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AFRICA:
Time for a rethink on AIDS campaigns - UNAIDS
IRIN
News
December
01, 2006
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=56599
DAKAR - Friday is annual World AIDS
Day but despite a boom in publicity campaigns such as this one,
the disease continues to spread in Africa because basic details
about the illness are not reaching the right people, UNAIDS has
warned.
According to a report released last
week by the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS),
4.3 million new cases of HIV were registered in 2006 and 65 percent
of them were in Africa. Some three million people met an early death
because of HIV/AIDS in 2006, the report said.
In sub-Saharan Africa, there are 24.7
million people living with HIV/AIDS, five million more than in 2004.
A glimmer of hope comes from West Africa,
where except for Mali the prevalence shows signs of stabilising,
and in some cases even slowing.
Southern Africa remains the most affected
region, but isolated Zimbabwe has nonetheless registered a drop
in prevalence rates amongst pregnant women, the report said.
Prevention is the key, according to
UNAIDS.
"New data suggests that where HIV prevention
programmes have not been sustained and/or adapted as epidemics have
changed - infection rates are staying the same or going up," UNAIDS
said in a statement at the report’s release.
The report singled out Uganda as an
example both of possibilities and pitfalls. Often praised for reducing
its infection rate from 20 to six percent in ten years, thanks to
a voluntary prevention policy, Uganda is now showing a resurgence
in HIV/AIDS infections.
"This is worrying - as we know increased
HIV prevention programmes in these countries have shown progress
in the past - Uganda being a prime example," said Dr. Peter Piot,
executive director of UNAIDS. "This means that countries are not
moving at the same speed as their epidemics."
According to the UNAIDS report, "People
at highest risk - youths, women and girls, men who have sex with
men, sex workers and their clients, injecting drug users and ethnic
and cultural minorities - are not adequately reached through HIV
prevention and treatment strategies because not enough is known
about their particular situation."
The report did point towards healthier
sexual behaviour among youths, which it said contributed to a decline
in prevalence rates in youths between 2000 and 2005, especially
in Rwanda, Burundi and urban areas in Burkina Faso and Cote d'Ivoire.
But Piot said that is not enough. "Action
must not only be increased dramatically, but must also be strategic,
focused and sustainable to ensure that the money reaches those who
need it most," he said.
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