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Progress
in Zimbabwe's HIV/AIDS battle
Michael
Fleshman, Africa Renewal
Extracted from Africa Renewal, Vol.19 #4 (January 2006)
January 2006
http://www.un.org/ecosocdev/geninfo/afrec/vol19no4/194aids.html
Despite serious
economic and political challenges, Zimbabwe has become only the
second country in sub-Saharan Africa to significantly slow the spread
of HIV, the human immunodeficiency virus that causes AIDS. In a
brief press statement on 10 October, the Joint UN Programme on HIV/AIDS
(UNAIDS) announced that infection rates among a particularly vulnerable
group — pregnant women — declined from 24.6 per cent in 2002 to
21.3 per cent in 2004.
The findings
are good news in a country with one of the highest HIV infection
rates in the world. It is an indication, UNAIDS Advocacy, Communication
and Leadership Director Achmat Dangor said, that education and prevention
programmes launched during the 1990s are beginning to show results.
"For us," he noted, "that is very significant."
During an exclusive
interview with Africa Renewal in New York in late October,
Mr. Dangor, a noted South African novelist and former head of the
Nelson Mandela Foundation, also reported that infection rates among
young people, another group at high risk, have dropped even further,
from about 25 to 20 per cent.
Despite the
impressive progress, he cautioned, "this is no reason for complacency.
Zimbabwe still has one of the highest HIV prevalence rates in the
world." The challenge now, he said, is to build on those gains.
Pinpointing
the causes
Zimbabwe
is only the second African country, after Uganda, to reduce very
high HIV rates through education and prevention. Continued reductions
in Zimbabwe, which is at the geographic and epidemiological centre
of the AIDS pandemic in Africa, could mark a turning point in the
struggle against the disease and offer valuable lessons to other
countries in the region.
Given the difficult
circumstances in Zimbabwe, Mr. Dangor said, when evidence of a decline
in new infections began to arrive, "we were skeptical at first."
UNAIDS commissioned the Imperial College in London to review data
from a wide variety of sources — including government reports and
research by the US Centres for Disease Control — to confirm that
there had been a real fall in infections, rather than an increase
in mortality rates or some other statistical quirk.
"All reviews
tell us that mortality does play a role [in prevalence rates], but
that level of decline cannot be accounted for by outward migration
or mortality," he asserted. "The death rate would have
had to quadruple, in fact," to be the sole cause of the decline.
The challenge now is to find out what aspects of Zimbabwe’s anti-AIDS
programme are responsible for the improvements. "At this stage
we cannot pinpoint what the scientists call the ‘specific programme
interventions’" behind the decline, he explained. "We
are now looking at the major programmes, governmental and non-governmental,
urban and rural, to see if we can identify them."
Ideology
out, ownership in
Early
analysis suggests that behavioural changes, including young people
waiting longer before becoming sexually active, fewer casual sex
partners and increased use of condoms, are parts of the explanation.
But Mr. Dangor also pointed out that Zimbabwe’s strong education
system, its emphasis on district and community management of AIDS
programmes and improvements in the status of women since independence
in 1980 could also be factors.
"We have
ABC," he said, referring to Uganda’s successful Abstain, Be
faithful or use a Condom campaign. "If I could add another
letter it would be ‘W’ for women, because we will never defeat AIDS
in Africa until we empower the women. These things must become embedded
in every activity of government at every level."
The country’s
progress cannot be explained by an abundance of external resources.
Neighbouring Zambia received $187 in aid for every HIV-positive
citizen in 2004, whereas Zimbabwe’s strained relations with some
donors meant that it received just $4 per person, according to the
World Bank. But even that, Mr. Dangor said, offers an important
lesson. "You do not have to wait for a massive amount of external
funding to contain the spread of HIV." As vital as resources
for prevention, care and treatment are, he continued, "what
is even more important is that countries own both the problem and
the solution, instead of the targets and the programmes coming from
outside."
The country’s
struggling AIDS treatment programmes, however, have been particularly
affected by the lack of funds. Only 15,000 of an estimated 300,000
Zimbabweans in urgent need of the anti-retroviral drugs (ARVs) that
attack the AIDS virus currently have access to them. With little
external financing available and foreign currency shortages hampering
imports, patient costs have soared, despite government subsidies,
from US$7.60 to $50 per month — beyond the means of most.
"AIDS will
be with us for many years — maybe forever," Mr. Dangor concluded.
"If governments of affected countries, donors and civil society
can just remove AIDS from the party political arena, the ideological
arena, I think we have a chance of containing this disease much
quicker."
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