The Fight Against AIDS: One Step Forward, Three Steps Back
Published April 19, 2007
In what seems to be a part of the pattern when it comes to progress in fighting AIDS worldwide, specifically in Africa, the little glimmer of hope offered by some good news is offset by the reality of what's still needed to be done. Although the cost of much needed first line drugs has dropped and countries are coming up with innovative means of reaching their people, the number of people not receiving care still outnumbers those receiving care by as much as 90%.
Pregnant women and children are still horribly at risk. With only 15% of all children and 11% of all pregnant women worldwide receiving care, it's hard to get excited by stories of small advancements being made. Even more depressing is that the region hardest hit, Africa, is still the region where care is the least adequate.
Ninety percent of children who have AIDS live in Africa, as do the majority of the two million pregnant women who suffer from the disease. Each of these women is a threat to pass the illness onto their children in the womb if they don't receive pre-natal care.
One of the major reasons for the shortfall in treatment is that most countries in Africa simply lack the facilities to properly care for their people. In order for a pregnant woman to be treated, she has to be diagnosed. This means having access to a proper health care facility with a lab for processing test results. Even that isn't adequate on it's own because there still has to be continual care until the woman comes to term or she could still be infectious.
A similar situation exists for children in Africa. Half the babies born with AIDS die by the time they are two, but during those years their symptoms are impossible to distinguish from other diseases without testing. Unfortunately, the test for someone under eighteen months of age is complicated and expensive, which means most infants die untested, let alone treated.
These countries lack health care facilities because they depend on the International Monetary Fund for loans to keep their countries afloat. One of the conditions of being a loan recipient is that countries cut spending on social programs like health care.
Even though the number of people who are receiving medication has risen thirteen fold since 2003 (100,000 to 1.3million) it's really only a drop in the bucket, especially when you consider these figures are based only on reported cases of AIDS. Fear of being diagnosed, ignorance of the facts, and the social stigma surrounding the disease keeps large numbers of people from being tested and the disease continues to spread close to unchecked.
The availability of less expensive first line retro viral drugs has probably been responsible for the majority of the gains made in the fight against HIV/AIDS in places like Africa. Problems still abound with ensuring people have access to the drugs they will need. The second line drugs, which people on long-term treatment need, are still priced out of reach for most African health care systems to afford.
- The Fight Against AIDS: One Step Forward, Three Steps Back
- Published: April 19, 2007
- Type: Opinion
- Section: Sci/Tech
- Filed Under: Sci/Tech: Health/Fitness, Politics: International, Culture: Society, Culture: Business and Economics
- Writer: Richard Marcus
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Richard Marcus is a long-haired Canadian iconoclast who writes reviews and opines on the world as he sees it at 









