Michael Carter, Monday, November 21, 2005
Over 40 million people are living with HIV worldwide, according to figures released by UNAIDS,
who estimate that there were 5 million new infections in 2005.
A 25% leap in the number of new infections was recorded in Eastern Europe and Central Asia, and
increases were seen in every other region of the world with the exception of the Caribbean.
However, UNAIDS highlights evidence that prevention efforts are working in certain parts of the
world. "Increased condom use, delay in first sexual experience and fewer sexual partners" have
led to a fall in overall HIV prevalence in parts of Kenya, Zimbabwe and the Caribbean region
according to UNAIDS. Although the latest prevalence figures apparently show the success of the
ABC prevention model - abstain, be faithful, use a condom- UNAIDS conceded that "increased
mortality also led to a drop in HIV prevalence."
Nevertheless, in Zimbabwe testing of pregnant women suggested that HIV prevalence had fallen
from 26% to 21%, and voluntary testing and counselling programmes and increased availability of
condoms were helping to promote HIV prevention in the Caribbean where the latest prevalence
figures were grounds for "guarded optimism."
Proven models of HIV prevention praised by UNAIDS included youth-targeted initiatives in
Uganda, work with gay and bisexual men in western countries, programmes for sex workers in
South East Asia, and Spain's HIV and hepatitis prevention schemes for injecting drug users.
Despite some notable successes, UNAIDS stressed that HIV prevention remained patchy worldwide
and that only 10% of HIV-positive individuals knew that they were infected with the virus.
Comprehensive HIV prevention programmes could prevention 55% of all new HIV infections southern
Africa in the next 15 years, UNAIDS estimates.
"We are encouraged by the gains that have been made by some countries and by the fact that
sustained HIV prevention gains have played a key part in bringing down infections. But the
reality is that the AIDS epidemic continues to outstrip global and national efforts to contain
it," said Dr Peter Piot, executive director of UNAIDS. "It is clear that a rapid increase in
the scale and scope of HIV prevention programmes is urgently needed. We must move from small
projects with short-term horizons to long-term, comprehensive strategies," he added.
The latest UNAIDS data also furnished further evidence of the feminisation of the HIV epidemic,
with an estimated 17.5 million women living with HIV worldwide. Figures from UNAIDS also show
how HIV prevention campaigns which only stress sexual abstinence or fidelity would do little to
protect many women from infection, "among women surveyed in Harare, Durban and Soweto, 66%
reported having only one lifetime partner, 79% had abstained from sex until the age of 17, yet
40% of young women were HIV-positive."
Although more people than ever before received antiretroviral treatment in 2005, only a
fraction of people who needed treated were receiving it. In southern Africa, only 10% of
HIV-positive individuals were treated with anti-HIV drugs this year, and only marginally more -
one in seven - received antiretroviral therapy in Asia. Most of the 3 million HIV-related
deaths which occurred in 2005 could have been prevented with appropriate HIV treatment, UNAIDS
stresses. However, thanks to treatment access programmes including the "3 X 5" initiate between
250,000 and 350,000 HIV deaths were prevented due to improved access to anti-HIV drugs last
year.
UNAIDS also stressed that HIV prevention and treatment initiates were mutually reinforcing,
with the provision of treatment offering an incentive to test. Indeed UNAIDS highlighted how
some voluntary testing and counselling programmes in Uganda were closing due to lack of demand
until antiretroviral therapy became available. In addition, treatment can also help change
perceptions of HIV according to UNAIDS by helping to fight the belief that the virus inevitably
leads to death and counter the stigma and discrimination that often accompanies the disease.
Other serious illness can also be diagnosed and treated as part of antiretroviral treatment
programmes, emphasise UNAIDS, including tuberculosis, malaria and sexually transmitted
infections, all of which causes significant amounts of illness and death in HIV-positive
people. Finally UNAIDS emphasised that HIV treatment can lower the infectiousness of
HIV-positive individuals and by reducing new HIV infections, lower demand for already
over-stretched health services.
"We can now see the clear benefit of scaling up HIV treatment and prevention together", said Dr
Lee Jong-wook of the World Health Organization, "treatment availability provides a powerful
incentive for governments to support, and individuals to seek out, HIV information and
voluntary testing and counselling. Effective prevention can also help reduce the number of
individuals who will ultimately require care, making broad access to treatment more achievable
and sustainable."
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Susie, age 9 - 23 Nov 2005 02:52 GMT
> Michael Carter, Monday, November 21, 2005
>
> Over 40 million people are living with HIV worldwide, according to figures
> released by UNAIDS,
> who estimate that there were 5 million new infections in 2005.
A vast predominantly heterosexual disease worldwide.
Perverts got it coming to them!
> A 25% leap in the number of new infections was recorded in Eastern Europe
> and Central Asia, and
> increases were seen in every other region of the world with the exception
> of the Caribbean.
Again, heterosexual perverts.
In the Caribbean, Cuba has removed HIV through quarantine. But UNAIDS ain't
talking
about that embarassing little reality, now are they?
susie
Death - 23 Nov 2005 05:11 GMT
"Susie, age 9" <nomail@noway.com> wrote in message
> Perverts got it coming to them!
My sentiment exactly