Watch this 5 minute film about the project:
In Salima District, as in all Districts of Malawi, there are numerous children living with HIV who have been born with the virus because of HIV positive parents. HIV is a virus which slowly destroys a person's ability to fight common diseases. Once their immune system is very weak, an HIV positive person begins to get sick very easily - this is AIDS.

Many of these children do not know that they have the virus because they have not been for a test. Even those that do know can afford to do little about it. When any person tests positive for HIV the first doctor's order is to live as healthy a life style as possible, in order to give your immune system the best chance. HIV positive people are told to eat extra food (because their bodies burn more energy) and to make sure they eat a well-balanced diet. Unfortunately few children are able to comply with these 'doctor's orders' because they simply can not afford to buy better food and many people are already malnourished. Malnourishment will speed up the progression of HIV and make it impossible for children to take drugs that fight the virus.

People who are HIV positive need to visit the doctor frequently. They must have regular checkups and get treatment at the first sign of common illnesses, such as the flu, otherwise these illnesses can spiral out of control. Furthermore, once an HIV positive person is sick with AIDS they should take drugs that fight the HIV. To take these drugs they have to visit the hospital once a month to be monitored and renew their supply. Again, the problem faces by many people, particularly children, is that they do not have the money it costs to go back and forth to the doctors. This means children who could benefit from free drugs to fight HIV are unable to get to their doctor to be given these life-saving drugs.

There is entrenched stigma against people with HIV - a problem found all over the world, not just in Malawi. For children who are outcast because of their HIV status life is very difficult. It is important that they have somewhere that they can go to have fun and also share their worries.

It is all of these issues - essentially the gaps in the free treatment provided by the Malawian health system - which the nutrition centre addresses.

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