ADOLESCENCE: MENTAL HEALTH, HIV

Posted on Jan 1, 2012

 

Adolescence is a difficult time for girls everywhere, but coming of age in a developing country carries even greater risk. Teenage girls living with HIV struggle to come to terms with their condition. As girls mature, they face contracting sexually transmitted infections such as HIV and human papillomavirus.

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Angelique's Story: In Rwanda, young girl affected by HIV enrolls in a mental health support group

 

 
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ANGELIQUE'S STORY:
A support group for HIV patients in Rwanda helps teens overcome their fears.

 

Support groups for adolescents and children affected by HIV include time to relax and socialize with their peers.

When she was 16 years old, Angelique* tested positive for HIV. She had already lost both her mother and stepmother to AIDS. Scared and angry, the teenager from the rural Rwinkwavu community in eastern Rwanda blamed her father for infecting her family.

Adolescence can be a time of emotional and psychological stress for many girls. For those living with a stigmatized disease like HIV/AIDS, having emotional support can be crucial. In Rwanda, Partners In Health is working to target these teens with a number of mental health and social support programs and services.

After an initial grieving period, Angelique finally came to terms with her status. She began antiretroviral therapy (ART) and started attending the adolescent counseling group at Rwinkwavu Hospital.

When Angelique first joined the adolescent counseling and support group, she harbored a lot of insecurities. She was uncomfortable with the realities of her diagnosis and was afraid of facing stigma and having others find out about her status. But thanks in large part to the holistic bio-psycho-social curriculum and the support of an HIV-positive peer group, she overcame her fears and is now the leader of the adolescent girls’ Saturday counseling group.

 
 

Inshuti Mu Buzima, PIH's partner organization in Rwanda, holds support groups for children (pictured above), as well as for adults and adolescents.

Now 20 years old, Angelique leads the group in song and drumming and assists the nurse and social worker in educating her peers as well as in directing field trips. Her confidence and willingness to share her experiences with the group has inspired other young women to talk about living with HIV and coping with stigma. She now presents herself as an example of how to take care of oneself and often shares her struggles with opportunistic infections with her peers to teach them how to stay healthy and manage their HIV.

Angelique is currently in her second year of a secondary school at a boarding school in Kigali, where her teachers support both her health and her learning.

She remains more comfortable with peers in her counseling group than others her age; she is anxious about relatives and members of her community at her school or elsewhere finding out her status. Even so, she has come a long way.

Once she completes secondary school, Angelique will transition into an Adult HIV support group, where the nurses are confident that she will flourish. She has already exhibited the capacity to manage her own health and has been a valuable resource to other HIV-positive adolescents learning to care for themselves.

*Name has been changed to protect the privacy of the patient.

 

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