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Social networks help Tanzanian children and caregivers cope with HIV/AIDS Studies of children living with HIV/AIDS have neglected the far greater number of young people affected by the sickness and death of close relatives. Few studies have looked at the coping strategies used by caregivers, children with dying relatives and orphans who must take care of themselves. HIV/AIDS is worsening the problems already faced by poor Tanzanians. Female-headed and child-headed households are particularly vulnerable to extreme poverty and insecurity, especially given customary laws that deny a widow the right to inherit her deceased husband’s land. For children whose parents are dying or have died of AIDS this can mean a lack of access to health care, education, property and food security. Stigma and discrimination attached to the disease remains widespread. Research from the University of Birmingham, UK, shows how caregivers, children, and young people cope with the impacts of the HIV/AIDS epidemic in the Tanzanian town of Arusha. Interviews revealed the strength of the social networks through which women and children care for family members in households affected by HIV/AIDS. Female members of the extended family, especially grandmothers, are a vital source of support for women living with HIV, whose ability to care for their children is reduced due to their illness. Young people take on caring responsibilities for their immediate relatives and help to meet the survival needs of the household. Some young people, shunned by their extended family following the death of a parent, migrate to urban areas and seek a living in the informal sector as a survival strategy. Policy interventions must recognise the broader concept of ‘social orphans’ – children whose parents are unable to provide for them – rather than, as at present, largely focusing on children orphaned by AIDS. Children and families from households affected by HIV/AIDS criticised the Tanzanian authorities for failing to provide basic services, involve people living with HIV/AIDS in community education programmes or work to challenge social attitudes towards the disease. Those who had become more open about their HIV status reported benefiting from: Contributor(s): Ruth Evans Source(s): id21 Research Highlight: 20 January 2006 Further Information: Tel: +44 (0) 121 4146630; Fax: +44 (0) 121 4144216 Source: iD21
‘Social networks, migration, and care in Tanzania: caregivers’ and children’s resilience to coping with HIV/AIDS’, Journal of Children and Poverty, Vol.11 (2) pages 11-129, by Ruth M.C. Evans, 2005
Ruth Evans
Institute of Applied Social Studies
School of Social Sciences, University of Birmingham, Muirhead Tower, Birmingham B15 2TT, UK
Contact: [email protected]