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EPIDEMICS
AIDS at 30: New funds, smarter spending needed - UNAIDS
by Staff Writers
Paris (AFP) June 3, 2011

UNAIDS painted a tableau of early setbacks and later successes in the fight against a complex disease.

More money, less waste and smarter programmes are urgently needed to consolidate precious gains in the war on AIDS and HIV, UNAIDS said on Friday ahead of the disease's 30th anniversary.

"The number of people becoming infected and dying is decreasing, but the international resources needed to sustain this progress have declined for the first time in 10 years, despite tremendous unmet needs," UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon warned.

"We have a long way to go to prevent new HIV infections, end discrimination and scale up treatment, care and support," he said in a foreword to the report.

The 139-page document, "AIDS at 30: Nations at the Crossroads," coincides with the anniversary on June 5 of a 1981 report by US epidemiologists describing the case of five young homosexuals whose immune systems had been destroyed.

That condition, later named acquired immune deficiency syndrome, has since killed nearly 30 million people, and more than 33 million others have the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) that causes it, according to UNAIDS estimates.

The UN General Assembly in New York will hold a high-level meeting from June 8-10 to assess progress in the campaign.

UNAIDS painted a tableau of early setbacks and later successes in the fight against a complex disease.

It hailed in particular "dramatic gains" in getting AIDS drugs -- once the preserve of rich economies -- to patients in poor countries.

At the end of 2010, 6.6 million people in low- and middle-income countries had access to treatment, it said.

This amounted to an increase of 1.4 million over 2009, and a 22-fold rise over 2001, "a vivid illustration of the power of international solidarity, innovative approaches and people-centred responses."

On the downside, the global tally still fell far short of the goal of "universal access" that the United Nations had enshrined for 2010. That deadline came and went with another nine million badly-infected people still in need of treatment.

Achieving that aim and tackling the many other issues of AIDS will require a major boost in funds, UNAIDS warned.

Between 2001 and 2009, resources for poorer countries rose 10-fold, from 1.6 billion dollars annually to 15.9 billion.

But this rise masks a flatlining that began with the 2008 financial crisis as western countries that are overwhelmingly the biggest foreign contributors began to tighten their belts.

The United States alone accounted for 3.165 billion dollars in AIDS support in 2009, followed by Britain, with 658 million and the Netherlands with 389 million dollars, although Denmark donated most as a percentage of its GDP.

"Waning support" had to be reversed, said the report.

Without naming names, it urged middle-income countries to entirely self-finance their AIDS programmes within the next few years.

And in a veiled reference to China and other developing giants, it said "some countries that are now emerging as global and regional economic powers may in due course" become donors rather than recipients.

Donations from China and oil-rich Gulf nations have become a sticky issue in the field of AIDS. Sources say Michel Kazatchkine, head of the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, has worked hard to drum up help from these countries but so far to little effect.

The report also pointed the finger at countries that were doing too little to prevent new infections, or failing to spend money in ways that would have the greatest impact.

In West Africa, scarce funds for prevention programmes often bypassed sex workers or gays, whose HIV prevalence was 10 times greater than in the rest of the population.

In parts of southern Africa, older heterosexuals account for a big chunk of new infections, but there are few programmes specifically designed to convey a safe sex message to them.

And in Asia, meanwhile, some 90 of spending on prevention for young people fails to target the youngsters who are at higher risk of infection.

Veteran AIDS campaigner and former US president Bill Clinton said the fight against AIDS had to adjust to leaner times by being smarter and less wasteful.

NGOs had to cut their overheads, governments had to reduce costs and efforts had to be focused on population niches most at risk of infection.

"By doing these things, even with the same level of funding, we can prevent many more infections," Clinton said.




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S.Africa's first free AIDS clinic celebrates 10 years
Cape Town (AFP) June 3, 2011 - South Africa's first clinic to roll-out free AIDS drugs celebrated a decade of lifesaving success on Friday, but also warned of new challenges facing what is now the world's biggest treatment programme.

The trailblazing project in shack-filled Khayelitsha in Cape Town began at a time when South Africa's government questioned the causes of AIDS and a health minister dubbed "Dr Beetroot" advocated vegetables over proven measures.

The courts later forced the government to offer medication, and South Africa now has the world's largest treatment programme.

The benefits of treatment were touted in the results from the first free clinic, where mother to child transmission has dropped to 2.5 percent, lowered death rates, and boosted testing from 450 to 55,000 per year.

"Khayelitsha is showing that it is possible to eradicate the transmission of mother to child," said Eric Goemaere, medical advisor for Doctors Without Borders, which started the clinic in 2001.

"We don't speak about a research setting or about the sophisticated hospitals in the United States. We speak about Khayelitsha: 2.5 percent, it's absolutely amazing."

But making sure that people kept taking the drugs was a challenge with only 65 percent of patients after five years still following their treatment which risks the need for expensive new medicines.

After five years of medical care, about 12 pecent of patients need second-line treatments when an initial cheaper cocktail of drugs had failed, a report on the project said.

That number is expected to rise. One in 10 patients who failed second line treatment already need to switch to a next round of drugs not available at state hospitals. That medication costs up to 15 times as much as the first cocktail.

Now one million people receive anti-AIDS drugs in South Africa, which has the world's most HIV infections, affecting 5.6 million of the 50-million population, according to UN estimates.





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EPIDEMICS
Longevity of AIDS patients presents new risks: US
Washington (AFP) June 2, 2011
Thirty years after the AIDS epidemic first surfaced, more people than ever before in the United States - more than 1.1 million - are living with HIV, the Centers for Disease Control said Thursday. The longevity of AIDS patients is widely attributed to the success of antiretroviral drugs which became widespread in the 1990s, but the rise in cases presents new risks for spreading HIV, the CD ... read more


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