-Caveat Lector-

HIV spreading undeterred in Africa, Asia, U.N. report says

United Press International

NEW YORK (July 3, 2002 12:04 a.m. EDT) - United Nations officials predicted
Tuesday that by the year 2020, as many as 68 million people will die from
AIDS in the 45 most affected nations - five times the number of people
already killed by the worldwide epidemic.

Twenty years since it was first identified as a health threat, doctors said
the epidemic - despite already killing 13 million people and infecting an
additional 40 million men, women and children - is still in its early stages.


"Effective responses to this epidemic are possible," said Dr. Pete Piot,
executive director of UNAIDS, the Joint United National Programme on
HIV/AIDS, "but only when they are politically backed and full scale, and that
unless more is done today and tomorrow, the epidemic will continue to grow."


The report - a litany of bad news - describes the extent of infection with
the human immunodeficiency virus, the retrovirus that causes AIDS:

-In southern Africa, about 40 percent of pregnant women are infected with
HIV. Neff Walker, senior epidemiologist for UNAIDS, told UPI "Our previous
estimates were off by 30 to 50 percent. We thought that the epidemic in parts
of Southern Africa had peaked, but it didn't turn out that way." He said the
epidemic continues to grow and continues to confound the best estimates of
researchers.

-In Botswana, where 36 percent of adults were infected with HIV two years
ago, the rate rose to 39 percent in 2001. About 60 percent of women 25-29
years old are infected in Gaberone, the capital city.

-In West Africa, an apparent stability in the prevalence of HIV infection has
turned around - in the wrong direction. In Cameroon, the rate, which remained
around 5 percent from 1988 to 1996, is now approaching 12 percent.

-Belief that major Asian populations would be free of the epidemic have been
shattered with rising infection rates in Indonesia and China.

-Hopes that the epidemic would be confined to marginalized segments of the
drug injecting populations of Eastern Europe and Central Asia have proved
illusory as the epidemic is spreading into heterosexual populations.

Piot said that in 2001, UNAIDS estimated 5 million people were newly infected
with HIV - including 2 million women and 800,000 children under the age of
15. He said the number of people living with HIV/AIDS today includes 37.1
million adults and 3 million children. In 2001, 3 million people - including
580,000 children - died of the disease. The disease has left 14 million
children as orphans - having lost at least one parent to AIDS.

Even in the United States and Western Europe, officials continue to be
concerned about the epidemic. "In high-income countries," Piot said, "where
reduced AIDS mortality has made headlines in recent years, increases in
unsafe sex and in HIV infections have crept up almost unnoticed."

In these countries, drugs to treat the disease - but not cure it - are
generally available. But in the developing world, where 90 percent of the HIV
infected people live, only 4 percent have access to the drugs, reported Hein
Marais and Andrew Wilson, authors of the 225-page document, released just
prior to the 14th World AIDS Conference, which begins in Barcelona, Spain,
next week.

"While inaction has proved to be a deadly mistake, the evidence has never
been stronger that action against AIDS gets positive results," Piot said.

Not all the news is grim, however. The authors cited some success stories:

-The establishment of a program to provide anti-retroviral medications in
Brazil has reduced AIDS deaths to one-third of the rate in 1996 and similarly
has reduced health care costs. Also, new infections have decreased in South
America's largest nation.

-In Zambia, prevention programs have resulted in a fall of HIV infections
among pregnant urban women from 28.4 percent in 1993 to less than 15
percent in 1998.

-In Cambodia, a prevention and education campaign resulted in a reduction of
33 percent among pregnant women between 1997 and 2000.

-In Uganda, which once had double-digit infection rates, government programs
and citizen action continue to show the disease may be
controlled. Infection rates of 8.3 percent in 1999 have continued to fall to
less than 5 percent in 2001.

Despite these advances, Piot said, "The unprecedented destruction wrought by
the HIV/AIDS epidemic over the past 20 years will multiply
several times in the decades to come unless the fight against this disease is
dramatically expanded."

Piot urged nations with accelerating epidemics to move quickly to adopt
proven strategies from the countries that have succeeded in turning the
epidemic around.

"One reason we have had such a large epidemic has to be the lack of political
leadership," he commented. Although there are signs this is changing, Piot
said he was disappointed in the recent G8 summit, involving the major
economic powers, because no real commitment was made to attack the epidemic.



"If this were a dictatorship, it'd be a heck of a lot easier, just so
long as I'm the dictator."
 -GW Bush during a photo-op with Congressional leaders on
12/18/2000.
As broadcast on CNN and available in transcript on their website
http://www.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/0012/18/nd.01.html

Steve Wingate, Webmaster
ANOMALOUS IMAGES AND UFO FILES
http://www.anomalous-images.com

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