God, AIDS, Africa & HOPE

Reflections / Gedanken

HIV prevalence is going nowhere in South Africa

Results of the 20th antenatal surveillance survey, which were released this week, show that South Africa’s HIV epidemic is not gaining nor is it slowing down. But does this mean that the country’s efforts in combating HIV are paying off?
Every year over a period of one month, pregnant women between the ages of 15 – 49 attending selected public antenatal care clinics in the country’s 52 health districts take part in an anonymous HIV testing programme. This is for the annual antenatal HIV surveillance survey which helps the Health Department project the prevalence of the epidemic in the general population, so it can develop policy and plan interventions. The survey for 2009 involved 33 000 women and shows very little difference from the previous four years, during which prevalence has hovered around 29%.
“By 2009, we have got 29.4 percentage prevalence. From 2006, nothing is changing in terms of prevalence. Actually, it has flattened out”, said Health Minister Dr Aaron Motsoaledi, announcing the results at Birchwood hotel, near the Johannesburg International Airport.
“Why is it important?” , Motsoaledi asked. “By 1990, the prevalence was only 0.7% and it kept on going high and high until it reached a peak of 30 by 2003. From 2005 or so, it started getting flat. We don’t know for how long it will stay flat, but it’s like that. There’s no change in terms of the prevalence in the general population of antenatal women”, he said.
Although the epidemic seems to be stagnant, the survey shows a difference of HIV distribution among different age groups. At a high level of 21.7%, HIV prevalence among pregnant women between the ages of 15 – 24 is unchanged from the 2008 finding. However, infection is increasing among older women. HIV prevalence levels among the 15 – 24 year age group have to drop drastically in order to show that the country’s efforts are making a dent on HIV distribution. The level of prevalence in this age group is also a marker in the Millennium Development Goal specific to reducing HIV.
“Our MDG baseline is 21.7%. By 2015, this must go to 17.3%. This is the most important group to use to provide evidence when monitoring new HIV infections incidence. The 15 – 24 year olds is a very important group to us to tell us what’s happening. These are still very young (women) who are falling pregnant for the first time. These are new entrants and what is happening to them is a good reflection of showing the changes in terms of the prevalence”, the Health Minister said.
The only group where HIV prevalence is not stagnant is the 30 – 34 year age group. “It has increased to 41.5% in 2009. This age group, which is the hardest hit is moving from 39.6%, 40.4%”, he said. The World Health Organisation’s Dr Patrick Abok interprets the finding.  “We are seeing a lot of people now having access to treatment and care, which means that many people now are trying to know their status and be able to come early and have access to treatment and care. The other element is regarding the awareness… having people who know they are HIV-positive and knowing where to go and seek treatment, and in that way, it positively is affecting their lifestyle in terms of now trying to live longer. So, we are bound to see that number increasing simply because it means that the number of people who have access to treatment, very few of them will be dying. The longer they live that means the more people in that category, the more the prevalence”, said Dr Abok.
Deputy chair-person of the South African National AIDS Council (SANAC), Mark Heywood, described the results as being “fairly predictable”. Heywood said the report suggests that the country is not doing well to prevent new HIV infections. “We’re not getting on top of the HIV epidemic, at least, as far as prevention is concerned. It shows that there is still very high numbers of new HIV infections and it shows that we have a growing number of people living with HIV in this country because of the combination of new infections and people who are now living as a result of antiretroviral treatment. I wouldn’t say that it points to our failures, but it points to our short-comings and our inadequacies, and it tells the Department of Health and SANAC that they have to do more to get this thing right, and, actually, we’re not getting it right this moment in time”, Heywood said.
As usual, KwaZulu-Natal has the highest HIV prevalence, followed by Mpumalanga and the Free State. The lowest prevalence – below 20% – is in the Northern and Western Capes, while the North West, Gauteng, Limpopo and the Eastern Cape have a prevalence level of between 20 – 30%. Prevalence levels also vary within provinces, with certain districts ranking higher than others.
Source”
ihttp://www.health-e.org.za/news/article.php?uid=20033008

Filed under: HIV and AIDS, HIV Prevention, HIV Treatment, Medical and Research, Politics and Society, , , , , , , ,

POZ Magazine: New Study Challenges Assumptions About HIV Treatment as Prevention

A new Chinese study conducted among heterosexual couples of mixed HIV status found that antiretroviral (ARV) therapy does not substantially reduce the risk of HIV transmission in a real-world setting. The study, published October 1 in the Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes, and reported by aidsmap, suggests that more data might be needed before rushing to roll out HIV treatment-as-prevention programs around the globe.
Treatment-as-prevention rests on a fairly well-established theory that when ARV therapy reduces an HIV-positive person’s viral load, he or she will be less likely to transmit the virus to sex partners. While this has been noted for nearly a decade, the strategy has received increasing attention in light of recent studies showing a reduction in HIV transmission in both San Francisco and Vancouver, two cities where an increasing number of HIV-positive people have received ARV therapy and the average community viral loads have dropped substantially.

To test this theory further, researchers looked at HIV transmission rates among 1,927 mostly monogamous couples in the Henan province of China, where one of the partners had HIV and the other did not. Many people in this province became infected from tainted equipment used for blood donations.
Surprisingly, the researchers found that there was no statistically meaningful difference in the rate of transmission in the couples whose HIV-positive partner was on ARV therapy (3 percent transmission) compared with couples where the HIV-partner was not on treatment (5 percent transmission).
The study’s authors acknowledge that poor adherence could have contributed to the failure to find that ARV therapy reduced transmission risk. Nevertheless, aidsmap reports that Myron Cohen, MD, from the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill said in an accompanying editorial that the study results “demand a giant pause.”
“Will ART suppress transmission of HIV under ‘real life’ conditions?” he asks. “[I]t seems wise to try and answer this question before we fully deploy a ‘Test and Treat strategy,’ expecting to detect a benefit to the general population.”

Source:  http://www.poz.com/rssredir/articles/hiv_china_prevention_761_19254.shtml

Filed under: HIV and AIDS, HIV Prevention, HIV Treatment, Medical and Research, , , ,

POZ Magazine: Regulating Condoms in the Porn Industry

The great condom debate lives on: Requiring the adult film industry to use condoms may not stem the spread of HIV among actors, according to an article in The Atlantic. After an actor tested positive for HIV last week, activists, legislators and industry execs are once again weighing in on condom regulation in porn. Among many intelligent talking points, the article highlights the difficulties of policing film sets for condoms and HIV tests, stating the current standard in gay porn is “condoms but no testing” and the standard of straight porn is “testing but no condoms.”

To read the Atlantic story, click here.

Source:   http://www.poz.com/rssredir/articles/Condoms_in_Porn_1_19264.shtml

Filed under: HIV and AIDS, HIV Prevention, , ,

20.10.2010 Podium Discussion

Yesterday evening at the Centre of the Book: Podiums discussion about ” A new South African HIV/AIDS policy: Reason for HOPE?.

Nozizwe Madlala-Routledge, Deputy Minister of Defence (1999-2004) and Deputy Minister of Health (2004-2007) and Chris Bateman,  Senior Editor of the SA Journal of Medicine and myself are discussing the new policy and the role, politics and civil society must play so that the new HIV/AIDS policy becomes reality. An interesting debate about the possibilities and limitations of the New South Africa and its leaders, but also the misery and burden of ordinary South Africans. The questions of the audience give room for a brought debate from trips to the bilateral German – South African agreement versus a contribution to the Global AIDS Fund, but also practical question how hope can be brought to certain communities and a perspective on life worth living and striving for.

An interesting evening where also the president’s life and the topic “leading by example” was not spared some honest comments. Last but not least the question why South Africa pays 20% above the cheapest market price for ART medication produced by Aspen and all the red tape stopping to make cheaper and more meaningful solutions possible.

Filed under: HIV and AIDS, HIV Prevention, HIV Treatment, Politics and Society, , , , , , , , , ,

POZ Magazine: Forecasting the Future of HIV

As much as $722 billion might be needed to tackle HIV by 2031, if no cure or vaccine is found, according to new research published in The Lancet and reported by PlusNews. Study authors predict that in the next 20 years, annual HIV infections will be halved to about 1.2 million. However, new treatment guidelines will raise costs by 43 percent, and about one third of funding must be spent in Africa to stop the epidemic.  Researchers noted that the amount of money needed could drop to $400 billion if countries restructured their AIDS funding policies now.

To read the PlusNews story, click here.

Source: http://www.poz.com/rssredir/articles/Future_OF_HIV_1_19243.shtml

Filed under: HIV and AIDS, HIV Prevention, HIV Treatment, Medical and Research, Politics and Society, , , , , ,

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