Wednesday, July 30, 2008

UN report: 140,000 new HIV carriers in Latin America in 2007

http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2008-07/30/content_8857753.htm

2008-07-30 15:46:40

MEXICO CITY, July 29 (Xinhua) -- A total of 140,000 people were infected with HIV last year in Latin America, bringing the total number of HIV carriers in the region to 1.7 million, according to a UN report published Tuesday.

Some 63,000 people died in 2007 in the region as a result of AIDS caused by HIV, said the director of the Joint UN Program on HIV-Aids (UNAIDS) for Latin America, Cesar Nunez, at a press conference in the United Nations office in Mexico City.

The situation was the worst in two of Latin America's most populated countries, Brazil and Mexico, which reported 730,000 and200,000 HIV-positive people in 2007, he added.

In Brazil, some 184,000 people are currently under anti-retroviral treatment, with 30,000 new cases registered and some 11,000 deaths annually, according to the Global Report on the AIDS Epidemic 2008.

Eduardo Barbosa, coordinator of the Brazilian Program of Sexually Transmitted Diseases, said the Brazilian government faces challenges in widening AIDS testing and treatment to a larger scale, and in ending prejudice that leads many infected people to avoid looking for medical help.

However, Nunez said the HIV epidemic is more or less stable in Latin America, with few changes in the past 10 years.

But he added that HIV was still spreading in the region, mainly through same-sex intercourse, prostitution and use of intravenous drugs.

HIV carriers worldwide numbered an estimated 33 million in 2007.

Editor: Sun Yunlong

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http://www.monstersandcritics.com/news/health/news/article_1420011.php/PREVIEW_AIDS_conference_chief_Prevention_still_best_hope_August_3-8_in_Mexico_City

Health News

PREVIEW: AIDS conference chief: Prevention still best hope August 3-8 in Mexico City

By Itzel Zuniga Jul 29, 2008, 5:08 GMT

Mexico City - The scientist who will serve as co-president of the XVII International AIDS Conference from August 3 to 8 in Mexico City says it is high time the biennial conference comes to the region - and emphasizes the importance of the theme, 'Universal Action Now.'

'The last word is important, because we all have to act together and we have to act now,' Luis E Soto-Ramirez told Deutsche Presse- Agentur dpa.

Soto-Ramirez, head of molecular virology at the department of infectious diseases in Mexico's National Institute of Medical Science, stressed the need to get priorities right in the fight against AIDS, and noted that 'the world has wasted a lot of time.'

'We do not have a vaccine, we do not have a cure. But with the weapons we have today we can do a global campaign for prevention first and treatment second. That is something the world is unfortunately looking at the wrong way around, and that is a serious mistake,' Soto-Ramirez said.

Scientists have tried new things and learned from mistakes, he said, but he admitted there is 'stagnation' and that the current vaccine research is based on the wrong ideas.

His comments echoed the recent decisions by Merck pharmaceuticals and the US publicly-funded AIDS research institute to suspend further testing of two unconventional vaccines which aimed to reduce the HIV count in people who became infected. Those vaccines emerged after decades of frustration in the search for a traditional vaccine to induce antibodies against the virus.

'If you inject HIV in millions of people, they are going to 'misbehave,' to have irresponsible sex, because they feel protected. This is going to lead to re-combinations of the virus, and (the vaccine) stops working,' Soto-Ramirez told dpa.

The conference co-chair called for an equilibrium between private and public initiatives, so that they would continue to fund crucial vaccine research.

'In apocalyptic scenarios, if you create an effective vaccine you are going to sell it to Europe, the United States and Canada. And what about everyone else? The creators are going to end up giving the patent to the World Health Organization for free, because African governments will not be able to buy it for all their inhabitants. So it is not a (private) business, it is a business for humanity.'

The United Nations says the numbers of AIDS deaths and infections have declined in the last decade, but new infections worldwide have far outpaced efforts to provide anti-retroviral treatment to patients.

UN health programmes provided anti-retroviral treatment to an additional 1 million people in 2007, but in the same year a total of 2.5 million people became infected with the AIDS virus.

Africa still has the lion's share of the world's 33.2 million HIV/AIDS cases, and 'the data that are issuing from India and China really are shocking,' Soto-Ramirez noted.

But he is critical of the fact that it has taken so long for the conference to come to Latin America, which he says is 'half way' compared with the rest of the world.

'We are not Africa, with virtually no access to treatment and so many cases. But we are also not the developed country which has open access to medication, with no cost impacts,' he said.

'We are in an intermediate part with very particular problems. Migration and AIDS and HIV is one of them.'

'Given that so many in Latin America and the Caribbean have died from HIV/AIDS and have fought this disease with the same enthusiasm and passion as in any part of Africa and Asia, there seems no justification for this lack of attention,' he wrote in a recent editorial in Science magazine.

Latin America's AIDS epidemic varies by country and population - a reflection of the cultural, ethnic and geographic diversity of Latin America and the Caribbean.

The largest number of HIV cases are through sexual transmission, generally among the most vulnerable populations, such as prostitutes in Honduras, Suriname, Guyana, Guatemala and El Salvador.

Men who have sex with men represent a quarter of the new infections in Latin America and half of the new cases in Brazil, while the Caribbean countries have a mainly heterosexual epidemic partly due to the demand for sexual tourism, according to the non- profit Kaiser Family Foundation.

The Caribbean is the second-most affected region in the world after Africa, with an HIV prevalence of 1 per cent of the population. That same rate prevails in smaller countries in the region such as Honduras, Panama, El Salvador and Guatemala.

The region as a whole grapples with complex issues related to poverty, migration, absence of leadership in some countries, homophobia, gender-based violence, little research on HIV transmission patterns and the resistance to promote condoms.

Since HIV is largely sexually transmitted, condoms are 'the only functioning method' of prevention, Soto-Ramirez said.

'Therein lies the first factor that blocks all efforts - the individuality of each person's sexuality. Everyone exercises sexuality in a different way. Sex is instinctive, and it sometimes pulls us away from logical reasoning,' he said.

'To this, you have to add other aspects that surround sexuality, like moral aspects, religion, social stigmatization. Homosexuality remains very stigmatized still.'

He saw a 'greater danger' in what he termed 'non-permissive societies,' among which he singled out the Muslim world, because they provide 'fewer chances for protection.'


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Come Together and Create!
Peter S. Lopez ~ aka:Peta
Sacramento, California, Aztlan
Email: sacranative@yahoo.com
C/S

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