POZ Community Forums

Main Forums => Living With HIV => Topic started by: manchesteruk on July 23, 2007, 12:23:47 pm

Title: World 'losing fight against Aids'
Post by: manchesteruk on July 23, 2007, 12:23:47 pm
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/6911736.stm (http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/6911736.stm)

US President George W Bush's top adviser on HIV/Aids has said the world is losing the battle against the virus.  Dr Anthony Fauci told a conference in Sydney that progress had been made, but more people were being infected with HIV than were being treated.

"For every one person that you put in therapy, six new people get infected. So we're losing that game, the numbers game," he said.

Dr Fauci was speaking at a gathering of the world's leading HIV/Aids experts.  Three years ago, fewer than 300,000 people in the developing world had access to the anti-retroviral drugs that help treat the deadly virus.  Last year, the figure had risen to 2.2 million, but new infections continue to outpace the global effort to treat and educate patients.

The HIV epidemic is essentially uncontrolled, uncontrolled in Africa, uncontrolled completely in Asia right now
Dr Brian Gazzard, British HIV Association

"Although we are making major improvements in the access to drugs, clearly prevention must be addressed in a very forceful way," said Dr Fauci, the director of the US National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.  But in many parts of the developing world, effective prevention strategies like condoms and sterile syringes are available to less than 15% of the population.  "The proven prevention modalities are not accessible to any substantial proportion of the people who need them," Dr Fauci said.

Declaration plan

Dr Fauci's warning was echoed by Dr Brian Gazzard, of the British HIV Association, who said that while advances were being made in extending access to anti-retroviral drugs, the disease was running out of control in parts of Asia and Africa.  "The HIV epidemic is essentially uncontrolled, uncontrolled in Africa, uncontrolled completely in Asia right now," he said.  Only a quarter of the people needing treatment were receiving it, meaning the other three-quarters would continue to spread the epidemic, which was still in its exponential growth stage, Dr Gazzard said.  The Australian conference's 5,000 delegates are drawn from more than 130 countries.

Participants at the forum are being urged to sign a declaration, aimed at boosting HIV research, which proposes that HIV programmes should devote at least 10% of spending on research.  The so-called Sydney Declaration's central message is that governments need to dedicate more resources to HIV research if the world is to effectively combat the Aids pandemic.  The document says this will help speed up the implementation of new drugs and technologies to prevent, diagnose and treat an infection which has already killed 25 million people.
Title: Re: World 'losing fight against Aids'
Post by: allopathicholistic on July 29, 2007, 11:43:45 pm
let's just hope the powers taht be don't come to the conclusion that it's a good idea to cease investing time, resources and money into a "losing fight" ... If so, HIV will really win, as in, it will never go away
Title: Re: World 'losing fight against Aids'
Post by: Matty the Damned on July 29, 2007, 11:57:26 pm
It's interesting isn't it? Save for the OP in this thread, the media coverage of the IAS gab-fest conference held down here last week was really most unhelpful. All the main coverage was about how HIV has effectively been defeated and is now a "manageable long term illness."

Matty the Damned holds a dim view of such conferences and the superannuated windbags, AIDS Industry careerists and other parasites who constitute the bulk of the delegations.

MtD
Title: Re: World 'losing fight against Aids'
Post by: tendai on July 30, 2007, 04:59:25 am
even though ZImbabwe's infection rate is said to have decreased i dont think this AIDS thing is going to go away unless a total cure is found.  there's too many people going around not knowing that they are infected and they pass it on to others and they pass it on. we have intensive campaigns like the "An HIV-free generation - it begns with you" campaign going on now but i'm so pessimistic that any of it will have tangible results.  a lot of people's attitude is " we're all going to die anyway whats the difference?"