March 10, 2025

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World AIDS Day 2017

This year’s World AIDS Day campaign, My Health, My Right, (link is external) focuses on the right to health, the right of everyone to enjoy the highest attainable standard of physical and mental health. The campaign reminds people that the right to health is much more than access to quality health services and medicines, but depends on a range of important assurances including, access to good quality comprehensive sexuality education (CSE) and safe and inclusive learning environments.

 

CSE, of which HIV prevention is a core component, is a critical intervention in efforts to end AIDS as a public health threat and to enable young people to reduce their risk of HIV infection. It is also a critical intervention for promoting sexual and reproductive health, gender equality and healthy relationships, all of which can positively affect education and health outcomes.

 

Furthermore, CSE helps build young people’s awareness and knowledge of their rights, such as their right to access HIV testing, treatment and care that is free from stigma and discrimination. Young people have to know their rights in order to be able to stand up for them. Standing up for the right to the highest attainable standard of physical and mental health, means challenging discriminatory laws and policies, which prevent young people from accessing the sexual and reproductive healthcare services they need, such as age-related barriers to HIV testing, or laws that criminalize homosexuality.

 

UNESCO is committed to promoting young people’s mutually reinforcing right to health and education through the new “Our Rights, Our Lives, Our Future” programme. Together with Sweden, UNESCO will support the delivery of accurate, rights-based and good quality CSE programmes that provide the skills, knowledge and attitudes required for preventing HIV, reducing early and unintended pregnancies and eliminating gender based violence. The programme, launched in Paris on 3 November 2017, expands on existing work in Eastern & Southern Africa (link is external) through the ESA Commitment, with new projects in West & Central Africa.

 

UNESCO, as a member of the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS), is committed to strengthening support for Member States to deliver health education that enables young people to know their rights and that promotes overall well-being, good quality education and health outcomes for all.

 

SOURCE

 

UNESCO.ORG