China on Friday launched a
national program on HIV/AIDS prevention and care in the
workplace.
The US$3.5 million HIV/AIDS Workplace Education
Program, funded by the United States Department of Labor, will be
overseen by the International Labor Organization (ILO), and
implemented in the provinces of Anhui, Guangdong and Yunnan.
"China is now at a critical stage in fighting
HIV/AIDS," said Hu Xiaoyi, vice minister of Labor and Social
Security, during the launching of the program in Beijing. "We
should try our best to prevent the spread of the disease from
high-risk groups to the general public."
Hu believed the 39-month program would be a good model
to promote China's anti-AIDS education policy and
implementation.
Hu said another five-year education program, jointly
launched by 12 ministries in 2005, had set a target of making 85
percent of the nation's rural migrant workers knowledgeable about
HIV/AIDS prevention by 2010.
The Regulation on AIDS Prevention and Control
stipulated that no employer or individual should discriminate
against people with HIV/AIDS or their relatives. The regulation
protects their rights of marriage, employment, medical care and
education.
Richard Howard, an ILO official and the program's
chief technical adviser, said the program is aimed at eliminating
discrimination against people with HIV/AIDS in workplaces and
reducing the high-risk behavior among target groups.
Howard said the program would provide training to
government officials at national and provincial levels and help
them to systematically develop guidelines and policies.
"We will motivate enterprises that employ a large
number of rural migrant workers to join our program and urge them
to fully implement HIV guidelines," Howard said.
"Our goal is that all workers with HIV/AIDS are well
protected.
"They can get jobs, keep jobs and have access to AIDS
prevention services, such as education, treatment and voluntary
testing and counseling," he said.
Statistics by the ministry shows in some of the
provinces, working-age HIV/AIDS people account for 90 percent of
the total infected population and a majority of them are under 35
years old.
(China Daily January 27,
2007)
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