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Global Education  /  Global Issues  /  HIV/AIDS

HIV/AIDS

 

Facts

  • World AIDS Day, December 1, helps us focus on the spread of the disease. It celebrates the progress made in the battle against the pandemic, and focuses attention on the continuing challenges caused by the spread of HIV.
  • There were 39.4 million people, including 17.6 million women and 2.2 million children under 15 years of age, living with HIV in 2004.
  • Sub-Saharan Africa has the world's highest rate of HIV/AIDS. Two thirds (64%) of all people living with HIV, and more than three quarters (76%) of all women living with HIV, live in Sub-Saharan Africa.
  • There were 4.9 million people, including 640 000 children under 15 years of age, infected with HIV in 2004. That's 13,400 new infections every day!
  • There were 3.1 million AIDS related deaths, which included 510 000 children under 15 years, in 2004.
  • Of the 17 countries which each have over 100,000 children orphaned by AIDS, 13 are in conflict or on the brink of emergency, and 13 are classed as 'Heavily Indebted Poor Countries'.
  • In Botswana, the country with the highest prevalence of HIV, the life expectancy has plummeted from 60 years in 1985-1990 to just 40 years in 2000-2005.

Source: http://www.unaids.org/

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Background

The HIV/AIDS pandemic represents one of the greatest challenges facing developing countries. HIV/AIDS threatens to reverse decades of hard-won development gains. It attacks people in their most productive years, destroys families and communities, and places heavy financial burdens on the economy.

What is HIV/AIDS?

The Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) infection causes a gradual depletion and weakening of the immune system. This results in an increased susceptibility of the body to infections, such as pneumonia and tuberculosis, and can lead to the development of AIDS. Most people infected with HIV do not know that they have become infected, because no symptoms develop immediately after the initial infection but they are highly infectious and can transmit the virus to another person.

Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS) is the term applied to the most advanced stages of HIV infection. The majority of people infected with HIV, if not treated, develop signs of AIDS within 8-10 years.

Who is affected? How does it spread?

Globally, the people most vulnerable to HIV/AIDS include:

  • the poor
  • women and girls
  • people with multiple sex partners
  • injecting drug users
  • children of infected mothers

HIV is spread through sexual intercourse; blood transfusion; the sharing of contaminated needles in health care settings and through intravenous drug use; and from mother to infant, during pregnancy, childbirth and breastfeeding. Religious, cultural, political and economic differences mean that different countries have different rates and profiles of infection. However, societies which have high levels of poverty and large populations that engage in risky behaviour - such as unsafe sex and injecting drug use - have higher rates of HIV infection.

Conflict and displacement can lead to increased spread of HIV/AIDS as social networks are disrupted and sexual exploitation is used as a weapon.

The AIDS epidemic is affecting women and girls in increasing numbers. Females are biologically more vulnerable to HIV than males. For physiological reasons, women are twice as likely as men to acquire HIV from a single act of unprotected vaginal sex. In many countries, women and girls are also socially and economically more vulnerable. Social and cultural factors mean they are less likely to be able to control with whom, when and how they have sex, and be educated in how to protect themselves from the virus.

Human and social impact

People's lives are affected in many ways which include:

  • a wide variety of physical health problems
  • social isolation due to the stigma and misunderstanding of the spread of the disease
  • altered family responsibilities - grandparents caring for large numbers of grandchildren
  • children orphaned, and left to live alone and fend for themselves
  • loss of cultural traditions as parents and key community members die before children are able to absorb their knowledge
  • loss of healthy adults, which means less ability to grow food and earn an income
  • loss of income, which makes people less able to access health care, education, and food, which, in turn, means they are less able to develop fully and protect themselves against exploitation and are likely to fall further into debt

Economic impact

Families suffer major economic problems as productive adults become ill, including:

  • loss of income as family members become sick and are unable to work, or have to give up work to care for the sick
  • limited income being consumed by expensive drugs and funerals

Countries suffer significant economic impacts including:

  • loss of investment in education and the knowledge and skills of professionally trained people
  • reduced ability to produce food
  • reduced ability generate income from internal sales and exports
  • high costs of treatment and demands on health systems

Prevention and treatment

There is no effective cure for HIV. Antiretroviral drugs, combined with good nutrition and good health care to fend off opportunistic infections, can limit the effects of HIV. Yet this treatment is not available for many people living with HIV. The cost of antiretroviral drugs is prohibitive, and good nutrition and health care are also costly in communities which have high infection rates. International advocacy has contributed to the dramatic price reduction in drugs for low-income countries but antiretroviral drugs generally remain out of reach of the majority of people living with HIV/AIDS in poor countries.

Prevention is an important factor in limiting the spread of HIV. Although approaches vary, depending on the religious, social, cultural and political influences in a country, there is increasing commitment to coordinate regional programs. Education and awareness programs targeting vulnerable populations are most effective where there is political will to confront the issues openly. In many countries stigma and discrimination prevent effective treatment, and support and behavioural changes are slow.

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Australia's response

The Australian Government contributes financially to international organisations working to combat HIV/AIDS. Australia funds the development of HIV services in countries affected by HIV/AIDS and supports countries to strengthen their responses to the epidemic. Activities that Australia funds include education and awareness raising, counselling and care, policy development, disease surveillance systems, clinical services and building the skills of local staff. Australia is active in advocacy at the policy level, promoting regional coordination in initiatives designed to meet local needs and priorities, especially reducing the impact of the epidemic on children, young people and families. Australia recognises that HIV/AIDS is more than a health issue, and includes a focus on HIV/AIDS in all its development programs.

Australia's approach focuses on five priority areas:
1. Strengthening leadership and advocacy
2. Building capacity
3. Changing attitudes and behaviour
4. Addressing HIV transmission associated with injecting drug users
5. Supporting treatment and care

Source: http://www.ausaid.gov.au/hottopics/hivaids/response.cfm

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The global agenda


  

Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria
URL:  http://www.theglobalfund.org/en/

The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria was created to dramatically increase resources to fight three of the world's most devastating diseases, and to direct those resources to areas of greatest need. As a partnership between governments, civil society, the private sector and affected communities, the Global Fund represents an innovative approach to international health financing.


Three Ones Principles (UNAIDS)
URL:  http://www.unaids.org/en/Coordination/Initiatives/three_ones.asp

The 'Three Ones' principles aim to speed up action and make efficient and effective use of resources at the country level though coordination and partnerships. The Three Ones are: 1. one agreed national action framework to provide the basis for coordinating the work of all partners; 2. one national AIDS coordinating authority with a broad-based multi-sectoral mandate; and 3. one country-level monitoring and evaluation system.


UNAIDS: the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS
URL:  http://www.unaids.org/en/default.asp

UNAIDS is dedicated to preventing the transmission of HIV, reducing the suffering caused by HIV and AIDS, and countering the impact of the pandemic on individuals, communities and societies. The site features a searchable database with information on AIDS and HIV, country-specific facts sheets, press releases, and Current Events section.


World Health Organization - The 3 by 5 Initiative
URL:  http://www.who.int/3by5/en/

The 3 by 5 Initiative is the global target to get three million people living with HIV/AIDS in developing and middle income countries on antiretroviral treatment (ART) by the end of 2005. It is a step towards the gaol of providing, as a human right, universal access to HIV/AIDS prevention and treatment services for all who need them.


HIV/AIDS patient sitting on a hospital bed in Port Moresby

Port Moresby's General Hospital provides comfort to those dying from AIDS-related illnesses
Source: AusAID/Lorrie Graham

Four children and two carers in a creche in Zimbabwe for families affected by HIV/AIDS

Parents who are living with AIDS are supported with a child care service at this crèche run by the Family AIDS Support Organisation (FASO) in Zimbabwe
Source: AusAID Focus Dec 2000

 

Colourful poster in Indonesian reads: AIDS - Kita bisa kena, kita juga bisa cegah (Anyone can get it, we can all prevent it

AIDS - Kita bisa kena, kita juga bisa cegah (Anyone can get it, we can all prevent it).
This poster is part of the mass media HIV/AIDS prevention campaign in Indonesia, and is designed to create community awareness quickly
Source: AusAID Focus, December 2000

Over 13,000 people a day are infected with HIV

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Last Modified : Wednesday, 29 October 2008