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WSWS : News
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: South
Africa
South African report shows devastating impact of HIV/AIDS
By Barry Mason
22 October 2001
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South Africas Medical Research Council (MRC) has only
just released its report drawn up in July, The Impact of
HIV/AIDS on Adult Mortality in South Africa.
The ANC government had attempted to delay its publication until
December, but was forced to release it under the pressure of public
opinion and criticism in the media from church and trade unions
leaders. Details from the report were leaked in September in the
Mail and Guardian newspaper.
According to the report, South Africa has 4.7 million people
with HIV/AIDS, more than any other country. One in nine of the
whole population and one quarter of adults are infected. 40 percent
of deaths were AIDS related in the year 2000. Without effective
intervention, this will rise to 66 percent by the year 2010 with
a cumulative figure of 5 to 7 million deaths from the disease.
The report estimates that deaths this year will total 195,000more
than double the numbers who died as a result of accidents and
violence in the year 2000. South African President Thabo Mbeki
recently attempted to minimise the impact of AIDS by claiming
that total deaths in one year from accidents and violence would
exceed those from AIDS.
The report predicts life expectancy will fall from the current
54 years to 41 by 2010. Two groups particularly hit are young
women in their 20s and young men in their 30s.
Astonishingly the death rate amongst women in their 20s is
higher than that of women in their 60sthe report describes
this as a unique phenomena in biology. Dr Malegaparu
Makgoba, the MRC president, introducing the report said: There
is no precedent for this in history. You have a situation where
the younger females who are supposed to be healthy and productive
are dying in greater numbers than their mothers.
Ten years ago the number of pregnant women tested for the HIV
virus at antenatal clinics was one in a 100today the figure
is one in four. 43 percent of all deaths at the Chris Hani Baragwanath
hospital in Soweto are attributable to AIDS.
Experts have described the MRC review as the most authoritative
model of the effects of HIV in South Africa to date. It was the
result of a comprehensive investigation and has been subject to
stringent review by scientific peers. One of the reviewers was
Dr Peter Goldblatt, chief medical statistician for England and
Wales.
The authors of the report express their concern at the result
of the findings saying, These shocking results need to galvanise
efforts to minimise the devastation of the epidemic. Dr
Makgoba commented, It presents the country with stark choices.
There should be active intervention.
In attempting to refute the report the ANC government used
a group called Stats SA, which claimed the MRC completely overestimates
the number of cumulative deaths by 2010, saying it should be only
one to two million. They have been taken to task by Professor
Rob Dorrington of the University of Cape Town, one of the reports
authors. Accusing them of a trashing operation, he
pointed out that their results are completely incompatible
with the empirical data in the report. Present figures for those
attending antenatal clinics showing that five million are HIV
positive. Their misuse of the statistical model involved in the
prediction of the disease is evidence of how little experience
and knowledge they have in the field, said Dorrington. Their
report was riddled with half-truths and misunderstandings.
It gives new meaning to the phrase lies, damned lies and statistics.
Interviewed by the Mail and Guardian, the MRC report
authors said that Stats SA had said that the only way to determine
the size of the epidemic was to conduct a sample of the whole
population, testing blood or saliva. They agreed that there was
a need to collect more information, but added, we believe
there is sufficient data already available to gauge the extent
of the epidemic. The need for better data must not prevent the
analysis and interpretation of available data sources to best
inform the decision-makers as soon as possible. In a clear
challenge to the ANC government, they said that prevention of
mother to child transmission would significantly reduce the number
of child deaths. The ANC still refuses to make the necessary drugs
available.
In a separate development the South African governments
Central Energy Fund (CEF) has put R80m (£6.3m) into trials
of a coal-based drug Oxihumate-K in research that is supposed
to show its anti-HIV/AIDS properties. The trials are taking place
on 350 patients in a military hospital in Tanzania and are being
conducted jointly with the University of Pretoria. Although the
MCC had overseen an exploratory trial of the drug in 1993, it
has no knowledge of the current trials.
Concerns have been raised about the trials and it has been
suggested that the patients were not in a position to give informed
consent. Professor Udo Schuklenk, head of bioethics at the University
of the Witwatersrand, commented, You need to question why
soldiers were used. It doesnt seem necessary to use themunless
the researchers are claiming that they represent a scientifically
and medically distinct group. Thats where I would start
worrying and criticising.
Oxihumate-K was first developed in the 1980s by Enerkom and
promoted as a nutritional supplement. Enerkom do not claim the
drug was a cure for AIDS, but that it boosts the immune system.
The trials give the appearance of being a re-run of the notorious
Virodene experiment. Virodene was first developed four years ago
at the University of Pretoria and received financial and political
support from the ANC government, claiming it was a new cure for
AIDS. It was subsequently totally discredited and the main ingredient
shown to be a cleaning fluid.
Oxihumate is being tested in the same military hospital in
Tanzania, where until recently researchers had continued testing
Virodene. The researchers were expelled from Tanzania in September.
After being exposed for its involvement with Virodene, it appears
that the ANC government is attempting to distance itself from
the present trials. Health Minister Manto Tshabalala-Msimang has
visited the clinic in Tanzania where the trials are being held,
but a South African government spokeswomen said she was not aware
of the trials.
See Also:
South Africa: President Mbeki
again downplays AIDS epidemic
[17 September 2001]
HIV /
AIDS
[WSWS Full Coverage]
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