God, AIDS, Africa & HOPE

Reflections / Gedanken

The influence of the Christian Rights on HIV / AIDS

Right wing Christian organizations, specially in the US,  are hampering the efforts of combating HIV and AIDS. Here a longer, but very detailed analysis of why they are wrong on HIV and AIDS. The original source is: http://www.thebody.com/content/art56485.html?ic=700100
The content of the article is the sole opinion of those who have compiled it. I find it thought provoking and quite comprehensive it its analysis.

Introduction

The last decade has seen huge funding increases for the international fight against HIV. Increased funding has effectively reduced deaths from AIDS. But despite this progress, approaches to preventing HIV based in belief, not fact, remain and continue to hamper HIV prevention. Policies promoted by Christian right groups from the U.S. have been detrimental on two fronts: They limit the use of proven and effective prevention methods, and they oppose the human rights of women and gay people worldwide. Anti-gay bias and stigma help drive the epidemic both in the U.S. and internationally. Christian right groups fuel existing stigma to achieve their ideological goals. The U.S. Christian right emboldens anti-gay local leaders with their backing. They give them the credibility to oppress gay people and other groups at high risk for HIV. Gender inequality is a key force driving the HIV epidemic. Women and girls are particularly at risk for HIV because they are often deprived of the rights to make decisions about their own bodies and economic well being. According to UNAIDS, half of all people in the world with HIV are female, and in sub-Saharan Africa they account for 59% of all cases. The Christian right continues to oppose key international efforts to protect women’s rights since they view these efforts as promoting abortion and prostitution while contradicting traditional values.

The U.S. Christian Right

The U.S. Christian right is a social movement working to impose so-called traditional values into public policy. The term describes a variety of right-wing Christian organizations whose membership is concentrated among evangelical Protestants. The groups that make up this movement vary in theological beliefs but share concerns about specific social issues and support conservative social and political values. The movement originated in the 1970s and its most prominent areas of focus were opposition to sex education, homosexuality, and abortion. Although the various sectors of the Christian right agree on these three points, they also have internal political divisions. In recent years, the leadership of the Roman Catholic Church hierarchy has led efforts by the Christian Right and has been at the forefront of pushing to ban abortion, fight sex education, and oppose legal equality for LGBT people. The evangelical-Catholic alliance against gays is ironic. While they are united on this issue, they actually have serious religious conflict. Many evangelical Protestants consider Roman Catholicism pagan idolatry. White evangelicals, Hispanic evangelicals, and Catholics disagree on immigration reform. On issues including war and peace, torture, and welfare policy, the evangelical right is often at odds with Catholic leaders. Some of the leading Christian right groups based in the U.S. are Concerned Women for America, Focus on the Family, the Family Research Council, the Traditional Values Coalition, and leaders of the Southern Baptist Convention.

Influence on the International Response to AIDS

U.S.-based Christian right groups have a large impact on HIV prevention efforts. They promote policies that ignore scientific proof on what HIV prevention methods work. They prioritize their religious beliefs over what works on the ground. These groups provide incorrect information and discredit prevention methods that work, such as condom use. The U.S. Christian right has fought contraception and family planning efforts as well as science-based HIV prevention around the world for decades. Its moral position was codified as long ago as the Reagan administration in the “global gag rule,” which prevented U.S. funding to be used toward accessing abortions. Organizations receiving funds for family planning or women’s health were severely limited in providing services and could not provide abortion or information about access to abortion services. Christian right groups have fought contraception and family planning efforts, as well as science-based prevention. President Clinton rescinded this gag rule, only to see it reinstituted by the second President Bush. President Obama has once again rescinded the rule. Additionally Bush-era abstinence-only restrictions on HIV prevention funding were weakened in 2008 when the global AIDS relief program was reauthorized. Another concern is the sole focus on heterosexuals in HIV prevention messaging. Currently only heterosexual people are portrayed in information about risks for HIV. This has led homosexually active men in Kenya, Uganda, and elsewhere to believe they are not at risk for HIV.

PEPFAR and the Christian Right

The U.S. President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) has been the primary U.S. response to the global epidemic. This program started under President Bush in 2003 and provides funding abroad. PEPFAR targets countries with high HIV prevalence, primarily in Africa. This initiative has increased funding, successfully lowered death rates from AIDS, and expanded access to medication. PEPFAR funding provides antiretrovirals to nearly 2 million people in Africa. One study shows that the plan has averted an estimated 1.2 million deaths from AIDS. The same study, however, found that PEPFAR has not lowered rates of HIV infection. While successful at lowering AIDS death rates, the prevention portion is not working. PEPFAR’s prevention efforts fail mainly because of their basis in religious dogma rather than proven facts. It allows ideology to direct HIV prevention while ignoring scientific evidence. Studies repeatedly show that abstinence-only prevention education does not work. Yet until 2008 PEPFAR required that fully one-third of prevention funds be directed toward such programs. This is partly due to the strong influence of the Christian right. The abstinence-only component of PEPFAR was by far the most ineffective. While changes have been made, problems remain. Even after the 2008 reauthorization, funding is still determined by ideological positions. PEPFAR requires the Office of the Global AIDS Coordinator to monitor the funding of non-abstinence programs. If organizations use more than half of their HIV prevention funds for non-abstinence prevention, they must inform Congress.This rule discourages organizations from having comprehensive prevention programming for fear of losing funding. There are also other PEPFAR funding requirements that have a negative impact on HIV prevention. Organizations are required to pledge opposition to prostitution and sex trafficking publicly. This provision creates difficulties for organizations doing prevention work by limiting their ability to work effectively with individuals involved in sex work — a population already marginalized and at high risk for HIV. The pledge limits provision of prevention, care, and treatment services for this vulnerable population. PEPFAR was amended in 2008 to improve HIV prevention among men who have sex with men (MSM) by calling for HIV prevention efforts designed specifically for them. It also calls for more research to understand HIV among MSM better in the global epidemic.

Christian Right Groups Funded by PEPFAR

Under PEPFAR, religious groups with little or no public health experience have landed lucrative federal grants. These funds support the provision of AIDS education, prevention, and services in Africa, Vietnam, and the Caribbean. The following is a profile of some of the main Christian right recipients of PEPFAR AIDS education funding. World Relief is run by the U.S. National Association of Evangelicals. World Relief’s mission is “to work with, for and from the Church to relieve human suffering, poverty and hunger worldwide in the name of Jesus Christ.” The organization’s Mobilizing for Life project received $9.7 million from PEPFAR to fund a faith-based approach to HIV prevention in Haiti, Kenya, Mozambique, and Rwanda. World Relief promotes “sexual morality” — abstinence until marriage — and “teach[es] God’s design for a faithful, monogamous relationship within marriage.” Teenage participants make public pledges of abstinence and virginity. This practice has been proven ineffective in the U.S. Condoms are not actively promoted, but are made available to pastors upon request. Catholic Relief Services promotes HIV prevention in Africa, Haiti, and Guyana with PEPFAR funds. It does not promote the use of condoms because of religious objections. CRS received $102 million of PEPFAR funding in 2007. Samaritan’s Purse is “a nondenominational evangelical Christian organization providing spiritual and physical aid to hurting people around the world,” Run by Franklin Graham, son of evangelist Billy Graham. Samaritan’s Purse uses “Bible-based education” and is one of nine faith-based organizations to receive funding under the USAID “HIV/AIDS Prevention Through Abstinence and Healthy Choices for Youth” program. Fresh Ministries is a multi-faith organization based in Florida. In October 2004 Fresh Ministries received $10 million from PEPFAR. In partnership with the Anglican Church in southern Africa, Fresh Ministries runs Siyafundisa, which teaches abstinence-only prevention education and combats AIDS-related stigma. Siyafundisa focuses on children and young adults in South Africa, Mozambique, and Namibia. One example of misinformation is the statement that, “Condoms are not 100% perfect protective gear against HIV, and this is because condoms have small pores that could still allow the virus through.” The Christian AIDS Fund receives PEPFAR funding for its work. It works closely with Ugandan First Lady Janet Museveni, an outspoken abstinence-only-until-marriage proponent. The U.S. points to Uganda’s ABC model (Abstain, Be Faithful, Use Condoms) as a successful indigenous approach. Under PEPFAR, however, the U.S. has undercut the model changing the focus to abstinence only. The U.S.-funded program in Uganda now follows a model like U.S. abstinence-only programs that misstates the effectiveness of condoms. One example of misinformation is the statement that, “Condoms are not 100 percent perfect protective gear against STDs and HIV infection, and this is because condoms have small pores that could still allow the virus through.” Officially, the Ugandan ABC policy has not changed, but Ugandan teachers report that U.S. contractors tell them not to mention condoms in school.

The Christian Right at the U.N.

Religious right groups like the Mormon World Family Policy Center, Focus on the Family, and Concerned Women for America closely monitor U.N.-sponsored international gatherings, paying particular attention to meetings focused on women. They actively promote their religious agendas and oppose homosexuality, abortion, and contraception. To their credit, some are active in efforts to prevent human trafficking. Anti-gay groups pressure the U.S. government to oppose sexual orientation nondiscrimination resolutions at the U.N. They have also lobbied against the candidacy of gay rights groups for membership in the U.N. Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC). United Families International, a Christian right group, has ECOSOC status, giving it a formal role in U.N. deliberation. Several religious right groups got together at the United Nations High Level Meeting on AIDS in June 2008. This forum included “ex-gay” groups, including the Catholic Family and Human Rights Institute and Families Watch International. Also present were the National Association for Research and Therapy of Homosexuality and Jews Offering New Alternatives to Homosexuality (JONAH). Speakers portrayed equal rights for LGBT people as a threat to “family rights.” They argued that all same-sex relationships are promiscuous and high risk. Speakers also contended that homosexuality is a choice and argued that people can become heterosexual through therapy and religious conversion.

Opposing Women’s and Children’s Rights

According to the World Health Organization (WHO), AIDS is the leading cause of death and disease among women of reproductive age in low- to middle-income countries, particularly in Africa. Women and girls in these countries are particularly at risk for HIV infection, since they face both gender-based inequalities and biological factors that make them more susceptible. According to UNAIDS, economic and social dependence on men often limits women’s power to refuse sex or to ask for condoms. In unprotected sex, heterosexual women are twice as likely as men to acquire HIV, and this is particularly so in girls, whose genital tracts are not fully mature. The inequalities faced by women and girls are evident across the world in deeply embedded discrimination. Women often have unequal access to education and information that would help them learn about how to avoid infection. They can face violence or may lack the right to make decisions that affect their own bodies. WHO reports that the most important risk factors for death and illness among women are lack of contraception and unsafe sex. These factors result in unwanted pregnancies, unsafe abortions, complications with pregnancy and childbirth, and sexually transmitted diseases, including HIV. Christian right groups opposed the U.N. Convention on the Rights of the Child, which sets out the civil, political, economic, social, and cultural rights of children. Some Christian right groups oppose key international conventions that seek to address these inequities. They have historically blocked U.S. ratification of the Convention on the Elimination of all Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW). This convention is an international bill of rights for women that defines what constitutes discrimination against women and sets an agenda for national action to end such discrimination. Concerned Women for America has been highly active in opposing ratification since President Carter signed the treaty in 1979. The organization claims that the treaty is dangerous and anti-family, and that it is bad for women because it could promote abortion, decriminalize prostitution, and redefine “family.” It points to the CEDAW committee’s statement in support of legalization of lesbianism in Kyrgyzstan to justify their position. Christian right groups have blocked U.S. ratification of other important international treaties. They opposed the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child, which sets out the civil, political, economic, social, and cultural rights of children. It requires nations to respect, protect, and fulfill the rights of children. The Heritage Foundation opposes it as a “potential infringement of U.S. sovereignty.” President Clinton signed the treaty in 1995, but the U.S. has still not ratified it. The U.S. and Somalia are the only countries in the world that have not ratified this convention. Concerned Women for America is particularly active in promoting its agenda at the U.N. “I believe abortion, pornography, premarital sex, and homosexuality are schemes of the devil,” said its founder Beverly LaHaye. The group has a budget of nearly $8.5 million, claims 500,000 members, sends delegates to the U.N., and seeks to impose its beliefs worldwide. CWA’s agenda includes:

Teaching creationism and abstinence-only sex education in schools

Opposing easy access to emergency contraception, even in the case of rape

Opposing abortion, except to save a mother’s life

Decrying daycare and working mothers

Opposing comprehensive sex education (even going so far as to equate its proponents with pedophiles)

Promoting efforts to end human trafficking

Opposition to efforts to ensure equal rights for women is particularly troubling given the harsh realities faced by women and girls in places where they are particularly at risk for HIV. Violence against women continues to be a problem — during times of war, or even peace, women can be victims of rape and violence. In places such as the Congo, Sierra Leone, and Sudan, rape and beatings have been used as tools of war. Displaced populations are particularly at risk, and by some estimates, in Africa alone there are up to 6 million refugees and 15 million internally displaced persons. In the Middle East and in parts of South Asia and Africa, women who are seen as having brought dishonor to the family can be killed by any man in the family. Honor killings happen even in countries where they are officially illegal, as is the case in India, Pakistan, and Egypt. They also sometimes occur in migrant communities in western countries such as France, Germany. and the U.K. Typically these women are perceived as having crossed the limits of social behavior. Offenses include refusing the sexual advances of their husbands, refusal to accept arranged marriages, unacceptable dress, adultery, and in some cases having been raped. Studies have shown that better educated young girls start having sexual relations later. Unfortunately, in many parts of the world, cultural and social conditions prevent women from receiving education, and many girls are denied the right to inform themselves about their sexual and reproductive rights and options. By opposing comprehensive sex education, contraception, and reproductive rights on the international level, the Christian right contributes to the disempowerment of women. Lack of empowerment fuels the spread of HIV. Youth are under the control of adults, and girls in particular tend to have sex with people older than themselves. Due to the power inequalities between young girls and adult men, it is hard for youth to negotiate safer sex. This is why societies have age-of-consent laws.

The Christian Right, HIV, and Anti-Gay Policy

A number of groups address gay issues:

Focus on the Family (FOF) is the largest U.S.-based Christian right advocacy group, claiming to reach 220 million people in 162 countries through radio and TV broadcasts. Its goal is to “conduct 196 ‘impact projects’ (such as abstinence training) in 75 countries.” FOF has spent tens of millions fighting marriage equality in Canada. Focus on the Family Canada’s 2005 budget was $10.3 million. In 2006, FOF established an Institute on Marriage and Family Canada in Ottawa. Focus on the Family is also active in Latin America. While abortion is largely illegal in Latin America, abortion rates per capita are similar to those of the U.S. Enfoque al la Familia broadcasts in Spanish in 34 nations and operates Christian counseling sessions. Additionally, it has lobbied the Puerto Rican Senate against same-sex marriage. The U.S. Knights of Columbus is a Roman Catholic group based in New Haven, Connecticut, that distributed 2 million anti-gay marriage postcards to Catholic parishes in Canada in 2005. World Congress of Families (WCF) is based in Rockford, Illinois, and is a project of the Howard Center for Family, Religion and Society. WCF “affirms and defends … the natural family, both nationally and globally” and “coordinate[s] the efforts of pro-family groups from more than 60 countries.” In the mid-2000s WCF worked with Latvia’s parliament to oppose sexual orientation nondiscrimination laws. (Latvia was asked to pass these laws to join the European Union.) WCF convenes a conference every few years and since 1997 has met in Prague, Geneva, Mexico City, and Warsaw. Polish President Lech Kaczynski gave the keynote address at the 2007 WCF Warsaw conference and served as the conference’s “Patron.” Kaczynski gives frequent exclusive interviews to Radio Marya, a Catholic radio station that regularly broadcasts anti-gay and anti-Semitic content. Also speaking at the conference was Education Minister Roman Giertych, who described his political party’s attempts to criminalize the teaching of “homosexual propaganda.” In recent years small gay pride parades in Poland, Russia, and other Eastern European nations have been attacked by both neo-fascists and police. In January 2010, Moscow’s mayor again vowed to prevent a gay pride rally. United Families International is based in Gilbert, Arizona. The organization opposes gay rights, sex education, and abortion rights and is an ECOSOC member. Its affiliate Restore Marriage, Canada! seeks the reversal of marriage equality and has published a Guide to Family Issues: Sexual Orientation, which contains inaccurate claims about homosexuality and gay people. Chapters are titled “Unhealthy practices,” “Unstable relationships,” “Child abuse,” and “Treatment of homosexuality.”

Uganda‘s Anti-Homosexuality Bill of 2009

In 2009 Ugandan Parliament member David Bahati introduced the Anti-Homosexuality Bill of 2009. Under current Ugandan law, homosexual acts are a crime punishable by a prison term of up to 14 years. The proposed legislation raises that to life in prison. In addition, anyone who fails to report the identity of any lesbian, gay, bisexual, or transgendered person faces serious consequences. Failing to make such a report within 24 hours can result in a jail term of up to three years. Most disturbingly, the bill creates a new offense: aggravated homosexuality — defined as one partner being a minor, HIV positive, or a serial offender (a repeat homosexual). The sentence for this offense is death. Mr. Bahati has close ties to U.S.-based Christian right organizations. So do most of the Ugandan legislators involved in writing this bill. International media have exposed these connections. The Times of London and The New York Times reported that politicians in Uganda, including Mr. Bahati, are connected to a Christian right organization called The Family, a secretive U.S.-based group of influential politicians and business leaders that actively promotes the objectives of the Christian right movement. The Family acts both within the U.S. and internationally. Its members include prominent politicians from both major U.S. political parties, and international decision makers are also included in its ranks. Other groups involved in stirring up homophobic sentiment in Uganda include Exodus International and FOF. There is no claim that these groups actually wrote the proposed legislation, but they have been known to exploit existing homophobia and fear to further their political goals. This draft bill has obvious implications for HIV treatment and prevention efforts in Uganda. Its provisions would further stigmatize HIV. It would also impede efforts to implement HIV prevention programming with MSM. In response to this legislation, Uganda stands to lose a chance to host a major research institution. Currently the African AIDS Vaccine Programme (AAVP) is based in Geneva, Switzerland. On December 14, 2009, the U.N. and Ugandan health officials announced that AAVP headquarters would be moved to Uganda. UNAIDS chief scientific advisor for UNAIDS Catherine Hankins, however, has made clear that “Criminalizing adult consensual sex is not only a human rights issue … .[I]t goes against a good HIV strategy. If the bill passes, UNAIDS and WHO would have to decide what happens to see whether this is an appropriate place.” In a December 2009 speech at Georgetown University, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton decried the bill, stating, “Governments should be expected to resist the temptation to restrict freedom of expression when criticism arises, and be vigilant in preventing law from becoming an instrument of oppression, as bills like the one under consideration in Uganda to criminalize homosexuality would do.” Secretary Clinton has called President Museveni directly to express the profound concerns of the U.S. about the proposed law. U.S. Christian right organizations initially refused to use their influence in Uganda to stop passage of this harmful legislation. Finally, after weeks of pressure that brought international attention to their connection with Ugandan groups behind the bill, politicians and leaders in The Family and other organizations spoke out against the proposed legislation. They even wrote letters to the Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni urging him to stop its passage. Exodus International, an ex-gay organization affiliated with FOF, sent a letter to President Museveni on November 16, 2009, that said: “The Christian church … must be permitted to extend the love and compassion of Christ to all. We believe that this legislation would make this mission a difficult if not impossible task to carry out.” In January 2010, President Museveni came under pressure from international leaders. He responded to the advice of the President of the United States, the Prime Ministers of Canada, and leaders from Australia and the United Kingdom. He expressed his opinion that the bill had become a foreign policy issue and urged his cabinet to take into account Uganda’s foreign policy interests when considering the bill. The Ugandan anti-homosexuality bill provides two crucial lessons. It shows the influence of Christian right groups on an international scale, and demonstrates how their ideological approaches obstruct effective HIV prevention. The reauthorization of PEPFAR made important changes: “abstinence-only” requirements were weakened. Groups particularly prone to HIV infection, such as MSM, were included. These steps show progress. The removal of the global gag rule by President Obama was also a huge milestone. But we are still not truly efficient at using limited HIV prevention funding. To do so, international HIV prevention efforts must fully fund and utilize proven prevention methods. They must also defund approaches and groups that continue to emphasize disproven methods and approaches.

Sean Cahill is Managing Director, Public Policy, Research and Community Health, and Lyndel Urbano is Manager of Government Relations in the Public Policy Department at GMHC.

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

Aids fund cuts a death sentence

Vienna – Cutbacks in rich-world funding for Aids treatment could sentence millions of sufferers to death for lack of access to anti-retroviral (ARV) drugs, Medecins Sans Frontieres warned on Thursday. “Donors have started to shift their support away from HIV/Aids, and funding is not keeping up with the need,” the medical charity warned in a report ahead of a major Aids conference in Vienna next week.

“If nothing is done, most of (those infected with HIV) will die within the next few years,” it said, in a study based on fieldwork in eight African countries. According to MSF, many donors have frozen their contribution to the fight against Aids – partly due to the financial crisis – with the United States planning to cut its support for ARV drugs in Mozambique by 15% over the next four years.

The Global Fund to Fight Aids, TB and Malaria is trying to raise $20bn for the next three years. So far it has received just a few hundred million dollars, the author of the report, Mit Philips, told journalists. “It is a very frustrating feeling to see that in spite of the achievements that have been made… the international donors, for the moment, show less interest and less resolve to continue to support the fight against HIV/Aids,” she said.  “It’s as if they want to give up the fight halfway through. We want to tell them: ‘you cannot turn back now on Aids treatment, it’s too important’.” While some three million HIV patients now have access to anti-retroviral drugs in Africa, the continent worst affected by the virus, another six million were still without treatment, MSF warned. By reducing funding, donor countries would ensure that even less patients received care, or received it too late, it added in its report. Turning people away from clinics, for lack of staff or resources, would also destroy the sense of trust that took years to build with local communities and make people less willing to come forward and get tested in a region where HIV still carries a strong stigma.

MSF’s study showed that early and sustained treatment of HIV patients had born fruit in several regions, including Malawi’s Thyolo district where the overall death rate dropped by a stunning 37% between 2000 and 2007, thanks to universal access to ARVs. Where patients get treatment, “there is an overall reduction of mortality in the community, there is also less tuberculosis and we start to see, where there is a high coverage of ARV, also a reduction in the number of new cases (of HIV/Aids),” said Philips.

Source: http://www.news24.com/World/News/Aids-fund-cuts-a-death-sentence-20100715

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

HIV figures around the world

A major international conference on AIDS starts in Vienna on July 18, when thousands of scientists, health workers, activists, and government officials will gather to discuss the latest advances against the disease.

An estimated 33.4 million people worldwide are infected with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) that causes AIDS, according to figures issued by the Joint UN Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS).

Here are some AIDS figures from around the world:

THE GLOBAL PICTURE:

* Global deaths from AIDS reached an estimated 2 million in 2008, the same number as in 2007. Since the AIDS pandemic started in the early 1980s, almost 60 million people have been infected with the virus and 25 million have died of HIV-related causes.

* In 2008, around 430,000 children were born with HIV, bringing to 2.1 million the total number of children under 15 living with HIV. Young people account for around 40 percent of all new adult (those aged 15 and over) HIV infections worldwide.

* The annual number of new HIV infections remained the same in 2008 as for 2007 at 2.7 million. This is down from 3.0 million in 2001.

* Although 33.4 million people had the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) in 2008, more of them are living with HIV than ever before, at least in part due to the beneficial effects of AIDS drugs known as antiretroviral therapy. There are currently 26.3 million adults over 25 living with HIV.

AFRICA & ASIA:

* Sub-Saharan Africa remains the region most heavily affected by HIV, accounting for 67 percent of all people living with the virus worldwide, 71 percent of AIDS-related deaths and 91 percent of all new infections among children.

* An estimated 1.9 million people were newly infected with HIV in sub-Saharan Africa in 2008, bringing to 22.4 million the number of Africans living with HIV.

* The nine countries in southern Africa continue to bear a disproportionate share of the global AIDS burden. Each of them has an adult HIV rate of more than 10 percent.

* With an adult HIV prevalence of 26 percent in 2007, Swaziland has the most severe level of infection in the world. Lesotho’s epidemic seems to have stabilised, with an adult HIV rate of 23.2 percent in 2008.

* South Africa continues to be home to the world’s largest population of people living with HIV — 5.7 million in 2007. More than 250,000 South Africans died of AIDS-related diseases in 2008 and almost 2 million children there have lost one or both parents to the epidemic.

* Asia, home to 60 percent of the world’s population, is second only to sub-Saharan Africa in terms of people living with HIV. An estimated 4.7 million people were living with HIV in Asia in 2008.

* India accounts for roughly half of Asia’s HIV cases. With the exception of Thailand, where HIV affects 1.4 percent of adults, every country in Asia has an adult HIV infection rate of less than 1 percent.

OTHER REGIONS:

* Rates of HIV in eastern Europe and Central Asia are on the rise, with severe and growing epidemics in the Ukraine and Russia. With an adult HIV prevalence of 1.6 percent in 2007, Ukraine has the highest prevalence in all of Europe. In eastern Europe 1.5 million people were living with HIV.

* In Latin America, new HIV infections totalled an estimated 170,000 in 2008 bringing to 2 million the number of people living with HIV there. An estimated 77,000 people died of AIDS-related illnesses there last year.

* There were 2.3 million people living with HIV in 2008 in North America and western and central Europe.

Sources: Reuters/UNAIDS
yahoo news: http://uk.news.yahoo.com/22/20100713/tsc-uk-aids-figures-factbox-011ccfa.html

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

POZ: Newly Discovered Antibody Kills Up to 91 Percent of HIV Strains

U.S. government scientists have discovered three potent new antibodies, one of which can neutralize up to 91 percent of all HIV strains. These discoveries were published online July 8 in Science and were reported by The Wall Street Journal. Though the scientists acknowledge that their findings represent a hopeful step forward, they caution that it will take a lot of time and effort before they can be translated into something that will prevent or treat HIV infection.

Antibodies are a key element in the immune system that our body uses to defend itself from bacteria and viruses. Antibodies kill these microbes directly or flag the foreign invaders for destruction by other immune cells. Unfortunately, HIV’s outer surface is so easily changeable that antibodies—most of which can neutralize only a few strains—fail to keep it in check. This has made designing a vaccine, which works by provoking the body to produce antibodies, such a frustrating endeavor.

Following a string of failures in vaccine science, researchers have turned in recent years to a search for broadly neutralizing antibodies, which can kill multiple strains of HIV. Several have been identified, but none have been able to neutralize more than 40 percent of HIV strains, and all were quite difficult for the body to produce naturally.

The Wall Street Journal reports that, “The [new] antibodies were discovered in the cells of a 60-year-old African-American gay man, known in the scientific literature as Donor 45, whose body made the antibodies naturally. Researchers screened 25 million of his cells to find 12 that produced the antibodies.”

It’s not yet clear whether or how these new antibodies can be used to prevent and treat HIV. Researchers will focus on several possibilities. One approach entails giving the antibodies directly to people, specifically in cases to prevent transmission from mothers to their babies. Other approaches range from building traditional vaccines with the antibodies, to the developing gene therapies.
Whichever strategy is most promising, it will likely take some time before it is available. Gary Nabel, MD, PhD—one of the leaders of the studies and a director of the Vaccine Research Center at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases in Bethesda, Maryland—told the Journal, “We’re going to be at this for a while” before any benefit is seen in the clinic.

Source: http://www.poz.com/rssredir/articles/HIV_neutralizing_antibody_761_18701.shtml

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

PlusNews Africa: Money no protection from HIV

JOHANNESBURG, 6 July 2010 (PlusNews) – A new study has challenged widely held assumptions about income level in relation to HIV, finding that neither wealth nor poverty are reliable predictors of HIV infection in Africa.
Previously, the argument that poverty drove HIV epidemics was supported by the World Bank and UNAIDS, as well as less reliable authorities like former South African President Thabo Mbeki, who told the International AIDS Conference in Durban in 2000 that the disease was a partner with “poverty, suffering, social disadvantage and inequity”.
More recent research suggests that the reality is far more complex. For example, Botswana and South Africa, described as two of the wealthiest countries on the continent, also have among the highest rates of HIV infection.
Nevertheless, the idea that poverty fuels the spread of HIV has persisted as “a very dominant narrative”, according to Justin Parkhurst of the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.
Parkhurst analyzed and compared data on HIV and wealth from demographic and health surveys in 12 sub-Saharan African countries with generalized epidemics (national prevalence rates higher than 1 percent); his findings are published in the July issue of the Bulletin of the World Health Organization.

He noted that in lower-income countries HIV prevalence tended to rise in tandem with wealth – in Uganda and Cote d’Ivoire, for example, women in the highest income bracket had the highest HIV prevalence.
In countries with a per capita gross domestic product higher than US$2,000, the link between wealth and prevalence was less clear.
Parkhurst also found that the relationship between wealth and HIV changed over time. A survey was conducted In Tanzania in 2003, and another in 2008; in the intervening five-year period, HIV prevalence declined among women in higher income brackets and rose among those in the lower income groups. Among men, prevalence stayed the same in the poorest group but was lower in all other groups, with the biggest declines in the highest income groups.
“HIV spreads through sexual behaviours, and these are social behaviours that change over time and are responsive to outside influences,” Parkhurst told IRIN/PlusNews. He compared the way HIV affected different social groups with the way tobacco use and obesity once affected mainly the rich, but were now bigger problems among the poor.

Wealthier people were often harder hit early in an HIV epidemic, probably because of their broader social and sexual networks. “Over time, the wealthy tend to be more educated [about HIV risk] and more likely to think about their future health,” said Parkhurst.
However, these trends are by no means universal and the patterns for men and women differ. In Swaziland, for example, which has the highest HIV prevalence of all the countries Parkhurst looked at, there was little evidence of a link between household wealth and individual prevalence.
Know your epidemic
Parkhurst’s findings have implications for one-size-fits-all prevention campaigns that do not take into account the complex and changing ways in which wealth, education level and gender can affect risk-taking behaviours.

“We need to educate people [about HIV] in a way that’s relevant to their context,” he said. “It’s about letting local actors to find out what’s going to work best. If we try to work out the solution from London … it’s unlikely to work.”

Parkhurst said “bottom-up” HIV prevention initiatives targeting the specific lifestyles and risk behaviours of a community were more likely to work. This approach is already catching on, with UNAIDS urging countries to “know your epidemic” and design prevention programmes accordingly.
“Health practitioners know they have to diagnose a problem before they can treat it,” he said. “I think the international community is starting to recognize the importance of addressing structural drivers of HIV, not just broadly, but to look at the specifics for specific communities.”

Source: http://www.plusnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=89746

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