Guest guest Posted December 28, 2001 Report Share Posted December 28, 2001 AIDS spells faster death in India than in US, says study The Indian Express 27th December, 2001-New Delhi INDIANS progress faster to wards AIDS from their HIV seropositive status compared to their counterparts elsewhere in the world, a study conducted in Mumbai has revealed. While it takes an average 13 years for patients in homosexual relationships in the US to get full-blown AIDS—the disease is said to progress faster in this section— heterosexual Indians reach this stage in less than eight years. The progression of the Indian patient, who does not use anti-retroviral therapy, from disease to death is also almost twice as fast, at 18 months, which is normally 33 months in the US. The results of the study—first of its kind in Asia --- conducted over seven years, serve as a pointer to care-givers to anticipate changes in HIV patients' lives and to policymakers and demographers to forecast the impact of the epidemic in the country. The reasons why the progression is much faster in Indians are many and varied, ranging from poor nutrition to high prevalence of tropical diseases here. " Also, there are different strains and subtypes of the HIV virus in the country, which could be one of the reasons, " says Dr. Subhash Hira of the AIDS Research and Control Centre (ARCON), a joint venture of the government of Maharashtra and University of Texas, Houston. The study on 1,009 patients in J.J. Hospital, Mumbai, during the period from 1994 to 2001 was co-conducted by the Indian Statistical Institute, Kolkata, Department of Infectious Diseases, MGM Medical College, Navi Mumbai, and the departments of Skin & VD and Pathology, J.J. Hospital. The results of the study were presented at the International Conference on HIV/AIDS held here last week. According to the study, HIV patients not on anti-retroviral therapy here suffered from a high incidence of chronic fever, diarrhea, oral candidiasis, weight loss, incident tuberculosis and herpes zoster, which are the main clinical markers of the progress of the disease, with TB being the disease largely associated with the patient's death. " In fact, the occurrence of TB in an HIV positive patient is 5.7 per cent, which means an approximate six in 100 persons in the country develop TB due to HIV, " explains Dr. Hira, pointing out that at this rate around 2.5 lakh tuberculosis patients are added annually to the existing 2 million cases in the country. ********************************************************************** Jagdish Harsh ( jharsh@... ) François-Xavier Bagnoud (INDIA) ( http://www.fxb.org/ ) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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