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AIDS epidemic grows unchecked
By Barry Mason
8 December 2001
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The United Nations (UN) has just issued its latest AIDS epidemic
update. It is now 20 years since the immunodeficiency syndrome
that came to be known as AIDS was first reported. In that time
the disease has wrought death and debilitation across the planet.
According to the UN in that 20 years more than 60 million people
have been infected with the AIDS virus. Worldwide it is the fourth
largest killer, whilst in sub-Saharan Africa it has become the
foremost cause of death. The report states that in the year 2001
there are 40 million people living with the disease, five million
people became infected and three million people died as a result
of AIDS.
The report picks out the course of the disease in various regions
of the world. Of the 40 million people with the disease, the majority
are in sub-Saharan Africa, which has 28 million, whilst in South
and South-East Asia there are over six million people with the
disease.
The report says of those in sub-Saharan Africa, Without
adequate treatment and care, most of them [AIDS victims] will
not survive the next decade. In surveys of antenatal clinics
in Botswana, Swaziland and parts of South Africa, there are HIV
prevalence levels of over 30 percent. Five West African countriesBurkina
Faso, Cameroon, Cote dIvoire, Nigeria and Togohave
adult prevalence levels in excess of five percent. Apart from
some isolated successes the overall picture is devastating.
The report points out that in spite of the dangers of the disease,
many young African women are unaware of them. UNICEF has found
that 70 percent of adolescent girls in Somalia have not heard
of AIDS, corresponding figures for Guinea-Bissau and Sierra Leone
are 40 percent. The report says, AIDS has become the biggest
threat to the continents redevelopment... essential services
are being depleted at the same time as state institutions and
resources come under greater strain...the risks of social unrest
and even socio-political instability should not be underestimated.
Eastern Europe and Central Asia, covering much of the area
that formed the Soviet Union and its East European satellite countries,
has experienced the fastest rise in levels of HIV infection. The
report states that much of this increase is due to drug use among
young people, the sharing of needles being commonplace, and the
increase in the number of sex workers. It cites a survey, which
shows condom use amongst sex workers (aged 17 to 23) in the Russian
Federation is erratic at best. The report says, Several
factors are creating a fertile setting for the epidemic: mass
unemployment and economic insecurity beset much of the region...
public health services are steadily disintegrating.
South and South East Asia has over six million people living
with the disease. Its prevalence is highest among drug users and
sex workers. Past experience has shown that these groups can act
as reservoirs for the disease which can easily spill out to the
rest of the population. The fear is that the prevalence of the
disease in this region could overtake that of Africa.
What are described as the high-income countries are also giving
cause for concern. The report states that the up-to-now successful
use of anti-retroviral drugs to cut AIDS related deaths has led
to misplaced perceptions that the disease can be cured. Consequently
there has been an increase in high-risk sexual behaviour. Within
this region there are variations in the levels of incidence related
to racial discrimination and health and income inequalities. It
states, In high-income countries there is evidence that
HIV is moving into poorer and more deprived communities.
In the USA African-Americans make up 47 percent of the AIDS cases
yet represent only 12 percent of the population.
Life expectancy in the worst affected countries is beginning
to drop sharply. In sub-Saharan Africa without the impact of AIDS
life expectancy would be 66. Instead it is 47. Twelve million
children were left orphaned by the disease up to the year 2000
and the figure is expected to double in the next decade. The disease
is also a big killer of children. In the Bahamas it is the cause
of 60 percent of deaths of under-fives, whilst in Zimbabwe the
figure is 70 percent.
In a section Coping with Crisis the report says,
Unequal access to affordable treatment and adequate health
services is one of the main factors accounting for drastically
different survival rates among those living with HIV/AIDS in rich
and poor countries and communities... Also indispensable are functioning
and affordable health systems. Massive international support is
needed to help countries meet that challenge.
Even the production of condoms is below the level needed to
prevent the disease spreading. Currently world production of condoms
is about eight billion. Experts estimate that to have an impact
on AIDS/HIV the world needs to manufacture three-times this amount.
UNAIDS estimate only three percent of sexually active people in
Africa use condoms.
Figures just released by the Nigerian government show the prevalence
of AIDS/HIV in Nigeria to be 5.8 percent of the adult population.
Stella Iwuagwu, executive director of the Centre for the Right
to Health, warned, Nigeria is the most populous country
to have crossed the five percent prevalence rate. That five percent
prevalence rate is called the threshold of disaster, because from
that point the epidemic begins to grow at an exponential rate.
Following an international AIDS summit hosted by Nigeria last
April, the government announced a programme making anti-retroviral
drugs available. There have now been three announcements, but
no programme. They are still planning, they are still verifying,
they are still doing a lot of research, meanwhile people are dying,
Iwuagwu said.
A group of 60 poor countries known as the Africa Group challenged
the World Trade Organisations Trade Related Intellectual
Property agreement (TRIP) at the WTO talks at Doha in November.
The Africa Group and its supporters wanted changes to the WTO
rules to allow poor countries to buy cheaper generic versions
of the vital drugs.
They attacked the hypocrisy of the American government, which
has been able to force the pharmaceutical firm Bayer to reduce
the cost of Cipro, the anti-anthrax drug, in response to the mailing
of infected envelopes, believed to have been carried out by right-wing
US extremists.
After extending the planned meeting by an extra day, the WTO
offered a limited concession over access to drugs for major epidemics
such as HIV/AIDS. The final statement allowed WTO member countries
to manufacture their own generic versions of drugs that are essential
for combating public health emergencies.
This confirms the existing arrangements the USA authorities
used to force Bayer to sell them Cipro at a reduced rate. The
new feature is that AIDS/HIV is explicitly named as a disease
that might be considered a public health emergency. In
practice, however, the new provision will have little effect on
the availability of drugs in most poor countries because they
do not have their own drug industries. The principal effect of
the declaration will to be to avoid a high-profile court case
between the drug companies and manufacturers of cheaper generic
versions of drugs in India and Brazil, which would have further
damaged the already tarnished image of the pharmaceutical industry.
Discussion of whether India and Brazil can legally export generic
drugs to other countries was postponed until next year. The only
country in sub-Saharan Africa with the ability to produce generic
AIDS/HIV drugs is South Africa. Even if the South African industry
began producing its own generics, other African countries could
not at present import them.
In an attempt to improve their public image some pharmaceutical
companies have begun to offer cut-price drugs to African countries.
But even then many of them are still too expensive. In Kenya the
government passed a law in June this year with the intention of
increasing availability of vital drugs, but even now the daily
cost of anti retroviral drugs (ARVs) in Kenya is between US$2.50
and US$5.00. The average income of a Kenyan is a dollar a day.
Dr Chris Ouma, of the NGO Action Aid working in Kenya, says that
since the law on access to cheaper drugs was passed 800,000 have
died of AIDS. Last year Merck began to offer its AIDS/HIV drugs
Crixivan and Stocrin to 100 countries for $600 and $500 a year
per person. In the US Crixivan costs about $6,000 a year per person
and Stocrin about $4,700. Charities and private insurers have
taken up the Merck program in Kenya and South Africa. Both have
seen dramatic increases in the number of people being treated.
But the figures only emphasise the appalling low levels of those
receiving the appropriate drugs. In Kenya there has been a fivefold
increase in the number of people receiving drug therapy, but that
has only taken the number to 1,000. In South Africa only 5,000
people have benefited from the scheme, but this is 20 times the
previous figure.
The Kenya Coalition for Access to Essential Medicines (KCAEM)
wants the life-saving treatment to be made available for all the
Kenyans that need it. Even at the reduced price, this would mean
spending one fifth of the entire Kenyan health ministrys
budget and cutting other programs, according to Health Minister
Sam Ongeri.
In South Africa, the legal action begun in August this year
by the Treatment Action Campaign received a boost this week when
the judge hearing the case said that he thought the anti-HIV drug
Nevirapine should be freely available.
The drug helps reduce the spread of the infection from mother
to unborn child. A German pharmaceutical firm, Boehringer, has
offered to provide it free of charge, but the South African government
has refused to accept the offer.
The use of Nevirapine would help reduce current numbers of
around 70,000 HIV positive children born each year. Even so, the
near five million adults and young people with HIV in South Africa
would still not receive the necessary drugs and treatment.
In April this year a Global Fund to fight AIDS, Tuberculosis
and Malaria was launched with a great fanfare of publicity. Most
experts agree that to combat these major killer diseases, it would
require an annual budget of $7-10 billion. Since its launch, $1.5
billion has been pledged to the fund and most of that has still
not materialised.
The US Congress originally agreed to allocate $1bn to the fund,
but this figure has now been cut to $190 million. Since the US
launched it so-called war against terror, the entire fund is under
threat and may be abandoned.
Six months after its launch the fund has no administrative
structures and has disbursed no money. Mark Curtis, Head of Policy
at the charity Christian Aid, has attacked the fund, pointing
out that it is not delivering new money... money is being
diverted from existing aid budgets. Worse than that, as the pledged
money remains unspent, it is actually reducing the money available.
A meeting of a consultative body of the fund in Baltimore in
October concluded that anti-AIDS drugs alone would not be enough
without an AIDS prevention program and public health services.
Dr John G Bartlett, chief of infectious diseases at the John Hopkins
School of Medicine, explained that anti-viral drugs were needed,
but we cant just dump therapy on these countries.
Trained workers are needed to ensure patients take their medicine,
for preventative measures, to stop mother to child infection and
for palliative care. The UN has identified AIDS as the greatest
health crisis on Earth, and the epidemic of AIDS threatens the
political, social and economic fabric of a substantial part of
the world, he said.
In the face of this disaster ministers from over 40 sub-Saharan
African countries met with top US government representatives at
the end of October. Instead of being offered debt relief or an
increase in the AIDS fund, they were subjected to lecturers from
President Bush and his top advisors.
The occasion was a forum meeting under the auspices of the
Africa Growth and Opportunity Act (AGOA) passed last year by the
US government. The measures of AGOA give duty free access to the
US for African goods. However, to be eligible countries have to
apply IMF adjustment programmes and allow US companies to penetrate
home markets.
The charity Global AIDS Alliance has calculated that to tackle
AIDS in sub-Saharan Africa alone would cost US$15bn a year. This
is only a little more than the $14.5bn that these countries pay
out each year to service their debts. Far from offering help to
the countries worst hit by AIDS, Western banks, governments and
the international financial institutions are actually depriving
sub-Saharan African countries of the resources they need to combat
the epidemic.
World leaders have written off the lives of millions of people.
Britains International Development Secretary Clare Short
argues that the Global AIDS fund should only be used for preventative
measures and not spent on drugs. She is prepared to deny the right
to life to all those already infected. Not only is this an offence
against these peoples democratic rights, it is an ineffective
approach to combating the disease. The French charity Medecins
sans Frontieres argues that prevention must be linked with
treatment. Unless treatment is made available, there will be no
incentive for potential victims to come forward for testing.
See Also:
South Africa: President Mbeki
again downplays AIDS epidemic
[17 September 2001]
South Africa: The
ANC government and the AIDS crisis
[5 July 2000]
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