?? PK LEE/ MSF |
Esther, aged 53, is doubly affected: she has been living with HIV for the last 8 years and she is a nurse with a passion for supporting people like herself and ensuring that they stick to their life-saving antiretroviral (ARV) treatment.
Esther has been working as an MSF staff nurse in Malawi's Thyolo district for nine years now.
In 1995 when Esther's husband died of AIDS it was at a time when people in Malawi still knew very little about the disease. Later she started working with MSF in a prevention of mother to child transmission programme, motivating pregnant women to get tested for HIV. "One day I told myself: 'Why don't you get tested as well?' " Esther told me.
"I tested HIV positive in 2008 and I started ARV treatment later in the same year. To me ARV treatment means life and hope," she said. "Since I learnt of my status, I had one hope – to educate my children. That's the only thing I wanted to do in my life."
Thanks to the ARV treatment, Esther achieved more than she hoped for. Not only is she able to see her four children growing into adults, but she is also able to make a difference in the lives of dozens other people living with HIV by working as a nurse.
As a medical worker in the battle against the HIV/AIDS crisis, Esther has also witnessed the importance of continued funding for ARV drugs which has brought treatment closer to people in need. "By now I thought we would be talking about the improvement of ARV treatment, the management of side-effects and access to newer and better treatments. But instead now we hear the international donors talking about cutting funding," Esther explained to me.
"If the donors cut the funding on ARV treatment, it's like saying that they just want us to die, they want our children to suffer again, they want our children to be orphans," said Esther. "We have the right for life. And we have the right for treatment."
?? PK LEE/ MSF |
?? PK LEE/ MSF |
The author is an?MSF Communications Officer.