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U N I T E D N A T I O N S

Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs

Integrated Regional Information Network

[These reports do not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations]

CONTENT:

1 - GUINEA: First donation of ARVs will help slash costs

1 - GUINEA: First donation of ARVs will help slash costs

CONAKRY, 17 December (PLUSNEWS) - Guinea received a donation of

antiretroviral drugs (ARVs) from the international community for the first

time on Friday that will allow costs to be dramatically reduced.

The consignment of ARVs, which will enable 150 people including 25

children to be treated for a year, were handed over to Health Minister

Amara Cisse by the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) representative

in Guinea, Marcel Rudasingwa.

Cisse told reporters that the government had already reduced the cost of

ARV treatment from 900,000 Guinean francs (US$ 324) to 650,000 Guinea

francs (US$ 234).

“With these new drugs we will further reduce costs to 35,000 Guinea Francs

(US $ 13), with the eventual aim of making them free of charge,” he said.

The latest figures from the ministry of health say as many as 170,000

people are living with HIV/AIDS in this West African country, and that the

problem is spreading.

Rudasingwa, who was acting on behalf of the Global Fund to Fight AIDS,

Tuberculosis and Malaria, said this first donation was intended to help

patients described by doctors and technicians as being most in need.

" It's not as soon as a person is confirmed as being HIV-positive that he

is going to start a course of treatment; the doctors and technicians will

determine that " , he emphasised.

In a speech to the nation on World Aids Day on 1 December, Guinea's health

minister had warned that if immediate steps were not taken, the disease

would ravage some four percent of the country's workforce by 2015.

Alima Camera, second in command at SIDAPEG, an organisation for people

living with the virus, said: “I have been living with AIDS for two years

now and today we see the prospects of buying the drugs at a negligible

price. "

[ENDS]

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Subscriber: AIDS treatments

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