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<title>HIV/AIDS in the Workplace</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/10539/3937</link>
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<pubDate>Fri, 08 Feb 2013 00:26:10 GMT</pubDate>
<dc:date>2013-02-08T00:26:10Z</dc:date>
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<title>Aids and the workplace with a specific focus on employee benefits: Issues and responses</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/10539/3938</link>
<description>Aids and the workplace with a specific focus on employee benefits: Issues and responses
Stevens, Marion
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY&lt;p&gt;&#13;
This report reflects the first activity in a three-year research project, funded by the European&#13;
Union, which is part of a programme of support to NGOs which are working with communities&#13;
to combat discrimination against and provide support for people with HIV/AIDS. The aim of&#13;
the project is to investigate, using a variety of methods, the world of AIDS and the workplace&#13;
with a specific focus on employee benefits. These benefits include medical schemes and&#13;
other health benefits, death, disability and pension funds. The research will concentrate on&#13;
the experience of formally employed, unskilled or semi-skilled workers who are vulnerable&#13;
because employers consider them dispensable or replaceable should they get ill or die, and&#13;
whose employee benefits may be eroded in the face of HIV. By creating workplaces which&#13;
are supportive of individual employees, one sustains households and, in turn, the broader&#13;
society. This report presents the findings of an initial situational analysis of responses to HIV&#13;
in the workplace, using a policy analysis methodology, which combined documentation&#13;
review and key informant interviews with 27 players in the field.&lt;p&gt;&#13;
The report starts with a review of the South African literature and documentation on HIV/AIDS&#13;
and the workplace. Available evidence on the direct and indirect impacts of HIV on workplaces&#13;
and the current models used to project impacts are presented; the legal and policy frameworks&#13;
relevant to AIDS in the workplace are summarised; and a chronology of key events and&#13;
processes that have informed this area are noted.&lt;p&gt;&#13;
The main body of the report outlines responses to HIV/AIDS of the three major players:&#13;
government, the private sector including NGOs, and trade unions. In each sector consideration&#13;
is given to the areas of: leadership and organisational responses, networking and policy&#13;
processes, and workplace policies and programmes including health care.&lt;p&gt;&#13;
While a legal framework and a set of legal precedents for a rights-based orientation to HIV&#13;
in the workplace have been established, prohibiting, for example, pre-employment HIV&#13;
testing, a consistent and sound response to HIV in the workplace has yet to emerge. The&#13;
report concludes that there is a need for strong, bold and coherent leadership in all sectors&#13;
of society.&lt;p&gt;&#13;
Responsibility for workplace HIV/AIDS programmes has generally been delegated to human&#13;
resource departments, rather than being seen as a core management issue. The overall view&#13;
noted by stakeholders was of strategic failures in managing HIV/AIDS in the workplace due&#13;
to the lack centralised responsibility and commitment within organisations. The business&#13;
sector and the trade union movement need to ensure that HIV/AIDS is fore-grounded as an&#13;
issue and that it is the concern of the most senior leaders in their sectors. Many interviewees&#13;
also felt that there was a need for better alliances and networking on workplace issues, and&#13;
that government needed to play a leadership role in this regard.&lt;p&gt;&#13;
Respondents across sectors called for planning to be informed by better data. These data&#13;
need to be independent, open to scrutiny and separate from private interests.&lt;p&gt;&#13;
Workplace benefits have undergone considerable restructuring in response to HIV. In the&#13;
early-nineties schemes changed from defined benefit to defined contributions, motivated&#13;
by the perceived impact of HIV on risk benefits. During the late-nineties some schemes&#13;
evolved from group schemes to individualised packages, anti-retroviral drugs became more&#13;
available in medical schemes, the outsourcing of unskilled functions appeared as a particular&#13;
response to HIV and new HIV insurance packages became available for workplaces. During&#13;
v&#13;
AIDS and THE WORKPLACE WITH A SPECIFIC FOCUS ON EMPLOYEE BENEFITS: ISSUES AND RESPONSES 2001. Centre for Health Policy.&#13;
2001, several companies announced their intentions to provide anti-retroviral treatment for&#13;
semi-skilled and unskilled employees. These changes have been in response to assessments&#13;
of direct and indirect HIV-related costs and the requirement to adapt to the reforming legal&#13;
framework. Developments in the field have prompted the emergence of a range of new players&#13;
dealing with disease management and impact assessments.&lt;p&gt;&#13;
The effect of this restructuring has been several fold. Individuals often have to negotiate for&#13;
benefits directly with insurance companies, as opposed to their companies taking responsibility&#13;
for this. This has left employees more vulnerable. While routine pre-employment testing is&#13;
no longer legal, it is apparent that many individuals are losing cover through pre-benefit&#13;
testing. As a contrary trend, there is a growing realisation, in the face of declining drug prices,&#13;
that HIV/AIDS treatment is affordable and cost effective in managing the health of employees.&#13;
However, there is the danger that anti-retroviral therapy, for example, will be offered to some&#13;
employees and not others. This is clearly of concern in terms of equity and discrimination.&lt;p&gt;&#13;
Finally, there is a need to counter the notion that businesses will be able to cope with the&#13;
HIV/AIDS pandemic because of ‘the ease of substitution’ . This rationale is neither positive&#13;
nor constructive. Businesses need to balance their fiduciary duties by remaining profitable&#13;
and viable yet being fair and socially responsible.
</description>
<pubDate>Mon, 01 Jan 2001 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
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<dc:date>2001-01-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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