
Latest AIDS Statistics
The number of new HIV infections "has dropped by about one-fifth over
the past decade but millions of people are still missing out on major
progress in prevention and treatment," according to the annual UNAIDS
report released Tuesday, Agence France-Presse reports. "In 2009, 2.6
million people contracted the HIV virus that causes AIDS, a decline of
19 percent over the 3.1 million recorded in" 1999 the report found,
according to the news service (11/23).
AIDS-related deaths also fell by nearly 20 percent over the past five
years, according to a UNAIDS press release. An estimated 1.8 million
people worldwide died from AIDS-related illnesses in 2009 compared to
the roughly 2.1 million that died of similar causes in 2004, the release
states (11/23). The report, which was based on HIV data obtained from 182 countries and includes country-by-country comparisons, found that "[a]mong young people in 15 of the most severely affected countries, the rate of new HIV infections has fallen by more than 25 percent, led by young people adopting safer sexual practices, according to UNAIDS," CNN writes (11/23).
Though "[s]ub-Saharan Africa continues to be the region most affected by
the epidemic, with around 70% of all new HIV infections occurring here …
infection rates are falling, particularly in South Africa, Zambia,
Zimbabwe and Ethiopia," according to the BBC (11/23). VOA News writes of how the report documents positive trends in the
prevention of mother-to-child transmission (PTMCT) of HIV, as described
by Bernhard Schwartlander, director UNAIDS' evidence, strategy and
results department. "Fewer children are being born with HIV,"
Schwartlander said. "New infections among infants have dropped by 24
percent in the last five years. And in 2009, we estimate that this
number stands at 370,000, which of course is still the target to be
overcome," he added, according to the news service (DeCapua, 11/23).
"We are breaking the trajectory of the AIDS epidemic with bold actions
and smart choices," UNAIDS Executive Director Michel Sidibe said in a
UNAIDS press release. "Investments in the AIDS response are paying off,
but gains are fragile – the challenge now is how we can all work to
accelerate progress," he added (11/23). The report found that "[m]ore than 1.2 million people began taking
anti-HIV drugs last year, an increase of 30 percent, as the number of
new infections declined for a 12th straight year," Bloomberg writes
(Bennett, 11/23). U.S. Global AIDS Coordinator Ambassador Eric Goosby "said the report was 'welcome news' to those fighting the AIDS epidemic," Reuters reports. "'It demonstrates that success can be achieved in the battle against AIDS,' he said in a statement. But he too added that the fight was 'far from over,'" according to the news service.
The Los Angeles Times examines other worrisome trends outlined in the
report: "In Eastern Europe and Central Asia, the number of people living
with HIV almost tripled from 2000 to 2009, climbing to 1.4 million
people. Russia and Ukraine are particular problem areas, accounting for
nearly 90% of all new infections in the region." The article notes how
HIV in the region "is concentrated primarily among drug abusers, sex
workers and, to a lesser extent, gay males" (Maugh, 11/23). HIV/AIDS experts also cautioned that recent gains in the global fight
against HIV/AIDS highlighted in the annual UNAIDS report could be at
risk due to the current economic climate, Reuters writes. In an
interview with Reuters, UNAIDS' Sidibe "said he was worried about a
slowdown in growth of funds to fight AIDS, with international donor
investment flattening for the first time in 2009, and about significant
barriers for marginalized groups such as drug users in getting the HIV
prevention and care services they need," the news service writes.
"UNAIDS said there was an estimated $15.9 billion available for the
global AIDS response in 2009, $10 billion short of the estimated need." "Demand is outstripping supply. Stigma, discrimination and bad laws
continue to place roadblocks for people living with HIV and people on
the margins," Sidibe said (11/23). The Los Angeles Times, also examining funding challenges, describes a
recent report published in the BMJ that suggested ways countries could
continue investing in global HIV/AIDS programs despite tightening
budgets. The Los Angeles Times adds that "Eric Goosby, U.S. global AIDS
coordinator, said in a statement that this country has been stretching
its funding through a variety of approaches, including switching from
air transportation for medications to ocean and land transport and
increasing the use of generic drugs." The article also quotes A.
Cornelius Baker, an AIDS expert on the Presidential Advisory Council on
HIV/AIDS (11/23). A Reuters factbox highlights key findings from the UNAIDS 2010 report (Kelland, 11/23). |