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WSWS : News
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: India
AIDS becomes a serious health problem in India
By Deepal Jayasekera
4 May 2001
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AIDS is rapidly becoming a major health crisis in India, which
the government is only beginning to address in a limited fashion.
The real extent of the disease and its impact are not known but
various estimates put the number of deaths a year in the six-digit
realm. The World Health Organisation (WHO) publication Epidemiological
Fact Sheet on HIV/AIDS and sexually transmitted infections
(2000 update) estimated that a staggering 310,000 adults and children
died of AIDS during 1999.
According to the latest figures released by Indian Department
of Health on March 20, the number of adults believed to be HIV-positive
was 3.86 million in 2000. UNAIDS estimated that 5 million people
were HIV-positive in India at end of 1998 and WHO put the number
at 4 million. If one expresses the WHO figure as a percentage,
then 0.4 percent of the population or 0.7 percent of the adult
population are HIV-positive. Although the rate is less than 1
percent, the sheer volume of HIV-infected people makes India second
only to South Africa in terms of overall numbers. India is now
home to 12 percent of the HIV-positive people in the world.
The number of identified cases of HIV-infection is relatively
low as a result of serious underreporting due to general ignorance
of the disease, cultural taboos and other factors. According to
the government's National AIDS Control Organisation (NACO), the
number of reported cases from 1986 to February 2001 was just 19,115.
NACO stopped publishing the data explaining that there was gross
under-reporting of HIV infections and the data was therefore
of limited value.
The surveillance studies done by the NACO reveal a dangerous
spread of the disease. Over five years, HIV infection has grown
from 1 percent to 51 percent among commercial sex workers in Bombay
in Western India and from 1 percent to 55.8 percent among drug
users in North-East State of Manipur. Among truck drivers in Tiruchi
in the south Indian state of Tamil Nadu, the rate jumped 2.7 percent
to 5 percent in just two years.
Dr Rajan Gupta, a nuclear physicist at Los Alamos National
Lab in the US, who is concerned at the spread of AIDS in India
warned of a disaster: Given the current conservative numbers
of HIV-positive individuals (UNAIDS estimates 5 million HIV positive
people in India at end of 1998) and doubling every 2-3 years means
that there will be 50 million by 2007 and 100 million by 2010.
This is one in 10 people, i.e. on average one in every family.
Also, it is important to realise that all socio-economic levels
are already affected. Thus life as we know of will cease to exist
by year 2010, if not sooner.
A World Bank report published in September 1999 entitled India's
National AIDS Control Program warned: By early in
the next century, India will have the highest number of AIDS cases
in the world. Even if HIV infection reaches the low' level
of five percent seen in many other countries, more than 37 million
Indians would be HIV-infected.
Poverty and inadequate health services are contributing to
the spread of the disease. The same World Bank report pointed
out: HIV infection in India is concentrated among poor,
marginalised groups, including commercial sex workers, truck drivers,
migrant laborers, men having sex with men, and injecting drug
users.
Originally confined in the 1980s to prostitutes and their clientsmostly
long-distance truck drivers and migrant workersHIV-infection
spread to the general population in the early 1990s. By the mid-1990s,
the first cases of children born HIV-positive began to appear.
Narcotic drug users are at high risk through the use of unsterilised
needles.
The HIV virus is also transmitted in hospitals and health centres
through blood transfusions, the use of unsterilised needles for
intravenous drips and unsterilised surgical instruments in operations.
According to the Bulletin of the WHO, Volume 77, No.10,
1999, the level of unsafe injections in India is estimated as
50 percent.
While the World Bank claims that the Indian government has
taken extensive measures to prevent HIV-infection through blood
transfusion, Dr Gupta comments: An Indian government study
based on data from HIV sentinel survey centres concludes that
about 10 percent of HIV infections are due to blood, blood products,
surgical instruments and needles... To me the more telling statement
of the severity of the risk is that, today, no educated and well-to-do
person is willing to go to a hospital, especially a government
hospital, and accept a blood transfusion unless they personally
know a doctor there who will pull the ropes and do the checks.
Although government regulations require the screening of blood
and the use of sterilised needles and surgical instruments, the
rules are not strictly adhered to as result of the lack of funding.
According to a World Bank report published in January 2000: In
health, India's public spending is very low: an estimated 1.2
percent of its GDP. This figure places India among the lowest
quintile of countries, and on a per capita basis, is far less
than the amount recommended to provide basic services by the World
Development Report 1993. The report also pointed out that
of the total spending on health the government contributes only
20 percent while the private sector, oriented to wealthier social
layers, makes up the rest.
India's AIDS program
Even though the first HIV case was identified among prostitutes
in Madras in 1986, the government's initial surveillance, screening
and education programs were very limited. It was not until 1992
that it established the NACO under the Ministry of Health and
Family Welfare. According to a WHO report, NACO only began to
seriously establish consistent HIV surveillance in each state
in 1998.
The total funding for first five-year plan for NACO was just
$US100.5 million, of which only $15 million came from the government.
The remainder was made up of $84 million of interest free credit
from the World Bank-affiliated International Development Association
and $1.5 million from the WHO. In the second phase of the program
for the period up to 2005, financing has increased to $328 million,
which is a pittance compared the latest defence budget of around
$13 billion or the tax concessions of $1.2 billion provided for
big business
Dr Gupta commented: The money we see for HIV/AIDS prevention
in India has mostly come from international sources. The Phase
II of NACO is 86 percent funded by loans, primarily from the World
Bank and USAID. The 14 percent Indian contribution is of the same
size as the foreign exchange incentives given to Indian business
for hard currency trade. So, in spite of the rhetoric, as far
as the indigenous government funding is concerned, India is treating
HIV/AIDS no different than any other disease. Also, there is no
sustained awareness campaign through TV or the newspapers, or
any other media.
As in South Africa, access to anti-retroviral drugs to retard
the onset of AIDS is developing as a major issue. In the West,
a triple-drug cocktail costs $US10,000-15,000 a year per patient.
Indian drug companies such as Cipla Ltd. have charged markedly
lessuntil recently $1,800 per year per patient. Now Cipla
is offering the drug combination at $800 per patient per year
to the Indian government, $600 for underdeveloped countries and
$350 to Doctors Without Borders.
Major drug corporations such as Britain's Glaxo Smith Kline
and the US-based Bristol-Myers Squibb are seeking to use their
patents to prevent Indian firms from manufacturing generic drugs.
They claim the high prices are necessary to cover the cost of
research. But as Cipla's chairman Dr Yusuf Hamied commented: The
name of the game is monopoly... If these companies spend x'
on research, they spent 9x' on protecting their monopoly.
I have broken no laws, and I am not a threat to anyone. There
is room for a hundred Ciplas. I am not against patents and I am
willing to pay royalties, but a country like India, with a billion
people, simply cannot afford a monopoly on these drugs.
Under existing Indian laws, it is only drug-making processes
that are protected by patents and so local companies can copy
foreign medicines. As a result, Cipla and other Indian companies
are able to produce anti-AIDS cocktails at relatively low costs
and, of course, can make substantial profits. The prices of local
generic drugs are still far beyond the reach of the vast majority
of people, who have to rely upon government and non-governmental
agencies.
The limited character of the government programs was highlighted
in an article in the New York Times on March 27, which
noted: India is also failing to prevent women from passing
the disease to their newborns. The appropriate drug, nevirapine,
is simple to administer and costs about $1 per child. Yet India
is only now beginning pilot projects to cut mother-to-child transmission.
Generic manufacturers in India are negotiating to sell a cocktail
of AIDS medicines to African governments for $600 a year. But,
shamefully, India's government does not buy these drugs. It claims
that even $600 a year is too much and would drain health budgets.
The situation for HIV patients is likely to dramatically worsen
in 2005 when India will be subjected to the World Trade Organisation
rules related to patents. Not only drug-making processes but also
the end productsthe drugs themselveswill be protected,
effectively putting an end to the cheaper generic drugs that are
currently available.
Taken together, these trendsthe rapid spread of the disease,
the indifference of the Indian government, the lack of adequate
health programs and the high cost of drugshave all the makings
of a major health catastrophe on the Indian subcontinent.
See Also:
United Nations AIDS
report confirms worst epidemic in history
[4 December 2000]
HIV /
AIDS
[WSWS Full Coverage]
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