Family with a Plus

Project facts

Project promoter:
Psychology of Health Center
Project Number:
PL05-0132
Target groups
People with HIV/AIDS
Status:
Completed
Initial project cost:
€37,500
Final project cost:
€35,764
From EEA Grants:
€ 31,986
The project is carried out in:
Poland

More information

Description

Children with HIV face not only the social stigma, discrimination and loneliness, and suffer side-effects of the antiretroviral therapy, but have to cope with challenges of adolescence and prolonged dependence from their parents. Project goal is to prevent social exclusion of families with children with HIV by improving their quality of life. This objective will be pursued through advisory services and other forms of support. Project activities will include: educational workshops, counseling (e.g. psychologist consultations, self-help group), mentoring and development of web portal with on-line consultations. It will serve as communication platform for specialized support available regardless of the place of residence. This will make the assistance accessible to people with HIV and their families from all over the country. As a long-term outcome of the project, regional support groups will be formed. The project will benefit approximately 80 families with children with HIV.

Summary of project results

"Children and youth infected with HIV and their families have to cope with the side-effects of treatment, stigmatisation and social discrimination, as well as with loneliness, which may lead to discontinuing treatment by them. In Poland, there is a lack of appropriate support for families in such situation - government institutions offer mainly medical help, while projects implemented by NGOs are usually directed to adults. The aim of the project was to counteract social exclusion of the families having children infected with HIV through supplementing the existing offer by advisory services and other forms of support for families of children living with HIV. The project contributed to enhancement of the quality of life for 101 persons with HIV from all over Poland through direct support, online support, and activities of local self-help networks. An online counselling service was created for children infected with HIV that gave counsel to 80 families, over 90 articles on medicine, psychology, law and social issues were made available, an Internet forum was launched. Three trainings were also conducted for 17 leaders who started activities of local self-help networks in 5 voivodeships, as well as two trainings for youth infected with HIV and their guardians that helped them to get to know each other, exchange experiences, talk about their fears, feelings of guilt, consequences of infection for communication in families and on relations with friends and partners. Direct beneficiaries of the project were persons endangered by social exclusion - 80 families with children and youth infected with HIV (101 persons)."

Summary of bilateral results