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HIV - AIDS Report
HIV infections slowing but
prevention gap persists
The rate of new HIV infections
worldwide has declined
by 17% in the past eight years
and prevention efforts can take
some of the credit, according
to the annual UNAIDS update
on the epidemic released on 24
November last year.
The report noted that while
the epidemic appeared to have stabilised in most parts of the
world, the number of people
living with HIV continued to
grow, reaching 33.4 million by
December 2008.
This was partly the result of
better access to life-prolonging
antiretroviral (ARV) treatment
– four million people, or
42% of those needing the
medication were receiving it
by the end of 2008 – but an
estimated 2.7 million new HIV
infections were added.
“There are clear signs that
HIV prevention methods are
beginning to make a difference,
but we’re still not
moving fast enough to keep
pace with this virus,” Paul De
Lay, UNAIDS deputy executive
director told journalists
during a telephonic press
briefing from Geneva.
ARV therapy is thought to
have saved around 2.9 million
lives, contributing to a 10%
drop in AIDS-related deaths in
the past five years, but AIDS
still claimed two million lives
in 2008, and for every two
people who started treatment,
five were newly infected.
De Lay warned that the
epidemic had changed in the
last decade, but prevention
responses had not evolved
accordingly. For example,
Asia’s epidemic had mainly
been concentrated among
injecting drug users, sex
workers and their clients, but
an increasing number of infections
were now occurring
among heterosexual couples.
In sub-Saharan Africa – still
the most heavily affected area,
accounting for 71% of all new
infections in 2008 – prevention
campaigns tended to overlook
older heterosexual
couples, despite evidence that
most new infections in many
countries were occurring in
this group. In Swaziland,
people older than 25 years
experienced two-thirds of new
infections, yet most prevention programmes targeted younger
people.
Although HIV surveillance
has become more sophisticated,
with more countries
conducting household surveys
to supplement HIV prevalence
data from antenatal clinics, De
Lay said there was still a lack of
understanding about evolving
transmission patterns and the
at-risk populations in need of
prevention services.
The UNAIDS update noted
that although heterosexual
intercourse was the primary
mode of HIV transmission in
sub-Saharan Africa, recent
evidence showed that
“epidemics in the region are
much more varied than previously
understood”, with a
considerable number of new
infections occurring among
men who have sex with men
and injecting drug users.
The report urged countries
to do a better job of matching
national AIDS strategies to individual epidemics, and De
Lay agreed: “We need to use
the resources available much
more effectively, particularly in
these times of economic crisis.”
Nevertheless, the report
recorded progress in several
areas: prevention of mother-tochild
HIV transmission
(PMTCT) services reached
45% of HIV-positive pregnant
women in 2008, averting an
estimated 200,000 infant
infections since 2001; in
several high-prevalence countries
the number of children
orphaned by HIV/AIDS
dropped because parents on
ARV treatment were living
longer.
Dr Teguest Guerma, acting
director of the World Health
Organisation’s HIV/AIDS
department, also speaking from
Geneva, emphasised that
international assistance to the
global AIDS response had
helped save lives, and that
there was a “moral imperative”
to extend and strengthen that
response.
UNAIDS Outlook 2010, a
companion report also released
on 24 November, noted that
AIDS funding reached a record
high of US$15.6 billion in
2008, with international assistance
accounting for 55%, and
that most of the money had
gone to sub-Saharan African
countries.
Whether these funding
levels will be sustained in the
current economic crisis is
unclear, but Outlook 2010
noted that many countries
were already experiencing
funding cuts for treatment and
prevention services.
“We cannot afford to let the
economic crisis paralyse us,”
said the report, quoting Michel
Sidibé, executive director of
UNAIDS. “Not when the
AIDS response is showing
results.” – IRIN 
Date
of upload: 26th Jan 2010
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