Re: Halting HIV/AIDS Needs Bold Responses
- From: "the vet" <enob77@xxxxxxxxx>
- Date: 29 Nov 2005 16:11:46 -0800
HIV/AIDS will never be controlled until the unifected can avoid contact
with those who are HIV positive by knowing who they are. Instead, in
most countries, secrecy laws protect the HIV carrier's identity.---The
Vet .
Chim wrote:
> Halting HIV/AIDS Needs Bold Responses - World AIDS Day, 1 December
>
> MANILA, Philippines, Nov. 29 /Xinhua-PRNewswire/ -- Calling for genuine
> commitment and stronger political will, Dr Shigeru Omi, WHO Regional
> Director for the Western Pacific, today urged Member States "to act
> boldly and urgently" to change the course of the HIV/AIDS epidemic.
>
> (Logo: http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20040610/CNTH001LOGO )
>
> Despite measures designed to prevent the virus from spreading, 3
> million people worldwide were needlessly infected last year, adding to
> the 40 million already living with the virus.
>
> "We know what works and what doesn't. So why has the necessary action
> to prevent the virus from spreading not been taken?" Dr Omi asked. "Why
> is the epidemic still growing and not reversing?"
>
>
> In the last few years, a number of goals were set in response to
> HIV/AIDS:
> -- 2000 -- Millennium Development Goals (MDGs): To reverse the
> HIV/AIDS
> epidemic by 2015.
> -- 2001 -- The United Nations General Assembly (UNGASS) Declaration
> of
> Commitment: To reduce HIV prevalence by 25% among people in the
> 15- to
> 24-year-old age bracket in the most affected countries; to
> reduce by
> 20% the number of babies infected through mother-to-child
> transmission;
> and to ensure that at least 90% of young people (aged 15-24
> years) have
> the information, education, service and life skills that will
> enable
> them to reduce their vulnerability to HIV infection.
> -- 2003 -- The 3 by 5 Initiative: To provide access to
> antiretroviral
> treatment to 3 million people living with HIV in developing
> countries
> by the end of 2005.
> In response and in line with the commitments made, World AIDS Day's
> theme this year, Stop AIDS. Keep the Promise, calls on Member States to
> review progress on the targets and to speed up action to stop HIV from
> spreading further. World AIDS Day is 1 December.
>
> The theme is a call for accountability. "What was done or not done. The
> failure to respond can also provide lessons," Dr Omi said. "It is
> becoming increasingly clear that with sufficient will and resources, we
> can turn this epidemic around."
>
> Although there have been dramatic developments in political commitment,
> the provision and treatment, and funding, fewer than one in five
> infected people has access to basic HIV prevention programmes
> worldwide.
>
> For example, only a few governments in the Western Pacific have
> effective interventions to prevent the spread of HIV through injecting
> drug use, despite it being a major route of HIV transmission in the
> Region.
>
> Despite the MDG target of stopping the spread of AIDS by 2015, the
> epidemic continues to grow, not reverse, in many countries, with
> further expansion likely. "With 10 more years to go, the target can be
> met, but only if bold responses focused on vulnerable groups are
> taken," Dr Omi stressed.
>
> Many UNGASS strategies have a 2005 target for implementation, making it
> necessary to review progress and see if promises have been kept. While
> not legally binding, UNGASS set a clear framework for action that
> leaders had agreed to uphold.
>
> Progress has been made with access to antiretroviral therapy (ART). By
> June 2005, almost 1 million people globally were receiving ART in
> developing countries. In Asia, the number of people receiving treatment
> increased by 50% in the first half of 2005 to 150 000, covering roughly
> one in seven of those who need it. Despite the progress, the 3 by 5
> Initiative is still short of its targets.
>
> All member countries of the United Nations have agreed to meet the
> UNGASS and MDG targets. Said Dr Omi: "These promises need to be
> translated into effective action. Political momentum has to be scaled
> up to meet national targets."
>
>
> For more information, please contact:
> Dr Bernard Fabre-Teste,
> Regional Adviser in Sexually Transmitted Infections including
> HIV/AIDS
> Tel: +63-2-528-9714
> Email: fabretesteb@xxxxxxxxxxxx
> Facts and Figures
> General situation
> -- About 40 million people are living with HIV/AIDS globally.
> -- More than 20 million people have died of AIDS.
> -- Women account for nearly half of all people living with the
> virus
> worldwide and nearly 30% of all infected people in Asia.
> -- More than 6000 people contract the virus every day.
> -- Donor funding for HIV/AIDS has increased 20-fold since 1996 to
> US$ 6
> billion in 2004.
> -- AIDS is the leading cause of death of people aged 15 to 49
> years
> worldwide.
> -- In some countries, average life expectancy has fallen by a
> decade
> because of HIV/AIDS.
> Regional situation
> -- About 1.5 million people are living with HIV/AIDS in the
> Western
> Pacific Region.
> -- Drug use and sex work are the driving the epidemic across the
> Western
> Pacific Region, yet there are few interventions to address
> these
> problems.
> -- Nearly all countries in the Region have concentrated epidemics
> among
> people practising high-risk behaviour. Cambodia and Papua New
> Guinea
> are the only two countries with a generalized epidemic (defined
> as
> more than 1% prevalence among the adult population.)
> -- The virus has spread to all 31 provinces and autonomous regions
> in
> China.
> -- Cambodia has the highest national HIV prevalence rate in Asia,
> at 2.6%
> of the general population.
> -- In 2003 in Cambodia, an estimated 3% of men and 2% of women
> were
> living with HIV.
> -- Estimates indicate that nearly 30% of sex workers in Cambodia
> were
> HIV-positive.
> -- If nothing is done to promote HIV prevention, some 10 million
> Chinese
> may be infected by 2010.
> -- Injecting drug use is the main route of HIV transmission in
> China,
> Malaysia and Viet Nam.
> -- In Malaysia, three quarters of all reported HIV infections were
> contracted via injecting drug use.
> SOURCE World Health Organization
>
>
> 11/29/2005 07:20 ET
>
> Copyright © 1996-2005 PR Newswire Association LLC. All rights
> reserved.
.
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- Halting HIV/AIDS Needs Bold Responses
- From: Chim
- Halting HIV/AIDS Needs Bold Responses
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