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Facial
expressions can reveal a negative response to HIV/AIDS. However,
a relatively new campaign is using our most expressive body part
to get a positive message across.
The ‘Nobody Has The Truth Written on Their Face. Protect
Yourself. Use a Condom” campaign – the ‘Faces’ campaign
for short – has been highly successful in Panama.
“The campaign has proved to be an unqualified success with
widespread coverage on posters at bus stops, on the main youth-targeted
website and extensive coverage in the mass media – especially
on the local press and radio,” said John Fleming, the Federation’s
Regional Health Delegate at the Panama Regional Delegation.
The Federation now hopes a Caribbean campaign, launched December
1 (World AIDS Day) in the Cayman Islands, is just as successful.
The Cayman Islands leg is a joint effort
between the Federation, British Red Cross Cayman Islands Branch
(CIRC), and the Cayman AIDS Foundation (CAF).
CIRC volunteers, CAF members, media, non-governmental organizations,
Minister of Health and Human Services, Anthony Eden, and students
of John Gray High School involved in the Caribbean Red Cross’ “Together
We Can” youth peer education programme, were present
for the launch at the CIRC headquarters.
Speaking at the launch,
Fleming said the Panama campaign, which involves the Federation,
the Panamanian Red Cross and the country office of international
advertising agency McCann Erickson, has reached over 500,000
people in a ten-month period.
It has been “very positively received by the local and
regional network of people living with HIV/AIDS, UNAIDS, UNICEF
and most importantly by the target audience.”
Costa Rica,
Honduras and Guatemala will soon see some new “faces” on
their buses, billboards and newspaper ads, he continued.
Fleming said the Federation does recognize “that condoms
and their promotion and consistent and correct use are NOT a
panacea but rather just one means of addressing the spread of
STIs, HIV and AIDS.
Gender inequality calls into question the
real value of condoms in settings where the woman’s ability
to insist on safe sex is undermined by a host of external and
entrenched forces such as economic dependence and violence”.
He noted, however, that the campaign has
an important role to play in getting the message across to sexually
active persons, and thanked CIRC and CAF “for their vision and commitment
in launching this campaign.”
Also speaking at the launch were Julia Brothwell, coordinator
of the Federation’s Port of Spain Sub Regional Office in
Trinidad; Jennison Nunez, CAF president; and Carolina Ferreira,
CIRC programmes manager and CAF operations manager.
Brothwell
spoke of HIV/AIDS worldwide statistics, noting that the Caribbean
has the second highest prevalence rate with 2.3% of adults infected.
“AIDS has become the main cause of death for the Caribbean
adult population of 15 to 49 years” she said, with Haiti
being the worse case with life expectancy being decreased by
eight years.
The Bahamas, Guyana and Trinidad & Tobago have
also seen life expectancy being reduced by four years. She called
for the fight to be waged at the local level.
“Individuals, governments, civil society, private sector
groups, international and non-governmental organizations must
fully commit and participate in scaling up the response…”
Jennison Nunez said he has faith Cayman Islands will prove its
worth as the starting point for the Caribbean campaign, and called
on the wider society to “take a stance against stigma and
discrimination; to come together and declare that it has no place
in this society, so that no one is denied their right to have
a voice.”
Carolina Ferreira said the campaign was timely as the CAF only
recently embarked on a condom social marketing programme with
Populations Services International.
She said as the campaign
was essentially visual, the posters will be distributed to schools,
local businesses, and the print media.
“With time, and as the campaign develops and we launch
new and ‘more familiar’ faces, our aim will be to
target more public areas, such as the bus stands throughout the
island.”
The Red Cross Societies of Dominica, Antigua, Trinidad & Tobago
and Jamaica have expressed some interest in the campaign.
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| Speakers pose near another
banner after the launch. Left to right: Carolina Ferreira,
Jennison Nunez, Julia Brothwell and John Fleming. |
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