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Health: the problem of AIDS
UNAIDS has estimated that in 1999 there were 2.6 million deaths due to AIDS, the
highest global total since the beginning of the epidemic, and 5.6 million newly infected
individuals. In all, 33.6 million individuals are estimated to be living with
HIV/AIDS. The vast majority of these are in Africa and South and South-East Asia: almost
70 percent of the people living with HIV/AIDS (23.3 million) are in Sub-Saharan Africa,
and about 20 percent (6 million) are in South and South-East Asia; over two-thirds of the
new infections of HIV in 1999 (3.8 million) were in Sub-Saharan Africa alone (Table 14).
A recent World Bank Study (Confronting AIDS: Public
Priorities in a Global Epidemic) showed that in a country such as Côte
dIvoire the prevalence rate which is as high as 14 percent and predicted to rise to
16 percent by 2010 with the current strategies, could be halved to almost 8 percent by
2000 if condom use could be increased to 80 percent among sex workers and 20 percent among
others with many partners.
The Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) has so far been unique among infectious diseases
in that it strikes rich people in the same proportion, or larger proportions, than it
strikes poor people. Nevertheless, AIDS is a disease of poverty (see Confronting AIDS):
- AIDS is a disease of poverty in the sense that most people with HIV/AIDS are poor. The
disease struck very hard in poor countries: 90 percent of infected people are in the
developing world, and a full two-thirds are in Sub-Saharan Africa. Moreover, although
infection rates are declining in the developed world, they are stable or rising in most
developing countries.
- Recent studies in developed countries have shown AIDS incidence to be highest among the
very poor. At the moment, there are no data to assess the precise proportions of poor and
non-poor people who are infected in developing countries, but if trends for developed
countries are replicated worldwide, the poor will be more likely to become infected than
the non-poor.
- AIDS deepens and spreads poverty. Poor households are more adversely affected by an AIDS
death of a prime-age adult than other households because they have fewer assets to draw on
to cope with medical expenses and the loss of income and services that a prime-age adult
typically provides.
- AIDS is also likely to increase poverty through the rise in the number of children who
lose one or both parents. Evidence shows that orphans have significantly lower enrollment
rates and are more likely to be malnourished than non-orphans. Lack of schooling and
inadequate nutrition will make it more difficult for orphans to escape poverty.
Table 14. The distribution of HIV/AIDS around
the world
Region |
New
HIV/infections during 1999 |
|
People
living with HIV/AIDS as of end 1998 |
Adult HIV/AIDS
Prevalence Rate a |
|
Number |
Percent |
|
Number |
Percent |
Percent |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Sub-Saharan Africa |
3,800,000 |
67.67 |
|
23,300,000 |
69.51 |
8.0 |
South and South-East Asia |
1,300,000 |
23.15 |
|
6,000,000 |
17.90 |
0.7 |
Latin America |
150,000 |
2.67 |
|
1,300,000 |
3.88 |
0.6 |
East Asia and Pacific |
120,000 |
2.14 |
|
530,000 |
1.58 |
0.1 |
East. Europe and Central Asia |
95,000 |
1.69 |
|
360,000 |
1.07 |
0.1 |
Caribbean |
57,000 |
1.02 |
|
360,000 |
1.07 |
2.0 |
North Africa and Middle East |
19,000 |
0.34 |
|
220,000 |
0.66 |
0.1 |
North America |
44,000 |
0.78 |
|
920,000 |
2.74 |
0.6 |
Western Europe |
30,000 |
0.53 |
|
520,000 |
1.55 |
0.3 |
Australia and New Zealand |
500 |
0.01 |
|
12,000 |
0.04 |
0.1 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total |
5,615,500 |
100.00 |
|
33,522,000 |
100.00 |
1.1 |
Source: UNAIDS, Aids Epidemic Update: December
1999.
Note: a The Adult Prevalence Rate is the proportion of adults (15 to 49
years of age) living with HIV/AIDS in 1999.
Next: Education: primary enrollments
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