New York - A reduction of more than 50 per cent in the rate of new HIV infections has been
achieved across 25 low- and middle-income countries – more than half in Africa,
the region most affected by HIV – according to a new United Nations report,
which shows that unprecedented acceleration in the AIDS response is producing
results.
“The pace of progress is quickening – what used to take a decade is now being
achieved in 24 months,” the Executive Director of Joint United Nations Programme
on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS), Michel Sidibé,said in relation to the report,
“We are scaling up faster and smarter than ever before. It is the proof that
with political will and follow-through we can reach our shared goals by 2015,”
he added in a news release from UNAIDS, the lead UN agency dealing with the
global AIDS response.
According to <i>Results</i>, in some of the countries which have the highest HIV
prevalence in the world, rates of new HIV infections have been cut dramatically
since 2001 – by 73 per cent in Malawi, 71 per cent in Botswana, 68 per cent in
Namibia, 58 per cent in Zambia, 50 per cent in Zimbabwe and 41 per cent in South
Africa and Swaziland.
In addition, sub-Saharan Africa has reduced AIDS-related deaths by one third in
the last six years and increased the number of people on antiretroviral
treatment by 59 per cent in the last two years alone.
In particular, Mr. Sidibé cited South Africa as an example of the benefits of a
scaled-up response. It increased its scale-up of HIV treatment by 75 per cent
over the last two years – ensuring 1.7 million people had access to life-saving
treatment – and new HIV infections have fallen by more than 50,000 in just two
years. During this period, South Africa also increased its domestic investments
on AIDS to $1.6 billion, the highest by any low- and middle-income country.
The report also shows that countries are assuming shared responsibility by
increasing domestic investments in the response to the disease. More than 81
countries increased such investments by 50 per cent between 2001 and 2011.
The report comes days before World AIDS Day, which falls on 1 December, and as
the international community steps up efforts to achieve one of the anti-poverty
targets known as the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), which have a 2015
deadline for achieving them.
The MDGs were agreed on by world leaders at a UN summit in 2000 and set specific
targets on a range of issues including poverty alleviation and education, as
well as HIV/AIDS. The aims of the specific MDG that deals with the disease is to
halt and begin to reverse, by 2015, its spread.
In the area of reducing new HIV infections in children, the report finds that
much progress has been made, with half of the global reductions in new HIV
infections in the last two years having been among newborn children.
In the last two years, new HIV infections in children decreased by 24 per cent.
In six countries –Burundi, Kenya, Namibia, South Africa, Togo and Zambia – the
number of children newly infected with HIV fell by at least 40 per cent between
2009 and 2011.
“It is becoming evident that achieving zero new HIV infections in children is
possible,” said Mr Sidibé. “I am excited that far fewer babies are being born
with HIV. We are moving from despair to hope.”
Antiretroviral therapy has emerged as a powerful force for saving lives, the
report notes. In the last 24 months, the number of people accessing treatment
has increased by 63 per cent globally. In sub-Saharan Africa, a record 2.3
million people had access to treatment, while China has increased the number of
people on HIV treatment by nearly 50 per cent in the last year alone.
There were more than half a million fewer deaths in 2011 than in 2005, with the
largest drops in AIDS-related deaths being seen in countries where HIV has the
strongest grip – South Africa saw 100,000 fewer deaths, Zimbabwe nearly 90,000,
Kenya 71,000 and Ethiopia 48,000 less than in 2005.
In the area of investments in the global AIDS response, the report shows that
countries are increasing their investments despite a difficult economic climate.
The global gap in resources needed annually by 2015 now stands at 30 per cent.
In 2011, $16.8 billion was available and the need for 2015 is between $22-24
billion.
In 2011, for the first time ever, domestic investments from low- and
middle-income countries surpassed global giving for HIV. However, international
assistance, which has been stable in the past few years, remains a critical
lifeline for many countries, according to the report. In 26 of 33 countries in
sub-Saharan Africa, donor support accounts for more than half of HIV
investments.
"Results" notes that an estimated 6.8 million people are eligible for
treatment and do not have access. UNAIDS also estimates that an additional four
million discordant couples – where one partner is living with HIV – would
benefit from HIV treatment to protect their partners from HIV infection.
Of the 34 million people living with HIV, about half do not know their HIV
status. The report states that if more people knew their status, they could come
forward for HIV services.
In addition, there is an urgent need to improve HIV treatment retention rates;
reduce the cost of second- and third-line treatment; and explore new ways of
expanding and sustaining access to treatment, including domestic production of
medicines and innovative financing.
Despite the encouraging progress in stopping new HIV infections, the total
number of new HIV infections remains high – 2.5 million in 2011. The report
outlines that to reduce new HIV infections globally, combination HIV prevention
services need to be brought to scale.
“UNAIDS will focus on supporting countries to accelerate access to HIV testing
and treatment. Now that we know that rapid and massive scale up is possible, we
need to do more to reach key populations with crucial HIV services,” said Mr.
Sidibé.
New UN report finds rate of new HIV infections has fallen by half in 25 countries
Unpublished- Written by alib
- Category: Science
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