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Maxwell Nhlatho
President, Botswana AIDS Melbourne, Faculty of Medicine, University of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
Email: mdnmax@yahoo.co.uk

B A M

Botswana AIDS Melbourne


This is an organisation formed in November, 2003, at the University of Melbourne by medical students from Botswana , determined to make an impact on HIV/AIDS in Botswana that's claiming so many lives there.

Aims & Objectives Click here


Medical students aim to curb HIV/AIDS crisis in Botswana
[ UniNews Vol. 15, No. 6 17 April - 1 May 2006 ]

By Janine Sim-Jones


Doing something: Above, Sennye Mogale and Max Nhlatho with the ‘father and mother of BAM’ Roger Short and Margo Collins.

[ Photo: Michael Silver ]


United against AIDS.

[ Photo: Michael Silver ]

The harsh reality of the HIV/AIDS epidemic in Botswana really hit home for Maxwell D Nhlatho when he realised that at 25 years of age – if he achieved the average life expectancy of his countrymen – he had only 14 more years to live.

“In Australia hospitals in the main are for old people,’’ says the University of Melbourne fifth-year medical student.

“In Botswana it’s quite the contrary; it is a lot of young blokes my age. When I go home to practise medicine this is something that is going to be quite challenging.’’

Mr Nhlatho, a University of Melbourne medical student, is currently completing his clinical training at the Austin Hospital and will return home to do his internship in 2008.

He is studying at Melbourne as part of an agreement in which the University accepts eight Botswanan students to study medicine each year.

The agreement is part of a wider collaboration which sees the University of Melbourne working with the University of Botswana to establish its first medical school, so that the country does not keep having to send its students overseas for their medical training.

When Botswana’s aspiring doctors return home, they face the challenge of a health system battling an epidemic which sees almost 38 per cent of adults infected with the HIV/AIDS virus.

It is a devastating statistic and when students are thousands of kilometres away, it could be tempting to lose sight of the challenges at home.

But Mr Nhlatho and his fellow students were determined this should not happen and Botswana AIDS Melbourne, or BAM, was born.

Initially it started as an informal group that met at the Royal Women’s Hospital in the evenings, then at the University of Melbourne on Saturdays. Today it boasts about 70 members – or 70 per cent of the Botswana student population in Victoria – and a mission to help decrease the prevalence of HIV-AIDS in Botswana.

“Botswana AIDS Melbourne was an attempt to keep ourselves in touch with the reality of Botswana when we are here,’’ Mr Nhlatho says.

“In Botswana you are continually reminded of the problem (HIV/AIDS), you hear about people dying, about people who are very sick. You constantly hear the A (Abstinence) B (Be Faithful) C (Condomise) message.

“But once you are here you don’t see that any more – you don’t see it on the TV or hear it on the radio – and you can easily forget that it is your priority because you tend to prioritise the things that you live with more.

“Forming BAM was a way we could do something as a group, and give us a voice for communicating with the authorities and people in Botswana.’’

In its early days, Botswana AIDS Melbourne was helped by seed funding provided by the University’s Dean of Medicine Professor James Angus and Professor Roger Short (Medicine).

Mr Nhlatho was the ‘caretaker president’ until official elections in 2005. The group has since held two successful annual conferences, attracting an array of guest speakers including the Botswana High Commissioner to Australia, Molosiwa Selepeng.

The conference material changes annually, in 2005 the theme was HIV/AIDS: a multisectoral problem, which showed that HIV/AIDS was not just a problem confronting the health sector, as students from other faculties such as engineering and arts discussed how HIV/AIDS impacted on all aspects of life.

BAM has also held a successful fundraiser with the Cantorion Cymereig Victorian Welsh Choir to raise funds to help increase the awareness of HIV/AIDS prevention in Botswana.

Recent elections saw Mr Nhlatho and Bolokang Jones Makhura, a third year medical student, elected president and vice-president.

The group continues to keep close links with medical professionals back home and is working on projects to reinforce the prevention message to young Botswana people through regular newspaper articles in Botswana.

Outgoing president Sennye Mogale still remembers an HIV/AIDS talk presented at her high school by a woman who was infected with AIDS.

“The woman was talking about how she was infected because she was raped by her uncle and as a result she decided to infect others by sleeping with them,’’ she says.

Ms Mogale says she did not judge the woman, but the talk illustrated the lack of information many young people had about AIDS – despite the strong health messages being promoted by the Botswana Government.

She says that in particular, there is a disturbing trend of older men infecting young girls.

She also believes that some complacency may have crept in as the result of the Botswana Government’s decision to distribute free anti-retroviral drugs to all of those infected with HIV/AIDS.

“Because the anti-retrovirals have been successful in prolonging lives and stopping the symptoms of HIV/AIDS many young people have forgotten the ABC message. But we have to keep reminding them that the best situation is not to get AIDS.’’

Ms Mogale is now in her fourth year of medicine at Melbourne and is undertaking her Advanced Medical Science year with North Western Mental Health Services. She will return home to practise medicine in 2009, but says she may consider further study to become a psychiatrist.

However, in the meantime she is dedicated to spreading the prevention message in Botswana during her yearly visits home.

“People are starting to have sex at a very young age and we need to try and talk as openly as possible about sex,’’ she says.

“There are cultural attitudes that make it difficult to talk to a teacher about sex, but hopefully it is easier for them to talk with younger people such as medical students and people from Botswana AIDS Melbourne.’’

Although the group consists almost entirely of students – two of its members – Ms Margo Collins, a personal assistant in the Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Health Sciences, and Professor Roger Short – have been dubbed by the group as the “mother and father” of BAM.

Ms Collins recalls meeting Mr Nhlatho when he came into her office to meet the Faculty’s Associate Dean (Academic) Associate Professor Susan Elliott.

“When I met Max I found we had very much in common. I had previously worked for the Victorian AIDS Council and I found that I could be a good resource for the group in helping them form links with local HIV organisations,’’ she says.

“I was blown away to meet a group of people with such a strong sense of purpose to improve the lives of others and to see first and second year uni students showing such incredible leadership and dedication.

“They are prepared to take the future of their country on their shoulders.’’

Professor Roger Short is known internationally for his research into the effectiveness of lemon juice in preventing HIV transmission.

He has spent much time in Africa, including living in a mud hut in Uganda for six months, and developed a huge love of Africa and its people.

He has taught many of the Botswanan students and he says other medical students at the University of Melbourne can learn much from them.

“I was giving a lecture to a group of first year medical students a few weeks ago and I asked if there were any students from Botswana in the audience,’’ he says.

“Three very shy girls up the back put up their hands. I told the students that these girls could tell them stories from back home that you haven’t even dreamed of .’’

Professor Short has also supervised a number of the Botswanan students’ research projects. In particular, he is full of praise for the work done by students Modise Modise and Mr Nhlatho.

Mr Modise’s PhotoVoice project armed Botswana secondary school students with disposable cameras to document the impact of AIDS on their community.

Mr Nhlatho’s research found that male circumcision significantly reduced HIV acquisition in men. He found the practice was widely accepted by health professionals in Botswana and could be re-introduced.

His thesis is now being used as a background paper by the World Health Organisation.

Professor Short says the young medical students are the key to combating the rapid spread of HIV.

“It is a disease that spreads because of ignorance, and young people are the ones who need to teach others how to prevent the disease – not some old white face but young Africans talking to their peer groups,’’ he says.

In 2008 Mr Nhlatho will be back practising in Botswana. He says the hospitals will not be as well equipped as those in Australia, despite enormous demands placed on them by the AIDS epidemic.

Botswana has always trained its doctors overseas, and in the past many have decided not to return, but Mr Nhlatho says this is not an option.

“In Botswana I can make much more of a difference,’’ he says.


The Australian AIDS Fund INc. in Conjucnction with Botswana AIDS Melbourne(BAM) Proudly presents:
VOICES AND IMAGES OF HOPE with Cantorion Cymreig VICTORIA WELSH CHOIR. click here to read more about it


BAM Report No. 2 - Melbourne - March 17, 2004
Melbourne University Magazine report - "Stopping AIDS in Africa"


BAM Report No. 1 - Melbourne - February 1, 2004

This first report for 2004 has been written by BAM President, Maxwell D. Nhlatho for the University of Melbourne's campus newspaper.


Spotlight on Botswana - PHOTOVOICE

In a previous Latest Breaking News, we referred to the small population of Laos, now the even smaller population of Botswana might have to depend on the success of the lemons and AIDS story for the very survival of its 1½ million people.

Modise Modies is a 3rd year Melbourne University medical student on a scholarship from the Botswana government and he's returned home to help his fellow countrymen and women.

Modise Modise's mission is
"Using education to combat HIV/AIDS in Botswana"

HIV is a major problem in Botswana.

About 38.8% of the whole population is infected by it.

Almost everyone in Botswana is affected by the rising infection rate. Lots of children are left as orphans, having lost their parents to HIV.

Modise's work will be directed towards educating youth to take precautions to prevent the spread of HIV.

The "photovoice" method will be used to assess what youth already know about the disease.
Cameras will be given to young Botswanans (mainly between 13-19 years old) and they will photograph whatever reminds them of AIDS.

The preventative messages are likely to include:

  • Delaying onset of first sex and avoiding sexual relations with older people.
  • Using condoms whenever engaging in sexual activity
  • Seeking medical assistance whenever they suspect a sexually transmitted disease
  • Avoid changing sexual partners.

The teaching will involve children (students) and teachers, and we would like the students to develop their own programme that can be put on a website for all schools to see.

Because Botswana has so very few trees, Modise travelled to the timbered hills near Melbourne to be photographed both in and among some of Australia's wonderful trees to show to all of you - family, friends and students in Botswana!


Male circumcision and lemon juice for HIV prevention in Botswana

It has been shown that circumcision can lower the risks of HIV infection in males by about 50%. In a study of Shapiro et al, it has also been shown that the people of Botswana welcome the idea of male circumcision for health issues.


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'I'm beautiful and HIV-positive' - Miss Botswana 'Stigma Free'

By Barnaby Phillips - BBC Southern Africa correspondent - 03/03/05

The women parade down the catwalk in evening dress and traditional wear. It takes enormous courage for them to be here. Attitudes towards Aids are changing very slowly, and some of these women had hidden their status from their own families for years.


"Raising youth AIDS awareness like ' trying to fight a dead animal' - January 26, 2005

GABORONE, 26 January (IRIN) - It's a well-known fact among young Batswana that their country has one of the highest HIV prevalence rates in the world; they know what HIV/AIDS is, what causes it, and ways to prevent it.

Botswana Winning AIDS Education War - January 25, 2005

GABORONE (Reuters) - Botswana, battling one of the world's highest HIV/AIDS infection rates, has made major inroads in its campaign to fight the deadly epidemic through public education, a national survey shows.

Taking stock of HIV/AIDS in Botswana - 25/06/2004

What is the actual state of HIV infection in Botswana, and by extension, that of the syndrome? We know from Sentinel Surveillance that infection rates are still estimated at about 37.4% of the adult population, a figure taken to be the highest (or second highest if the latest figures from Swaziland are used) in the world.


Australian Circumcision Team Flying to Botswana - July, 2004

Queensland's Dr Terry Russell and Melbourne's Professor Roger Short will be flying to Botswana in September (2004) to discuss the use of circumcision as a preventive measure against AIDS and to demonstrate the use of Plastibell at a conference in the capital, Gabarone.


Botswana faces critical challenges
Botswana Press Agency (BOPA)
- 30 April, 2004

GABORONE - President Festus Mogae says Botswana is facing some critical challenges in combating the HIV/AIDS scourge.


Botswana Communications Breakthrough Brings ARV Treatment Education to the Masses
Government of Botswana Ministry of Health - April 28, 2004

The launch of an animated patient education video marks the latest step in the Masa programme to mobilise communities on HIV/AIDS and ARV therapy in Botswana.


Botswana no longer topping the world's HIV/AIDS infection rate - March 19, 2004

Swaziland now in that position - Agence France-Presse

Circumcision 'can block HIV infection'- Reuters/ABC, March 26, 2004

Circumcised men are less likely to be infected with the virus that causes AIDS because of biological reasons and not less risky behaviour, scientists say.

Circumcision, condoms and lemon juice - February, 2004

In Press, Reproduction, Fertility and Development, 2004
The HIV/AIDS Pandemic: New Ways of Preventing Infection in Men - Professor R. V. Short FAA, FRS


Highlights of Special Report by Stephen Lewis, UN Special Envoy, HIV/AIDS in Africa

To Retroviruses Conference, San Francisco - Feb 8, 2004

 

UNAIDS Applauds Botswana's Leadership in the Fight Against AIDS - Francistown, Botswana, 1/12/03

Despite having the highest adult HIV prevalence worldwide at close to 40%, Botswana has managed to mount an effective response to AIDS over the past few years.

Talking with the Botswana President - part of the BBC's excellent Global AIDS interactive debate - November 25, 2003

President Mogae has pledged to invest much of the country's annual budget in tackling the crisis. His ground-breaking antiretroviral drugs programme has made Botswana the first country in sub-Saharan Africa to provide universal, free access to the medicines.

How does President Mogae intend to stop the spread of Aids in Botswana? What does the future hold for one of the countries hit hardest by HIV and Aids?

Botswana’s HIV/AIDS Battle Lesson for Bush - 19 November, 2003

After US President George W. Bush visited five African countries in July this year many people were left wondering as to what exactly did he come here for.

 

Merck Helps to Battle HIV on Two Fronts in Botswana

October, 2003
New resources regarding Women, Children and HIV including caring for HIV-infected children and care of orphans in the community.

www.womenchildrenhiv.org


 

 

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