The Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) was first detected almost four decades ago, but a viable cure continues to evade the millions afflicted with HIV/AIDS world over.
AIDS claims the lives of thousands of adults and children every year. Significantly, HIV passes on from parents to their kids. So, this brings to the fore the question: Is it ethical for HIV+ persons to have children, knowing that the child may be orphaned or may contract the disease themselves?
But before delving into the issue, it’s important to dispel some of the myths around HIV/AIDS. Many confuse HIV with AIDS. The Human Immunodeficiency Virus attacks the immune system, making it susceptible to disease.
HIV spreads through bodily fluids like semen, vaginal and anal fluids, breast milk and through the placenta. It does not spread via sweat or saliva. If detected early, it can be suppressed with medication, allowing a person to lead a relatively normal, healthy and long life.
India is home to the world’s third-highest number of people living with HIV-AIDS.
HIV+ parents can pass on the virus to their children. The virus can be transmitted during the last weeks of pregnancy or even during labour and delivery. It can also be transmitted during breastfeeding.
These orphaned children are left to fend for themselves and are often vulnerable to trafficking, addiction and other illicit activities.
Those afflicted by HIV-AIDS are forced to shell out roughly Rs 3,500-4,500 per month for medication, which they are required to take all their lives. While speaking to The Quint, columnist and LGBTQ activist Harish Iyer shed some light on the difficulty of getting treatment in India.
Mansi Shah, who runs Happy Feet Home, a hospice that looks after terminally ill children, spoke to The Quint about HIV+ parents.
She said that while people can still have babies while being HIV+, there are chances of it passing on as there is no foolproof conception method. The virus will progress much faster in a newborn or a small child as they are more susceptible to the illness. Shah, who also oversees the care of some HIV+ patients who are in their late teens, also stated that some children can lead “normal lives” like their peers.
So, if the chances of living a healthy, disease-free life are slim, is it ethical then to give birth to a child while being HIV+?
Iyer said an HIV+ person should instead consider adopting. “I think having children in general is unethical,” he stated. “From an ecological, environmental and sociological perspective, having a child is wrong. Why not adopt the many orphans there are instead?”
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