Abstract
This paper used accounts of professional caregivers to HIV/AIDS patients in Lomé, Togo, West Africa to explore the impacts of cultural, institutional and socio-economic factors in the fight against HIV/AIDS. Thirteen health professionals and 17 non-health professionals who work with people living with HIV/AIDS were interviewed in June and July 2002 in Lomé, Togo. The study found that, in Togo there are some cultural, socio-economic and institutional practices that put Togolese at risk of contracting HIV and complicate the care of those who become infected. People with HIV/ AIDS face socio-economic, emotional and psychological battles as they attempt to deal with their physical health and the social reactions to such a stigmatizing disease. Thus, in order to contain the spread of HIV/AIDS, people living with HIV/AIDS, family caregivers, traditional healers as well as the public must be educated about the importance of preventing the disease and how each group can help achieve success in its control. Interventions in prevention and care should be designed with an awareness of these structural factors that contribute to the spread of AIDS and compromise the quality of care given to those who become infected.