Yinka Jegede-Ekpe

{{short description|Nigerian HIV/AIDS activist}}

{{Infobox person

|name = Yinka Jegede-Ekpe

|birth_date = {{birth year and age|1978}}

|birth_place = Nigeria

|occupation = HIV/AIDS Activist

|known_for = First Nigerian woman to come out as HIV-positive

|children = 3

|organization = The Nigerian Community of Women Living with HIV/AIDS

|awards = Reebok Human Rights Award (2004)

}}

Yinka Jegede-Ekpe (born {{circa}} 1978){{cite web |url=https://www.thenewhumanitarian.org/news/2007/04/25/positive-mother-speaks-out |title=Positive mother speaks out |date=27 April 2007 |access-date=June 3, 2020 |work=The New Humanitarian}} is a Nigerian HIV/AIDS activist. After being diagnosed as HIV-positive, she became the first Nigerian woman to publicly announce her status. She experienced discrimination and set up the Nigerian Community of Women Living With HIV/AIDS organisation to raise awareness of HIV/AIDS in Nigeria. In 2006, she gave birth to a healthy HIV-negative baby.

Early life

When she was 19 and living in the city of Ilesa, Nigeria, Jegede-Ekpe was concerned by rashes on her body and decided to take a blood test. She then found out that she was HIV-positive. After the blood test for her boyfriend (her only sexual partner) came back negative, she remembered a visit to a dentist who worked in unsanitary conditions and assumed she had come into contact with contaminated blood. In the early 2000s, Jegede-Ekpe decided to make her HIV-positive status public, which at the time was a controversial course of action. She was the first Nigerian woman to do this.{{cite news |title=Positive mother speaks out |url=http://www.thenewhumanitarian.org/news/2007/04/25/positive-mother-speaks-out |access-date=5 May 2020 |work=The New Humanitarian |date=25 April 2007 |language=en|publisher=United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs}} She experienced discrimination and was shunned by friends and colleagues fearful of HIV/AIDS: her choir refused to sing with her any more; she was studying medicine at Wesley Nursing School and the administration pressed her to stop. However, she continued to study and graduated as a nurse in 2001.{{cite news |last1=Donnelly |first1=John |title=A name, not a number - Taipei Times |url=https://www.taipeitimes.com/News/feat/archives/2004/03/10/2003101952 |access-date=5 May 2020 |work=Taipei Times |date=10 March 2004 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060901121324/http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/feat/archives/2004/03/10/2003101952 |archive-date=1 September 2006 |url-status=live }}

Career

Jegede-Ekpe became an activist raising awareness of HIV/AIDS in Nigeria and set up the Nigerian Community of Women Living With HIV/AIDS organisation. The organisation aimed to transmit information and to help the voices of women to be heard. It planned to set up funds to help women in crisis and to educate orphans.{{cite news |last1=Fleshman |first1=Michael |title=Women: the face of AIDS in Africa |work=Africa Renewal |url=https://www.un.org/africarenewal/magazine/october-2004/women-face-aids-africa |publisher=United Nations Department of Public Information |access-date=5 May 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190501143906/https://www.un.org/africarenewal/magazine/october-2004/women-face-aids-africa |archive-date=1 May 2019 |url-status=live }} She commented later that "when people like myself come out, you see the faces of the epidemic for the first time. I'm not a fact or figure. And they can see that people like me can live a normal life". As of 2004, nearly 6 percent of the Nigerian population (7 million people) had HIV/AIDS and 75 percent of all HIV-positive Africans aged between 15 and 24 were female.{{cite news |last1=Cunningham |first1=Carissa |title=Human rights award winner speaks at SPH |url=https://news.harvard.edu/gazette/story/2004/03/human-rights-award-winner-speaks-at-sph/ |access-date=5 May 2020 |work=Harvard Gazette |date=18 March 2004}} Speaking at the Harvard School of Public Health in Boston, Massachusetts, Jegede-Ekpe remarked that the HIV/AIDS epidemic in Nigeria would not be solved until women and men were treated equally.

Jegede-Ekpe became a consultant for UNICEF and in 2001 the organisation helped her to access antiretroviral drugs for her own health after a friend was shocked by her weight loss. She married a fellow campaigner who is also HIV-positive. In 2006, she gave birth to a healthy baby girl, who tested HIV-negative. In 2004, Jegede-Ekpe won a Reebok Human Rights Award for her work on HIV/AIDS awareness.{{cite news |author=W. W. D. Staff |title=Reebok's Human Rights Stars |url=https://wwd.com/business-news/media/reebok-8217-s-human-rights-stars-596505/ |access-date=5 May 2020 |work=WWD |date=7 May 2004 |language=en}}

See also

References

{{Reflist}}

Further reading

  • {{cite journal |last1=Bryant |first1=Elizabeth |url=http://connection.ebscohost.com/c/articles/13817335/q-yinka-jegede-ekpe |title=Q & A with: Yinka Jegede-Ekpe |journal=Ford Foundation Report |date=2004 |volume=35 |issue=2}}{{dead link|date=January 2025|bot=medic}}{{cbignore|bot=medic}}

{{Authority control}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Jegede-Ekpe, Yinka}}

Category:Living people

Category:Nigerian HIV/AIDS activists

Category:People with HIV/AIDS

Category:Nigerian women activists

Category:HIV/AIDS researchers

Category:1978 births

Category:21st-century Nigerian people

Category:21st-century Nigerian women