God, AIDS, Africa & HOPE

Reflections / Gedanken

POZ Magazine: South Africa to Spend $88B Over 20 Years on HIV Prevention

South Africa-one of the countries hardest hit by the AIDS epedemic-is stepping up efforts to reduce HIV rates, The Associated Press (AP) reports.  Having spent $2 billion in 2009 on prevention, the South African government plans to spend $88 billion during the next 20 years. This is projected to reduce the annual HIV rate from 500,000 to 350,000. An international team of experts has proposed a more extensive strategy to cut the annual HIV rate to 200,000 at a cost of $102 billion. There are questions as to whether international donors will provide sufficient financial support for the strategy.

To read the AP article, click here.

Source:  http://www.poz.com/rssredir/articles/South_Africa_Prevention_1_19445.shtml

Filed under: HIV and AIDS, , ,

20.11.2010 Opinion of a pope

Pope Benedict condones condom use in some cases – the headlines on BBC but also the German media jumps on this news and celebrates it as a change in the stance of the official church. Well, let’s be more realistic: It is the first step in the right direction and it comes 30 years too late for the pandemic. So no celebration but rather encouragement for those ruling our church not to stand still again but to move, to take modern sciences into account and to apply ratio to this question. Our church claims to protect life under all circumstances – and she is right so. Therefore the opinion of the pope is only a consequence of this claim – long overdue.  And guess we will see in the next days from some quarters of the church the attempt to soften the words of the pope again.. and another battle field is opened between the right-wing faithful of our church and those who trying to live their faith in our world and not in the past century.
Nevertheless: A first step to be welcomed by all who are working in the field of HIV and AIDS in the RC church.

Filed under: HIV Prevention, , , , , , , ,

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: Beijing AIDS Group Forced to Close

Beijing AIDS Group Forced to Close

Beijing Loving Source, an AIDS service organization, will close operations following increased pressure from tax authorities in the Chinese government, The Associated Press (AP) reports. The group was founded by Hu Jia, a well-known AIDS activist who is currently serving a 3.5 year prison sentence for pushing authorities to deal with HIV publicly. After the government started regulating overseas donations, the organization ran into financial troubles.

To read the AP article, click here

http://www.poz.com/rssredir/articles/AIDS_Beijing_ASO_1_19395.shtml

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

11.11.2010 working group on ethics and hiv

I am invited to the theological working group on ethics and HIV in Frankfurt, associated to the “Aktionsbuendnis AIDS” in Germany. It is a lively discussion about what we have to do and how to create synergies and specially the topic how we deal within the church with employees who are HIV  positive is coming up again and again. It seems to me that all churches are not very open on this issue. Maybe the sensitivity of the topic is to frightening for the superiors. Not sure about it, but I am sure that we have to tackle it before it hits us. An interesting afternoon where North and South are meeting in a lively debate.

Filed under: HIV and AIDS, Networking, Reflection, , , , , , , ,

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