Oxfam Ambassador Kristin Davis in South Africa to help Oxfam break the stigma and close the treatment gaps fuelling AIDS
Oxfam International Press Release
2 February 2008
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (2 February, 2008) - Kristin Davis, star of US hit TV show Sex & the City, joined Oxfam and leading AIDS activists at a Johannesburg press conference today, to support community efforts in addressing the HIV and AIDS epidemic in South Africa.

Oxfam Ambassador Kristin Davis is greeted by children in the North West province of South Africa where she was visiting AIDS support programs.
Kristin, an Oxfam Global Ambassador, shared a platform with the President of Oxfam America, Raymond C. Offenheiser, and leading South African activists, to raise up the voices of the communities she has met, and to help ensure that they are given the dignity of effective HIV treatment and care.
This is Kristin’s second trip to South Africa, and she has used her time to revisit the strong women and community groups that touched her in Soweto, as well as learning more about how HIV is tackled in South Africa from new groups in rural areas and informal settlements.
The trip has helped Kristin appreciate the power and importance of community workers in South Africa’s response to the HIV and AIDS epidemic, as well as the obstacles that are preventing millions of people living with HIV from getting the treatment they need, such as the lack of doctors, nurses and treatment clinics, particularly in rural areas.
Kristin Davis, Oxfam Global Ambassador, said:
“I have been amazed by the incredible strength and energy of South Africa’s community groups in tackling the AIDS epidemic in this country. People like Mama Grace, who runs a soup kitchen in Soweto for orphans and other vulnerable children, are an incredible tower of strength in South Africa’s uphill response to AIDS. These unsung heroes are pulling together what little food and money they have to provide care to those living with HIV. Oxfam helps support them in this effort. These people are inspirational, but can’t win the battle on their own. These communities need nurses and doctors. These wonderful people are holding up their communities and need our support.”
The AIDS epidemic is the leading cause of death in South Africa, with an estimated 400,000 people dying of HIV-related causes each year. To respond, the country has mounted the biggest rollout of HIV treatment in the world, which has seen over 300,000 people receiving anti-retrovirals on the public health system. However, many barriers to good health for people living with HIV remain. A shortage of doctors, nurses and clinics prevent people from getting the treatment they need – in one community Kristin visited the nearest clinic was over 80km away, which meant people had to take a day off work and pay $14 or more for a round trip on public transport to get the treatment they so desperately required.
Oxfam’s South African partners, the Treatment Action Campaign and the AIDS consortium also spoke at the press conference.
Denise Hunt from the AIDS Consortium raised the importance of tackling stigma as a part of the HIV response saying that stigma prevents people, particularly women, from coming forward for testing. She will call for extra training for the community groups already providing care. With training, those providing home-based care for men, women and children living with HIV could play a larger role in rolling out treatment. She called on the South African government to empower and harness the skills of community health care workers to help extend access to treatment to more people, more rapidly.
Oxfam recognises the important role of community organisations and continues to support innovative approaches to expanding access to treatment and care for people living with HIV in South Africa, as well as campaigning on the global level for more doctors, nurses, and community healthcare workers to boost the level of care and treatment received by millions of people living with HIV.
Raymond C. Offenheiser, President, Oxfam America, said:
"The AIDS epidemic does not respect race, class, gender or ethnicity. But lives can be saved through unique partnerships that support access to medicines, quality health services and empowered community leadership. Behind the statistics lies a preventable human tragedy that can and must be confronted."
Kristin Davis is on a four-day visit to South Africa from 29 January – 02 February 2008. Kristin’s visit continues her efforts to gain a better understanding of the HIV/AIDS situation in the country. Organizations she met include Let Us Grow in Orange Farm, Circle of Promise in Soweto and a HIV and AIDS project in Rustenburg, in the North West province.
For more information or interviews, please contact:
ROI: Paul Dunphy, Media and Communications Executive, 01 635 0422, paul.dunphy [at] oxfamireland.org
NI: Phillip Graham, Media and Communications Officer, 028 9089 5959, phillip.graham [at] oxfamireland.org
Notes to Editor
Photographs of Kristin Davis visiting HIV and AIDS projects in South Africa are available at:
http://nabilphotography.com/oxfam/KristinSA/1.zip
Captions:
Picture 1: Oxfam Ambassador Kristin Davis is greeted by children in the North West province of South Africa where she was visiting AIDS support programs.
Picture 2: Oxfam Ambassador Kristin Davis learns more about small businesses run by women affected by HIV in Soweto, South Africa
1. Quotes from partners attending press conference
Denise Hunt of the AIDS Consortium, which represents the NGO sector on the South African National AIDS Council (SANAC), said:
"The only way we are going to meet the access to treatment targets are through dramatic shifts in how health care is delivered. Community care workers are well positioned to play an expanded role and need the finances, training and resources to enable them to enhance their skills and contribution to service delivery."
"Volunteer home-based care workers are able to provide additional capacity in treatment support. Shifting tasks to community health care workers would ease the burden on the limited number of doctors and nurses, freeing them to take on additional tasks and improving overall access to testing and treatment,"
Gordon Mthembu, Gauteng Coordinator for the Treatment Action Campaign says:
"I am HIV positive and I am alive. I owe this to the anti-retroviral tablets I take everyday. Today I do not think of myself as sick. Why should I? I am a person with a chronic illness that can be managed. Today I am a proud, active father of a three children, but could have easily become another HIV death statistic. It pains me that there are so many needless deaths from AIDS in South Africa. The fact that I am alive and well makes me determined to keep pushing to secure antiretroviral treatment for all of those living with AIDS in this country."
Oxfam Ireland is an independent member of Oxfam International- a group of thirteen non-governmental agencies dedicated to fighting poverty and related injustice around the world.


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