[:en]By Lauren Burke
April 18, 2009
During the summer of 2008, I traveled around China meeting with HIV-positive children to discuss the barriers they faced in accessing treatment. Xiao Liu, a thirteen-year-old patient in a Beijing hospital, was one of the last children I met. In his hospital room with green walls, Xiao Liu handed me a notebook
Inside was this picture, accompanied by a description of what he envisioned as a happy day:
Inside a house, there are some children playing. Some are watching TV, some are skipping, and some are catching little bugs. Some are sleeping, some are making food, and some are bathing. There are fruit trees in the courtyard. There are small fish and turtles in the pond. Geese and little birds are flying in the sky, and flowers and grass are growing on the ground. Their lives are wonderful.
When Xiao Liu passed me the drawing, he was laying down. Too weak to sit up without assistance from his dad, his fingers were dark and worn, and his skin pulled across his bones as if there was not enough to cover his small, frail body. His father showed me a scar running down Xiao Liu’s leg, tracing the path where boiling water scarred his skin when he was two years old. His father rushed him to a government-run hospital seeking assistance with the burns, and Xiao Liu left with HIV from a bad blood transfusion he received there. His father did not explain why he was given a blood transfusion for burns.
Xiao Liu learned his diagnosis when he was eight, but his dreams have remained the same as most children in our world. He wanted to go to school and do well, to be liked by his friends. He loved animals and his family, being outdoors and playing with friends. But Xiao Liu wasn’t like most children, a fact apparent to anyone who met him. When he visited Beijing in the summer of 2008 to receive treatment, I took Xiao Liu, his father, and the NGO worker who introduced us, to see the sites of the upcoming Olympics. Xiao Liu wanted to show his friends back in his home province pictures of him by the famed Bird’s Nest, yet the taxi ride tired him out so much that he couldn’t make it into the Olympic Village. In Tiananmen Square, the children pointed and photographers snapped shots of his stretched skin, swollen belly, and impossibly thin arms and legs.
On January 2nd, 2009, Xiao Liu died of heart failure. His family had done everything they could to pay for treatment, but while the government provides free antiretroviral (ARV) treatment, hospitals charge for everything else – tests, equipment, and treatment for opportunistic infections. His parents sold their home and changed jobs to accommodate Xiao Liu’s constant visits to the hospital. His sister gave up on her education to work and earn money to pay for hospital bills. They tried to get compensation from the local authorities for the blood transfusion, but instead they were warned to drop their case or face future consequences.
The challenges Xiao Liu faced in accessing treatment are shared by thousands of Chinese children that are estimated to be living with HIV/AIDS, and many more are probably living with the virus undetected. I spent three months researching these barriers to treatment in different parts of China and found some disturbing trends. While I met some rural doctors who were deeply dedicated, I also heard that not enough health care workers have been trained in the complexities of AIDS care. I spoke with families whose children with HIV/AIDS were turned away from hospitals, sometimes out of unfounded fear of contagion, sometimes because hospitals know AIDS care is expensive and doubt families would be able to meet the costs. One mother didn’t even know that free ARV treatment was provided by the government.
While I saw pictures of Chinese leaders shaking hands with people living with AIDS on national television, and calling for an end to stigma and discrimination, stigma and discrimination are still widespread. Xiao Liu and other children told me they had been turned away from schools and harassed by schoolmates and teachers. Some were reluctant to take their AIDS medicines at school where other children would see them. The children I met with showed signs of severe depression and social withdrawal. One man told me that all his niece does “is cry in her room.”
Others beyond China’s borders share the blame. The world has made advances in the availability and quality of HIV/AIDS drugs and yet few steps are made to ensure that children in impoverished countries are provided the same care as those in wealthy ones. Drug companies point to the lack of demand for pediatric formulations of ARV medicines as an excuse for the high cost, while children struggle daily with the side effects of the adult-formulated drugs they take. Because of the tight grip big pharmaceutical companies keep on patents, China has yet to produce second-line ARVs domestically. So many kids have no choice remain on regimens to which they have grown resistant; no second-line treatment is available yet in China.
China has made a remarkable commitment in promising free treatment to those who have HIV/AIDS, but gaps in the program leave thousands of children out in the cold. The AIDS treatment program should be expanded to include all the costs families shoulder to care for an HIV-positive child, and China should exercise its rights under the WTO to issue compulsory licenses and manufacture second-line drugs domestically. The small grassroots charities that provide aid and treatment to children with AIDS in China in hard-to-reach areas and marginalized communities also deserve more support from the government, as well as from international donors. The children I met with deserve better care and support, and they deserve to get their lives back.
In a letter dated in the summer of 2008, Xiao Liu wrote:
I have been living with this illness for awhile now; my health is always bad, and sometimes I wish that I would just die. But my mother and father are always cheering for me, and they tell me to be brave and strong. Since they spoke these words, I have been inspired to battle with HIV/AIDS. I will fight until my last breath.
Tragically, Xiao Liu’s wishes and the hopes of his parents were not enough to stop AIDS. It is up to the rest of us, however, to take Xiao Liu’s words to heart, to not forget this brave little boy and to continue to fight for the thousands of others like him.[:zh]
By Lauren Burke
April 18, 2009
During the summer of 2008, I traveled around China meeting
with HIV-positive children to discuss the barriers they faced in accessing
treatment. Xiao Liu, a thirteen-year-old patient in a Beijing hospital, was one of the last
children I met. In his hospital room with green walls, Xiao Liu handed me a
notebook
Inside was this picture, accompanied by a description of what he envisioned
as a happy day:
Inside a house, there are some children playing. Some
are watching TV, some are skipping, and some are catching little bugs. Some are
sleeping, some are making food, and some are bathing. There are fruit trees in
the courtyard. There are small fish and turtles in the pond. Geese and little
birds are flying in the sky, and flowers and grass are growing on the ground.
Their lives are wonderful.
When Xiao Liu passed me the drawing, he was laying down. Too
weak to sit up without assistance from his dad, his fingers were dark and worn,
and his skin pulled across his bones as if there was not enough to cover his
small, frail body. His father showed me a scar running down Xiao Liu’s leg,
tracing the path where boiling water scarred his skin when he was two years
old. His father rushed him to a government-run hospital seeking assistance with
the burns, and Xiao Liu left with HIV from a bad blood transfusion he received
there. His father did not explain why he was given a blood transfusion for
burns.
Xiao Liu learned his diagnosis when he was eight, but his
dreams have remained the same as most children in our world. He wanted to go to school and do well, to be
liked by his friends. He loved animals and his family, being outdoors and
playing with friends. But Xiao Liu wasn’t like most children, a fact apparent
to anyone who met him. When he visited Beijing
in the summer of 2008 to receive treatment, I took Xiao Liu, his father, and
the NGO worker who introduced us, to see the sites of the upcoming Olympics.
Xiao Liu wanted to show his friends back in his home province pictures of him
by the famed Bird’s Nest, yet the taxi ride tired him out so much that he
couldn’t make it into the Olympic Village. In Tiananmen
Square, the children pointed and photographers snapped shots of
his stretched skin, swollen belly, and impossibly thin arms and legs.
On January 2nd, 2009, Xiao Liu died of heart failure. His
family had done everything they could to pay for treatment, but while the
government provides free antiretroviral (ARV) treatment, hospitals charge for
everything else – tests, equipment, and treatment for opportunistic infections.
His parents sold their home and changed jobs to accommodate Xiao Liu’s constant
visits to the hospital. His sister gave up on her education to work and earn
money to pay for hospital bills. They tried to get compensation from the local
authorities for the blood transfusion, but instead they were warned to drop
their case or face future consequences.
The challenges Xiao Liu faced in accessing treatment are
shared by thousands of Chinese children that are estimated to be living with
HIV/AIDS, and many more are probably living with the virus undetected. I spent
three months researching these barriers to treatment in different parts of China and found
some disturbing trends. While I met some rural doctors who were deeply
dedicated, I also heard that not enough health care workers have been trained
in the complexities of AIDS care. I spoke with families whose children with
HIV/AIDS were turned away from hospitals, sometimes out of unfounded fear of contagion,
sometimes because hospitals know AIDS care is expensive and doubt families
would be able to meet the costs. One mother didn’t even know that free ARV
treatment was provided by the government.
While I saw pictures of Chinese leaders shaking hands with
people living with AIDS on national television, and calling for an end to
stigma and discrimination, stigma and discrimination are still widespread. Xiao
Liu and other children told me they had been turned away from schools and
harassed by schoolmates and teachers. Some were reluctant to take their AIDS
medicines at school where other children would see them. The children I met
with showed signs of severe depression and social withdrawal. One man told me
that all his niece does “is cry in her room.”
Others beyond China’s borders share the blame.
The world has made advances in the availability and quality of HIV/AIDS drugs
and yet few steps are made to ensure that children in impoverished countries
are provided the same care as those in wealthy ones. Drug companies point to
the lack of demand for pediatric formulations of ARV medicines as an excuse for
the high cost, while children struggle daily with the side effects of the
adult-formulated drugs they take. Because of the tight grip big pharmaceutical
companies keep on patents, China
has yet to produce second-line ARVs domestically. So many kids have no choice
remain on regimens to which they have grown resistant; no second-line treatment
is available yet in China.
China
has made a remarkable commitment in promising free treatment to those who have
HIV/AIDS, but gaps in the program leave thousands of children out in the cold.
The AIDS treatment program should be expanded to include all the costs families
shoulder to care for an HIV-positive child, and China should exercise its rights
under the WTO to issue compulsory licenses and manufacture second-line drugs
domestically. The small grassroots charities that provide aid and treatment to
children with AIDS in China
in hard-to-reach areas and marginalized communities also deserve more support
from the government, as well as from international donors. The children I met
with deserve better care and support, and they deserve to get their lives back.
In a letter dated in the summer of 2008, Xiao Liu wrote:
I have been living with this illness for awhile now; my health is
always bad, and sometimes I wish that I would just die. But my mother and
father are always cheering for me, and they tell me to be brave and strong.
Since they spoke these words, I have been inspired to battle with
HIV/AIDS. I will fight until my last
breath.
Tragically, Xiao Liu’s wishes and the hopes of his parents
were not enough to stop AIDS. It is up to the rest of us, however, to take Xiao
Liu’s words to heart, to not forget this brave little boy and to continue to
fight for the thousands of others like him.
[:]