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December 1, 2006
Report cites positive signs amid rising HIV/AIDS statistics
A UMNS Report
By Linda Bloom
Programs to prevent HIV/AIDS get better results when they target the
people most at risk and make adaptations as the course of the epidemic
changes.
That’s one of the conclusions from the 2006 AIDS Epidemic Update,
published by the Joint United Nations Program on HIV/AIDS and the World
Health Organization.
Although the infection rate continues to grow – even in some
countries where it had previously declined or remained stable – the
report noted some positive signs, such as the decline in HIV prevalence
among young people in a number of African countries.
Today is World AIDS Day, and The United Methodist Church’s top
legislative body, the General Conference, encourages church members to
observe it through prayer and action.
The United Methodist Social Principles states that individuals living
with HIV/AIDS must be “treated with dignity and respect” and have rights
to employment, medical care, public education and full participation in
the church. “We urge the church to be actively involved in the
prevention of the spread of AIDS by providing educational opportunities
to the congregation and the community.”
According to figures from the 2006 update, released Nov. 21, an
estimated 39.5 million people are living with HIV. Southern Africa
“remains the epicenter of the global HIV epidemic,” with 32 percent of
those infected living in the sub-region and 34 percent of AIDS-related
deaths occurring there.
In fact, 65 percent of the 4.3 million new infections in 2006
occurred in sub-Saharan Africa, but significant increases also were seen
in the infection rates in Eastern Europe and Central Asia. Some 2.9
million people have died of AIDS-related illnesses in 2006.
The update reports that 1.7 million people are living with HIV/AIDS
in Eastern Europe and Central Asia, where the infection rate has seen a
20-fold increase in less than a decade. Most of the 15- to 24-year-olds
living with the disease in the region are in the Russian Federation and
the Ukraine. They make up nearly one-third of the new infections. Dirty
needles are the prime mode of HIV transmission.
Calling these statistics “numbers without tears,” the Rev. Donald
Messer, executive director of the Center for the Church and Global AIDS,
said the challenge is to have United Methodists and others “feel” the
facts.
“When I think of the global AIDS pandemic, I don’t respond to
abstract figures but to human faces,” Messer, the former president of
Iliff School of Theology in Denver, told United Methodist News Service.
“I remember the sobbing mothers and wives that embraced me in sorrow
at an AIDS hospital a few weeks ago in India. Likewise, I recall those
prisoners with AIDS that knelt in front of me and begged for us to pray
together. And I see those little children who are dying of AIDS because
the world refuses to provide them medicine.”
Focusing on prevention
The UNAIDS/WHO report suggests that increased HIV prevention programs
aimed at reaching those most at risk are having an effect. As young
people have delayed becoming sexually active, taken few sexual partners
and increased the use of condoms, declines in HIV infection between 2000
and 2005 have been seen in Botswana, Burundi, Cote d’Ivoire, Kenya,
Malawi, Rwanda, Tanzania and Zimbabwe.
Prevention programs specifically targeting sex workers and IV drug
users seem to have had an effect in some regions of China. Infection
among drug injectors in Portugal dropped by almost a third between 2001
and 2005 after special prevention programs were started.
But in several regions, including Latin America, the Caribbean, the
Middle East and North Africa, people at highest risk often aren’t
reached by HIV prevention and treatment programs because not enough is
known about their situations, according to the AIDS Epidemic Update.
Knowledge about safe sex and HIV also remains low in many countries.
Improving prevention strategies in 125 low- and middle-income
countries “would avert an estimated 28 million new infections between
2005 and 2015,” the report said. That would save $24 billion in
associated treatment costs.
“Once United Methodists begin to feel the facts of the global AIDS
pandemic, I am confident that every pastor will preach an Advent sermon
related to World AIDS Day and every layperson will speak out against
stigma and discrimination,” Messer said.
At that point, he added, the United Methodist Global AIDS Fund “will
easily surpass its $8 million goal.”
The fund is aiming to raise $1 per United Methodist in the United
States, or about $8 million. The United Methodist Global AIDS Fund is an
Advance Special of the United Methodist Church, #982345. Write that
number on the memo line of a check and drop it in the offering plate of
your local church. Credit-card donations may be made by calling
toll-free 800-554-8583.
Linda Bloom serves as a United Methodist News
Service news writer based in New York.
HIV, AIDS in Indiana
- Number of people living in Indiana with HIV: 7,254; 3,034 in
Marion County.
- Number of AIDS cases reported in Indiana since 1982: 7,989;
3,312 in Marion County.
More info:
www.statehealthfacts.org.
Source:
Indiana State Department of Health's semi-annual report for June
2006
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e-HUM Announcement copyright
2006 by Indiana Area United Methodist Communications.
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