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NAT issues new HIV guidelines for prisons

Blood-borne viruses in prison: guidelines launched for prevention, testing and treatment.

National AIDS Trust (NAT) has issued new guidelinesĀ to boost efforts to prevent, diagnose and treat blood-borne viruses (BBVs) in prisons.

Prevalence of BBVs such as HIV, Hepatitis B and Hepatitis C are four times higher amongst people in prisons than in the general population with hepatitis accounting for 93% of viral infections reported in prisons.

Taking the opportunity to tackle BBVs in the transient prison population is crucial to curbing epidemics in the wider population. Prisons in England, Scotland and Wales are currently in the process of implementing programmes for BBV testing which include it being offered on an opt-out basis.

NAT hopes that the new guidance can support prisons in delivering testing effectively but also go beyond this, ensuring that people living with BBVs in prisons have access to treatment and care that can lead to sustainable outcomes for health and well-being.

Kat Smithson, Director of Policy and Campaigns at NAT said: ā€œTackling BBVs in prisons is not only key to the health of those individuals in prison, but also to improving health outcomes in the wider public ā€“ prisons donā€™t exist in a vacuum.ā€

ā€œThose who test positive can access care that will improve their health, reduce any risk of transmission, and stand them in good stead for resettlement after they are released.

ā€œIt is simply not acceptable to have people in prison undiagnosed when we have the facilities to prevent, test and treat. But we know prisons are under enormous pressure and our framework is intended to be a useful and practical tool to support them to improve their approach to BBVs, from reception to release.ā€

Areas covered by the guide include awareness raising; vaccination; access to condoms and other preventive tools; staff training on BBVs and related stigma; and ensuring that there are no breaks in the provision of crucial medications to those who are already diagnosed.

REVIEW: Rainbow Chorus Christmas Concert

Nothing marks the start of the Christmas season proper as clearly as a festive concert, and the Rainbow Chorus certainly declared the season well and truly open on Saturday night (December 9).

Photo: Sophie Cook
Photo: Sophie Cook

In a programme that was perhaps a little less challenging than their summer concert, they more than made up for it by delivering a set of uplifting songs that created a real sense of joy.

Community choirs vary greatly in both ambition and achievement but for some time now the Rainbows have been achieving high upon high and choirmaster Aneesa Chaudhry pushes them at every opportunity, and usually with great success. This Christmas offering however, seemed more focused on pure enjoyment than challenge and as a result it was a real delight. The capacity audience, they will need to find a bigger venue if they continue in this way, loved every moment and for once, when asked to join in, they sang with gusto and heart.

There was a balance of Christmas songs and Christmasā€™s carols along with some non-festive offerings. A medley of Simon and Garfunkel hits was excellent, although The Sound Of Silence was take a touch too fast to really highlight the excellence of the arrangement and its delivery.

Carl Jenkinsā€™ work featured twice, the very moving Benedictus using a bass flute to replace the usual cello solo was inspired and haunting and Adiemus showed the choir at their very best. Jenkins might not be to the taste of serious ‘musos’ but his work is ideally suited to a choir of this size and one cannot help feeling that the serious music fans are merely dismissive because he has penned some delightful and popular tunes.

The choir got into their full stride with a complex and hilarious arrangement of The Twelve Days of Christmas and took the entire evening to new heights with a roof raising rendition of Queenā€™s Somebody To Love in which soloists Hannah and Chic nailed the lead vocals.

The evening was a great success marred only by a group of women in the gallery who talked audibly throughout the whole of the first half, disrespectful of both performers and audience alike. Given their drinking they should have stayed in the pub!

The Rainbow Chorus

St Georgeā€™s Kemp Town, Brighton

December 9

By Andrew Kay

 

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