Teaching and Aids | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Education has been described by UNAIDS and the World Bank as 'the single most effective preventative weapon against HIV and Aids'. Many research studies across Africa have shown that especially for girls, those who are enrolled in school are far less likely to become infected with HIV. A UNICEF study in Zimbabwe found that girls enrolled in schools are five times less likely to be HIV-positive than girls not in school. HIV and Aids among teachers But at the same time HIV and Aids are leading to illness and deaths among teachers. This makes it harder for schools to find the trained and experienced teachers needed to teach children and make them less vulnerable to the virus. Every year in Kenya and Zambia, more teachers die of Aids than are trained in teacher training institutions. In South Africa, 21% of teachers aged between 25 and 34 are HIV-positive. The death of a teacher in rural communities can result in the closure of the school. Africa Have Your Say - World Aids Day special Against the backdrop of these grim statistics, BBC Africa Have Your Say asks teachers, parents and pupils about their experiences.
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