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EPIDEMICS
China promises medical care for HIV-positive boy: state media
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Dec 22, 2014


Unlicensed Cambodian doctor charged over mass HIV infection
Phnom Penh (AFP) Dec 22, 2014 - An unlicensed Cambodian doctor was charged on Monday over an apparent mass HIV infection in a remote village after admitting he reused needles when treating patients, officials said.

Hundreds of panicked residents of Roka village in the western province of Battambang have flocked for testing since news of the infections emerged two weeks ago, with more than 100 people believed to have been infected.

Yem Chroeum, a 55-year-old self-styled doctor detained since last week, has admitted reusing needles and syringes on different patients, Battambang provincial police chief Sar Thet told AFP.

"He has confessed to sometimes reusing needles and syringes over the past years," said Thet, adding that the man, who is not thought to have undertaken formal medical training, "had the intention to infect villagers with the HIV virus".

Last week health officials said a total of 106 people may have been infected in Roka.

They could not immediately be reached for a new toll but the Pasteur Institute told The Phnom Penh Post newspaper Saturday that it had confirmed at least 119 cases in a third round of testing.

Formal charges were pressed against Chroeum at Battambang provincial court on Monday.

"He was charged with three counts which include the intention to infect others with HIV/AIDS, murder with cruel act, and operating an unlicensed clinic," prosecutor Nuon San told AFP.

He faces a maximum sentence of life imprisonment if convicted just of murder with "cruel act".

The motive for the alleged deliberate infections was unclear. Despite the murder charge, no deaths have yet been reported in connection with the case.

The outbreak in the village of around 800 residents emerged in late November when a 74-year-old Roka man tested positive at a local health centre for the virus. He was swiftly followed by his grand-daughter and son-in-law, according to the health ministry.

The infected villagers have accused Chroeum of spreading the virus by reusing contaminated needles on patients including children and the elderly.

An investigation into the outbreak by the kingdom's Ministry of Health, the World Health Organization and UNAIDS is under way.

Cambodia has been widely hailed for its efforts in tackling HIV/AIDS.

The National AIDS Authority says the rate of HIV infection among people aged 15 to 49 has declined from 0.6 percent in 2013 to 0.4 percent in 2014.

Currently, Cambodia estimates more than 73,000 people live with the disease.

The country is aiming for a zero-percent HIV/AIDS infection rate by 2020.

China's health ministry has promised to provide medical care and a living allowance for an eight-year-old HIV-positive boy targeted by villagers for expulsion, state media reported Monday, in a case that has drawn widespread condemnation.

Some 200 residents -- including the child's own grandfather -- signed a petition last week to expel him from their village in the southwestern province of Sichuan to "protect villagers' health", sparking anger online at perceived prejudice and ignorance in the countryside.

Beijing has now pledged to ensure the boy, dubbed Kunkun in the media, gets an education after reports he was having trouble finding a school that would take him, the China Daily said.

The health ministry has also pledged to conduct spot checks around China to uncover any other violations of anti-discrimination policies, the state-run paper reported.

The provincial Communist Party committee is investigating reports of the petition to expel the boy, the Global Times newspaper, with close ties to the party, quoted an unnamed propaganda official as saying.

The boy was left with his grandfather when both his parents quit the impoverished village to seek work and remains in his grandfather's care in the village for the present, the Beijing News indicated.

It was unclear on Monday whether Kunkun would still face expulsion from the village.

Reactions on social media have been swift to condemn the villagers who signed the petition.

"It's terrible that the villagers are undereducated, they should be sent to school too," said one user on Sina Weibo, a Twitter-like microblogging service.

Another commentator centred the blame on Kunkun's parents.

"It's strange that no one condemns the boy's parents who are so irresponsible and can be charged of abandonment crime in foreign countries," the user wrote.

The United Nations said it was "deeply concerned" about the case, which has prompted huge debate in China and highlighted the stigma attached to the virus in a country where sufferers face widespread discrimination.

"Stigma and discrimination are our biggest enemies in the fight to end HIV," the UN said in a statement Friday.

"But sadly, this week's reports demonstrate that breaching confidentiality, ignorance and fear continue to have devastating consequences for those living with HIV."

The child's grandfather and guardian, Luo Wenhui, told the Beijing News on Saturday that he had signed the petition to remove Kunkun because he "hoped that it would make things better," as he would receive better care elsewhere.

Luo, who is aged over 60, told the paper that he "did not have long to live" and that the petition was suggested by a local journalist as a way of drawing attention to his grandson's plight.

"We are getting too old, and he is getting more naughty... we don't have the ability to look after him," Luo said.

"If he didn't live better outside the village, he could come back."

The Global Times said the boy's mother left the family in 2006, while his father "lost contact" after Kunkun's condition was diagnosed.

The boy was reportedly referred to as a "time bomb" by villagers worried about being infected and local children shunned him. Reports said Kunkun was born HIV-positive through transmission from his mother.

Kunkun told the Beijing News that he could not remember what his parents looked like, adding: "Other children don't play with me."


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EPIDEMICS
Shame in China as village votes to expel HIV-positive boy
Beijing (AFP) Dec 18, 2014
The plight of a Chinese boy with the HIV virus, reportedly pushed to leave his home by 200 villagers who signed a petition, sparked intense online soul-searching in the country on Thursday. The case has highlighted the stigma attached to HIV in China, where many sufferers face widespread discrimination. The boy's guardian, his grandfather, was among those in the southwestern Sichuan prov ... read more


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