CRC/C/HND/CO/3
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(c) Continue prioritizing the issue of adolescent health on the political agenda of the
Government and grant more resources to public institutions for quality care of this age
group.
HIV/AIDS
62. The Committee welcomes the adoption in 1999 of Decree No. 147/99 on HIV/AIDS
which, inter alia, establishes a multisectoral national Commission (CONASIDA) mandated to
promote inter-institutional coordination on all issues related to HIV/AIDS, as well as the
HIV/AIDS Strategic National Plan 2003-2007 (PENSIDA II). However, the Committee is
concerned that, despite the 2003 National Plan for prevention of mother-to-child transmission,
the incidence of HIV/AIDS in Honduras is worryingly increasing and substantially higher than
the average in the region. The Committee is also concerned at the information that CONASIDA
lacks the necessary support to carry out its functions properly and that coordination is lacking
among all institutional actors dealing with this issue.
63. The Committee recommends that the State party, taking into account the
Committee’s general comment No. 3 on HIV/AIDS and the rights of the child and the
International Guidelines on HIV/AIDS and Human Rights (E/CN.4/1997/37):
(a) Increase its efforts to prevent HIV/AIDS transmission among children,
including by developing a clear and coherent national normative framework;
(b) Strengthen its measures to prevent mother-to-child transmission, for example
through coordination with the activities aimed at reducing maternal mortality;
(c) Pay particular attention to children infected and affected by HIV/AIDS or who
have become orphans as a result of the death of HIV/AIDS-infected parents, through
providing adequate medical, psychological and material support and by involving the
community;
(d) Provide adequate human and financial resources to both CONASIDA and
PENSIDA II;
(e) Strengthen its efforts by conducting campaigns and programmes to raise
awareness about HIV/AIDS among adolescents, particularly among those belonging to
vulnerable groups as well as the population at large, so as to reduce discrimination against
children infected and affected by HIV/AIDS;
(f) Seek further technical assistance from, for example, the United Nations Joint
Programme on HIV/AIDS and UNICEF.
Standard of living
64. The Committee, while welcoming the adoption of a Poverty Reduction Strategy in 2001
and of the Law on the Fund for Poverty Reduction (Decree No. 70-2002), is concerned that the
degree of poverty in the country remains high, especially in the rural areas and that the poor
socio-economic situation of the country has a devastating impact on the standard of living of
children, particularly the lack of access to basic goods, health services and education.