- Seseorang yang HIV positif tidak hanya membutuhkan perawatan dan pengobatan secara medis melainkan juga membutuhkan dukungan psikologis, sosial, ekonomi, dan spiritual.
- Petugas manajemen kasus berfungsi mendampingi dan memfasilitasi ODHA mengakses layanan dan dukungan yang ia butuhkan. Di samping itu, petugas manajemen kasus juga memberikan dukungan psikologis dan sosial. Karena itu ia harus mempunyai daftar dan berjejaring dengan berbagai penyedia layanan yang mungkin dibutuhkan oleh ODHA.
- Petugas manajemen kasus diambil dari petugas pembinaan di Lapas/Rutan.
- Ia berkoordinasi dengan dokter, perawat, petugas konseling, rohaniawan, dan staf pengamanan Lapas / Rutan agar kliennya dapat mengakses layanan dan dukungan yang ia butuhkan, termasuk akses ARV dan dukungan adherence ARV.
- Petugas manajemen kasus membantu narapidana/tahanan yang HIV positif untuk membuat perencanaan yang akan dilakukan oleh narapidana/tahanan setelah bebas.
- Petugas manajemen kasus berkoordinasi dengan petugas manajer kasus dari LSM di luar Lapas/Rutan guna merujuk narapidana/tahanan HIV positif pada saat keluar dari Lapas/ Rutan.
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Pelatihan Manajemen Kasus untuk petugas LP/Rutan Nasional diadakan di HOtel Jayaraya, jl. Raya Puncak. Peserta berasal dari 6 propinsi yang bekerja di wilayah kerja FHI. Terdiri dari:
1 Santi Rahayu, Amd.K Rutan Klas IIA Jakarta Timur
2 Wahyu Prasetyo, Bc.IP, S.Sos Lapas Klas IIA Batam
3 Kusdaryanto Lapas Klas IIA Wanita Malang<
4 Mualim, S.Ag Lapas Klas IIA Tanjung Pinang
5 Mamik Purwaningsih, Amd.K Lapas Klas IIA Bogor
6 Rachmalia Komara Rutan Klas I Jakarta Pusat
7 Santa Elisa Sinuraya Lapas Klas IIA Wanita Medan
8 Drs. Pangihutan Siagian Lapas Klas I Medan
9 Prima Supriadi, Amd.IP, SH Rutan Klas I Bandung
10 Sulalah Ruslan Hidayat, SH Lapas Klas IIA Narkotika Pamekasan
11 Andy Syahputra Purba Rutan Klas I Medan
12 Achmadi Lapas Klas IIA Narkotika Besi
13 Kadarisman Dwiyana, A.Ks Lapas Klas IIA Kerawang
14 Yazuri Lapas Klas IIA Pekalongan
15 Novita Megasari Sinurat, SH Lapas Klas IIA Narkotika Jakarta
16 Arjiunna, Amd.IP, SH Lapas Klas IIA Narkotika Cirebon
17 Triswanto, SH Lapas Klas I Semarang
18 Sudarno, Amd.IP, SH Lapas Klas IIA Madiun
19 Nurgempa Wati, A.Ks Lapas Klas IIA Bekasi
20 Samsun, A.Ks, M.Si Lapas Klas I Cipinang
GUIDING PRINCIPLES FOR POSITIVE PREVENTION:
POSITIVE PREVENTION is based on the realities and perspectives of people living with HIV. It Acknowledge that they have the personal right to choose wheter or not to have sex, and therefore need explicit information and pratical support to ensure that the sex they choose is safer for both them and their sexual partners.
POSITIVE PREVENTION is focused on communication, information,support and policy change.It does not blame,judge or stigmatise.HIV positive people are individuals with varying needs and desire.
POSITIVE PREVENTION requires the meaningful involvement and participation of People living with HIV. This mean not only giving support and information to individual and groups of people living with HIV,but also ensuring their participation in planning how best to apply the strategies to their local context.Strong,wll-resourced organizations of people living with HIV,as well as individual HIV positive activists,working in partnership with governments and service providers can offer the expertise thatderives from the lived axperience of HIV.They alsogive a face to HIV.Acceptance and involvement at community level can increase the self-esteem and confidence of HIV positive people to protect their own sexual health and avoid passing on HIV infection to others.
POSITIVE PREVENTION requires HIV service organizations, HIV support groups and NGOs to integrate positive preventive with existing HIV programmes. It is important that information and/or support around safer sex, re-infections, reproductive choice, the effect of ARV treatment delivery sites, family planning clinics,home-based care programmes and community centres.
POSITIVE PREVENTION promote human right. Right to health, privacy,confidentiality, informed consent, freedom from discrimination must be respect at all times, alongside the duty to do no harm.
POSITIVE PREVENTION recognises that HIV si fuelled by inequalities in power due to gender inequality, sexuality, knowledge, societel roles and poverty. HIV prevention strategies must be developed without further stigmatising those marginalised in our communities
POSITIVE PREVENTION place responsibility for reducing transmission of HIV with us all. Openness, communication and information about sex and sexuality are the most efective tools to reduce the spread of HIV (Aidsalliance,2007)