Moscow, 15 July 2005 (RFE/RL) -- Human Rights Watch’s 41-page report paints a bleak picture of the treatment reserved for HIV-positive mothers, pregnant women, and their children. The Russian government says the country has 300,000 HIV-positive people, although Russian and foreign experts put this figure at 1 million.
Discrimination against people with HIV and AIDS is rife in Russia, but mothers and small children are a particularly vulnerable group. The report laments that Russian doctors often fail to assist HIV-infected women in reducing the risk of transmitting the disease to their children.
Refuse Treatment
Instead, Denber says, they insult them or even refuse to treat them.
“What we mean by discrimination is verbally abusive treatment by doctors who don’t want to be treating HIV-positive women because they are afraid of the disease, or because they think the women might be drug-dependent and only deserving of scorn. They are very rough with them, they are very rude with them, neglectful, and sometimes they will simply refuse to treat them,” Denber said.
Human Rights Watch’s report cites official statistics according to which almost 10,000 HIV-positive women have given birth since 1997. Up to 20 percent of them abandon their babies.
Russians tend to be relatively ignorant about AIDS, which has been spreading dramatically since the collapse of the Soviet Union. The general lack of knowledge about AIDS in Russia means many orphanages are unwilling to take children born to HIV-infected mothers, even if the child has yet to be diagnosed with the disease.
Casual Contact
Denber says many child-care workers still believe the disease can be contracted through casual contact.
“Regular orphanages are very reluctant to take children born to HIV-infected women. They are reluctant to take them because they fear catching the disease, because they aren’t adequately educated about how the disease is actually spread," she said. "They think that one can contract the disease through casual contact, by drinking out of the same glass or by hugging or kissing a child.”
As a result, the report notes that growing numbers of children born to HIV-positive mothers are segregated in hospital wards for at least the first 18 months of their lives. This is the age at which Russian tests are able to determine whether the child has HIV.
Denber says hospital wards are unable to provide the care and attention needed for the child to develop properly. “[The child] is being fed, he’s being clothed, and his diapers are being changed, but he’s not being stimulated in any way, he doesn’t really have access to all the things children needs to develop properly," she said. "The only stimulation children could get is whatever underpaid and overworked hospital staff could give them out of the kindness of their own hearts.”
'Lamentably Failing'
A handful of hospitals have created their own orphanages offering specialized care for children abandoned by HIV-infected mothers. But these cases are still distressingly rare. In its report, Human Rights Watch criticizes the government for “lamentably failing," to respect national and international legislation to protect the rights of these children.
It also blames Russian authorities for their reluctance to publicly address the issue of AIDS even though Russia has one of the fastest-growing infection rates in the world. Many observers say this reluctance is inherited from the prudish Soviet past, when sex-related issues were rarely addressed in public. Human Rights Watch also called on Russian President Vladimir Putin and his government to do more to promote awareness of AIDS and fight the widespread discrimination of HIV-mothers and their children.