February 28, 2008
AIDS in
Africa: Abstinence Works
Interview With Expert Matthew Hanley
By Carrie Gress
BALTIMORE, Maryland, FEB. 27, 2008 (Zenit.org).- In the fight
against AIDS, abstinence-based programs that focus on changing
behaviors rather than handing out condoms simply work better,
says an AIDS expert.
Matthew Hanley has been a HIV/AIDS technical adviser at Catholic
Relief Services (CRS) for the last seven years and is the author
of the forthcoming book "Avoiding Risk, Affirming Life: Science,
Love, and AIDS."
In this interview with ZENIT, Hanley comments on the programs
and principles that have led to dropping rates of HIV prevalence
in Africa.
Q: You seem to be something of a lone voice in the wilderness
promoting Catholic principles in the fight against AIDS, and yet
so much of the research is showing that this approach is really
what is heading off the disease. How and where is this actually
working?
Hanley: First, actual changes in patterns of sexual behavior
have led to the most significant reductions in HIV prevalence.
Take the well-known case of Uganda, where the prevalence rate
dropped from 15% in 1991 to a little over 5% in 2001. Behavior
change was so thorough in Uganda that by the mid-1990s, 95% of
adults in that country said they had only one partner or none at
all. But it is not only Uganda.
The most important factor in recent HIV declines observed in
several other countries, such as Kenya, Zimbabwe and Haiti has
been an increase in fidelity or "partner reduction." This should
not be altogether surprising, considering that in a large swath
of southern Africa, where over half of new infections globally
come from, the AIDS epidemic is being driven by the dynamics of
multiple and often concurrent sexual partnerships.
Where this kind of behavior change has not taken place, HIV
incidence has remained high. This is the case in South Africa,
which has been a vigorous promoter of condoms, but rather silent
about the need for a more profound modification of behavior,
specifically multiple partnerships.
The primacy of behavior change comes into even sharper relief
when we consider that the two other major planks of HIV
prevention besides condoms -- treating other sexually
transmitted infections, and the promotion of voluntary
counseling and testing -- have not been particularly effective
in decreasing HIV incidence.
Q: One currently popular approach to AIDS prevention is called
ABC -- Abstinence, Be Faithful, Condoms. The Catholic Church
supports the AB. As someone who works in the fight against AIDS
in a Catholic organization, how do you present the Church's
teaching against condom use?
Hanley: First, we try to articulate what the Church actually
proposes, abstinence and fidelity, in a positive manner. I have
found in my trips to Africa that there is a real thirst for
something different, something hopeful. We all know that people
yearn for more than the satisfaction of their appetites. In
other words, they yearn for love, for respect and for meaning in
life. In his first encyclical, "Deus Caritas Est," Benedict XVI
reminded us of long-standing Christian tradition, namely that
human beings are a "union of body and soul," that love is
characterized by exclusivity, or fidelity, and that love
contains a quality of permanence over time.
When we conducted training recently with five dioceses in
Ethiopia, one of the participants, a wife and a mother, spoke
for the group by saying how much she appreciated the emphasis on
fidelity and related human values such as respect and
communication. She was puzzled as to why such basic themes are
not more routinely promoted in the context of HIV prevention,
adding: "Why hasn't anyone explained it like this before?"
So we try to address the whole human person, their deeper
aspirations, and in proposing love, affirm basic Christian
sexual ethics. It is on this level that the Church then
encounters the wider culture, which as Pope John Paul II
suggested in "Familiaris Consortio," often holds "fundamentally
irreconcilable views of the human person and of human
sexuality," leading many to aggressively reject these first
principles.
Perhaps one of the most helpful means that I have seen of
expressing the moral significance of the issues involved comes
from the Kenyan bishops. In their pastoral letter on AIDS, they
hit upon the crux of the matter: The Church proposes the same
sexual morality even "when and where AIDS poses no danger." The
central issue with respect to the Church's consistent teaching
on sexual matters is thus not the risk of HIV, but the lack of
chastity, and "this is not easy for 'the world' to grasp."
So the Catholic Church, among others, objects to the widespread
promotion of condoms, primarily on legitimate moral and ethical
grounds, over and above the practical limitations observed to
date in practice.
I think it is also fair to point out that even from a practical
point of view, the claims made by religious leaders -- that the
promotion of condom use could lead to a false sense of security
and even end up increasing overall risk -- have been echoed in
the scientific literature; even long-time condom advocates have
described this phenomenon as real.
Q: From your experience, why is there so much pressure to
promote the C of the ABC approach given that despite the moral
implications, it is not proving to be effective?
Hanley: Yes, researchers have noted that in many countries in
sub-Saharan Africa, HIV transmission rates have remained high
despite a considerable increase in condom use. For example,
condom sales in Botswana increased from 1 million in 1993 to 3
million in 2001, while HIV prevalence among pregnant urban women
increased from 27% to 45%. In Cameroon, during the same period,
condom sales rose from 6 million to 15 million, while HIV
prevalence increased from 3% to 9%.
A study commissioned by UNAIDS concluded, "Prevention campaigns
relying primarily on the use of condoms have not been
responsible for turning around any generalized epidemic."
I also found one survey conducted in Lesotho to be particularly
revealing. It found that about 75% of respondents could identify
condoms as a means of preventing HIV, but only approximately 5%
of respondents identified abstinence or faithfulness as a means
of avoiding HIV.
The more interesting element to consider, implicit in your
question, is the underlying assumptions and philosophy behind
how prevention measures are prioritized and emphasized. Since
the primary approach of condoms, voluntary counseling and
testing and treatment of other sexually transmitted infections,
has not produced the intended results, in terms of achieving
reductions in HIV prevalence, it would be difficult to avoid
concluding that these interventions maintain their privileged
position not because of empirically observed scientific
excellence, but at least in part because of the desire of their
proponents to cling to an underlying vision of the human person,
freedom and sexuality.
Yet it is the Church that is routinely characterized as being
opposed to science, or "dogmatic." But this charge does not
stand up to scrutiny. The reference to dogma, though, calls to
mind one of G.K. Chesterton's observations, "There are two kinds
of people: Those who have a dogma and know it, and those who
have a dogma and don't know it."
In other words, any approach to these issues is inherently
charged with meaning. As products of our own time and place, we
all naturally bring some sort of vision to the table, some
presuppositions about life, relationships, sexuality, the
dignity of the human person, family and so many other
fundamental topics.
Beyond that, public health is deeply influenced by a kind of
utilitarianism, known for its aim to achieve the "greatest
happiness for the largest number." As it applies to HIV
prevention policy, the objective becomes seeking to maximize the
good of sexual pleasure while minimizing the pain of AIDS. But
as the very name suggests, utilitarianism allows for the use or
the manipulation of one person by another. In Christian thought,
to "use" another person is the polar opposite of loving another
person.
Public health approaches also borrow heavily from an inflated
sense of "human autonomy" within the wider culture. This form of
individualism exalts personal freedom as the supreme value.
Freedom is thus enthroned above truth, as opposed to being
subject to it. It is a concept of freedom that is, rather sadly,
unencumbered by human relationships.
These schools of thought, in denying and rejecting objective
moral and philosophical truths, advance no internally consistent
or coherent rationale for limiting sexual partnerships, and thus
tend to yield interventions that would rightly only be
considered "secondary" measures of HIV prevention.
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