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HIV/AIDS epidemic in rural China
By John Chan
6 August 2001
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As many as half a million people may be infected with HIV/AIDS
in the rural Chinese province of Henan. Tens of thousands of poor
peasants, struggling to survive on incomes of a few hundred dollars
a year, became infected while selling their blood to profit-making,
blood-collecting agencies and have spread the disease due to ignorance.
According to the July issue of the Chinese-language magazine
Cheng Ming, the Henan provincial health council decided
in 1993 to establish blood collection networks among rural communities.
A government official declared in a report: We must develop
third industry such as blood stations. Henan has a
population of nearly 90 million, of whom 80 percent are peasants.
Even if there are only one to three percent of these 70 million
peasants willing to sell blood once or twice a year, we will be
able to collect this blood for biomedical companies, and can create
millions in value.
Over subsequent years, at least 200 legal blood stations and
an unknown number of illegal stations were set up under this official
policy. The operators were generally government bodies, such as
hospitals, or private entrepreneurs connected with government
officials. Peasants were encouraged to sell blood for around $US5
per 400cc. Blood plasma was sold on to biomedical companies operating
in Shanghai and other major cities, which utilised it to manufacture
medicines.
With ample evidence already existing internationally as to
how HIV/AIDS was transmitted, the methods employed in the blood
stations were nothing less than criminal. According to a June
20 account in the Japan Times, they collected at
one time from a number of donors who share the same blood type.
Afterward, the blood is pooled, the components needed for medical
use are separated and the remaining blood is divided up and re-infused
into the original donors. This unsafe procedure exposes people
to the blood of six to 12 other donors every time they donate,
facilitating the spread of not only HIV but hepatitis and other
serious diseases. There are recorded cases of people giving
blood several times in a single month.
By 1996 the first evidence was surfacing of severe rates of
HIV infection in the rural areas where blood sale was prevalent.
It was not until 1998, however, that the central government in
Beijing banned the practice. By that time it was too late for
thousands of villagers across Henan.
Both Chinese and international news services have exposed the
situation in the village of Wenlou, in the Henan county of Shangchai,
where blood donation became a major source of income in the mid-1990s.
According to an Agence France Presse report last November,
30 villagers had died of AIDS in the previous two years, and 10
more were dying, out of a population of just 800. A test of 155
villagers found that 95 were HIV-positivea calamitous infection
rate of 65 percent.
A Wenlou woman told Reuters that villagers sold their
blood to a local hospital. They told us it was harmless
to sell blood, so we believed [them]. If they told us that it
could cause AIDS, nobody would ever sell their blood. We dont
have any hope, we dont have any money or medicine. We are
waiting to die. We hope the person who is responsible for this
tragedy, the blood collector, will be arrested.
Another woman, whose daughter had already died and whose son
was dying of AIDS, told AFP: My daughter and son
began donating blood when they were 15 and 16 years old. My son
didnt want me to do it because my health was poor. For each
time he donated blood, we bought a large wooden beam to build
the roof. Other villagers relied on the sale of their blood
to pay taxes or their childrens school fees or simply to
make ends meet.
In May, the New York Times ran an investigative report
on the crisis in the Henan village of Donghu, in the county of
Xincai. Three blood-collecting agencies operated in the county,
including one run by a military-owned business. During December
alone, 14 villagers died of AIDS. The infection rate among Donghus
4,500 residents was estimated to be 80 percent. Other villages
in the region were believed to be similarly afflicted. A Henan
doctor told the newspaper: Ive been a doctor for many
decades, but I never cried until I saw these villages.
Aggravating the health risks was the lack of understanding
throughout rural China that HIV could be spread by sexual intercourse,
breast-feeding or used syringes. The steady flow of infected persons
to other villages, towns and cities ensured that the HIV crisis
in rural Henan did not remain localised.
By the late 1990s, doctors and medical experts were making
sustained efforts to alert government authorities about the AIDS
epidemic and calling for a concerted campaign of education and
treatment. They universally confronted obstruction. A report to
the national government by a committee of medical experts damned
the regime for its inaction at the beginning of this year. It
declared: Owing to government indifference, AIDS prevention
and control is gravely ineffective.
From its beginnings in 1949, the Chinese Stalinist state has
reinforced ideological and cultural backwardness. Homosexuality
was outlawed and deemed a mental disorder. Its response to HIV/AIDS
has been the same combination of reactionary moralising and bureaucratic
edicts.
No sustained nation-wide education program has been conducted
to explain the nature of HIV. Rather, the regime has promoted
popular prejudices that it is caused by immoral living. Such is
the narrow conservatism of the ruling elite that the first national
advertisement promoting the use of condoms to prevent HIV was
banned within two days for illegally promoting sex products.
Instead of education to prevent the spread of HIV/AIDS, authorities
have responded with almost medieval superstition and persecution.
According to Wall Street Journal of March 23, the Beijing
city government adopted a law that stipulates that bodies
of people who died from AIDS must be cremated immediately and
not moved out of the city.
The Hebei provincial government introduced legislation decreeing:
Those with sexually transmitted diseases who have not been
cured cannot join the military, enter school, recruit workers
or get married, cannot obtain permission to have a child, cannot
work in child care, food-related or service industries, etc.,
and those already in those fields must be transferred.
The result is an appalling degree of ignorance. A survey conducted
by the Guangming Daily showed that, even in a relatively
developed area of China, 45 percent of persons aged 20-64 did
not think using a condom could help prevent AIDS. More than 50
percent of respondents thought that they could be infected if
they used the chopsticks and bowls that an HIV person had used,
or that it could be contracting through sneezing and even hand
shaking.
The situation in Henan and the plight of thousands of poor
peasants dying without access to even basic medicines has forced
Beijing to finally acknowledge the dimensions of Chinas
AIDS crisis. In late June the Health Ministry increased its estimate
of HIV-positive cases 15-fold, from 22,517 to over 600,000. It
has since admitted that two-thirds live in rural areas and that
71.2 percent contracted the virus through blood transmission.
The United Nations is predicting China will have at least 10 million
HIV cases by 2010.
Even so, the government is not implementing any serious measures
to combat its spread or alleviate the suffering. An AIDS
Control and Prevention Program launched on August 3 is so
conservative in its scope that by 2003 a quarter of major hospitals
will still not be able to diagnose HIV or provide treatment. Just
$US14 million will be spent per year for the next five years to
finance increased AIDS educationor 85 cents per person in
China. This compares with the estimated $US20 billion to be spent
on infrastructure for the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games.
See Also:
UN AIDS Conference ends as
a fiasco
[9 July 2001]
AIDS becomes a serious health
problem in India
[4 May 2001]
AIDS in Africa: an
indictment of an outmoded social order
[16 August 2000]
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