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The New Life Center

Giving New Life to Children with HIV/AIDS

A boy with HIV/AIDS is healthier because he now eats nutritious foodHIV/AIDS is a rapidly growing problem in Nepal, fueled by ignorance about HIV prevention and brutal discrimination against people with AIDS. Many children with HIV are forced to leave their schools, and infected women are often abandoned by their husbands. Because of this stigma, many people avoid being tested and hide their symptoms of AIDS for as long as possible. According to a U.N. study, more than 80% of Nepalis with HIV have not been diagnosed.

The New Life Center provides excellent lifesaving treatment to children with HIV/AIDS while teaching their caretakers, most of whom also have HIV, to live hygienically and cook nutritious meals. This training dramatically reduces the risk of acquiring the illnesses that make HIV develop into AIDS, and lets infected people lead fulfilling lives. During the months that children and their guardians spend at the Center, they receive food, housing, and all medical treatment for free.

The New Life Center is the only facility in Nepal that uses a holistic approach to helping HIV-positive children. Its nurses, nutritionist, doctor, and other staff provide:
For kids: education and enriching activities
For caretakers: training in nutrition, health, literacy, and income generation
For both: nutritious meals, 24-hour medical care, and counseling to improve their self-confidence and help them manage the stigma of HIV/AIDS

The New Life Center's nutritionist teaches women to cook healthy foodThis comprehensive care model is a key to the Center’s success. Most children arrive with full-blown AIDS, including illnesses such as tuberculosis, malnutrition, and hepatitis, and return home with only HIV, ready to go to school and enjoy a happy childhood. If kids with HIV live hygienically, eat a nutritious diet, and try to avoid infections, they can typically expect to lead full and meaningful lives for around 25 years. By that time, it’s likely that additional treatments will be available to extend their lives even further. Most of the children don’t even need to take anti-retroviral drugs, which are difficult for people in rural and remote areas to obtain.

With your help, the New Life Center will continue to let children with HIV lead fulfilling lives, and can expand to include:
• Community outreach about HIV awareness and prevention
• Follow-up visits to monitor the health of kids who have been discharged
• The construction of additional Centers in areas with high rates of child HIV/AIDS

Find out more on the New Life Center's blog

Learn about NYF's pioneering programs to treat severely malnourished children, provide needy kids with psychological counseling, and create Nepal's first dietician training course.

Two Lives Transformed by the New Life Center

Gita and her son have HIV, but live happy, full lives"When I was diagnosed as HIV-positive, my husband was also tested and was negative," Gita said. "He blamed me for having HIV and left me… Maybe I became infected through a blood transfusion, I don’t know." When her eight-year-old boy, who was HIV-positive from birth, came down with a fever, tuberculosis, and other illnesses, the doctors at the local government hospital refused to help him because she couldn't afford the treatment. Gita was alone, destitute, and heartbroken, until someone recommended the New Life Center.

"After coming to the New Life Center, my son and I both got healthier and gained weight," Gita said. "I learned about a balanced diet, health, and hygiene. I gained self-confidence, and I learned how to deal with discrimination about HIV/AIDS and stand up for my rights." After two months at the Center, Gita and her child were healthy and ready to resume their lives. The Center connected her with an organization that is sponsoring her son’s education at a school with special facilities for children with HIV/AIDS. Gita is now employed as a social motivator, training HIV-positive women. "At the New Life Center, I became empowered. Now I feel confident enough to do anything."

   





   

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