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Success Story
A health organization supports AIDS-affected children who have nowhere else to turn
Resources Focus on Children with AIDS
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Photo: USAID/Virginia Foley
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Dr. P. Manorama, founder of Chennai's Community Health Society, works with AIDS-affected children at the CHES orphanage.
"The stigma is the challenge."
— Dr. Manorama
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An alarming 90 percent of the 5.1 million people in India with HIV/AIDS don't know about their
status until a crisis occurs. So when a parent dies unexpectedly or a newborn becomes ill, HIV/AIDS
is often discovered to be the cause. After that, the community frequently becomes frightened and
shuns the family. Relatives will not take them in. Schools reject surviving children.
Inspired by two little girls who had AIDS but nowhere to turn, Dr. P. Manorama created Chennai's
Community Health Education Society (CHES), an organization that finds resources to house,
educate and nurture shunned children. Supported by USAID, CHES operates five family resource
centers where people learn how to care for stricken families and where myths and misinformation
about HIV/AIDS are corrected to reduce fear and slow the spread of the disease. A separate CHES
shelter houses and educates 32 AIDS-affected children who have nowhere to live and no
family to turn to.
CHES workers seem to be everywhere: Murugan, a resident of the CHES orphanage, won a watch
for being the top student at his school — one of the few that accepts children affected by HIV/AIDS,
thanks to interventions by CHES. At a CHES community resource center, two adolescent peer counselors
practice for a street performance about HIV/AIDS while a community educator meets with a self-help group.
Dr. Manorama's desire to help two little girls continues to have a ripple effect, each day helping
more and more people affected by HIV/AIDS live with dignity and respect.
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