Health Policy and Planning, Vol 13, 121-130, Copyright © 1998 by Oxford University Press
S Hawkes
Subsequent to recommendations from the 1994 United Nations International
Conference on Population and Development, and given recent findings
outlining the links between control of sexually transmitted infections
(STIs) and a reduction in HIV incidence, many countries are now seeking to
establish STI control programmes. In many cases this is through a policy of
providing comprehensive reproductive health care through the maternal and
child health/family planning (MCH-FP) system. This involves management of
all reproductive tract infections including STIs. This paper demonstrates
how such an approach may miss one of the largest target groups - men. In
general, men are at higher risk of initially contracting STIs, but, once
infected, their clinical management is usually simpler than treating
equivalent infections in women. It is argued that these two factors alone
make the inclusion of men in STI control programmes critical. The paper
outlines the experiences of one programme in rural Bangladesh in
establishing sexual health clinics for men within the existing service
structure. In response to client demand, the clinics moved beyond simple
STI care towards provision of comprehensive sexual health services.
Finally, the paper argues that whilst including men in sexual health
programmes should never be at the expense of providing services for women,
excluding them from service provision may make the objectives of STI
control programmes unattainable.
ARTICLES
Why include men? Establishing sexual health clinics for men in rural Bangladesh
Public Health Sciences Division, International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh (ICDDR,B - now the Centre for Health and Population Research), Dhaka, Bangladesh; Correspondence to S Hawkes, Clinical Research Unit, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, Keppel Street, London WC1E 7HT, UK
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