Guest guest Posted June 1, 2006 Report Share Posted June 1, 2006 What they say about HIV/Aids, 25 years on " 2005 was the least bad year in the history of the Aids epidemic " Piot, Unaids Report Shows AIDS Epidemic Slowdown in 2005 By LAWRENCE K. ALTMAN Published: May 31, 2006 UNITED NATIONS, May 30 — New surveys suggest that the global AIDS epidemic has begun to slow, with a decline in new H.I.V. infections in about 10 countries, the leader of the United Nations AIDS program said Tuesday. Outside of those countries — which include Haiti, Cambodia, Kenya and Zimbabwe — the number of new AIDS infections continues to rise or hover at its current pace. Meanwhile, public health efforts are reaching only a small proportion of people at risk, Dr. Piot, the executive director of Unaids, said at a news conference here on Tuesday. " It's a very complex epidemic, " he said. " We can no longer talk about AIDS " as a single epidemic, but as many diverse ones. India, for example, is at about the same level as South Africa as the country with the largest number of H.I.V. infections. India has 5.7 million infected people and South Africa 5.5 million, but India's population is far greater. Showing no sign of decline, South Africa has a prevalence rate of about 19 percent of 47 million people. In India, the rate is less than 1 percent of its population of 1.1 billion. The progress against AIDS in some regions represents dividends from a surge in financing since 2001, when the United Nations pledged its commitment to stem the epidemic by 2010. That declaration called for countries to report regularly on their responses to AIDS. This week, the General Assembly will review the progress that 126 countries have said they have made. The report, the most comprehensive survey ever compiled from country data, pointed to the 2001 United Nations meeting as a turning point for AIDS financing. In 2005, the United States and the rest of the world spent $8.3 billion on AIDS, compared with $1.6 billion in 2001. " We are seeing the impact, " Dr. Piot said. " It's about time. " He cited increased condom use, a rise in the postponement of sexual intercourse and a decrease in the number of sex partners as factors in the slowing of the epidemic. Summarizing the report's findings, Dr. Piot said that " 2005 was the least bad year in the history of the AIDS epidemic, " first detected 25 years ago. The most promising news, Dr. Piot said, is that the number of new H.I.V. infections has dropped in three African countries — Kenya, Zimbabwe and urban areas of Burkina Faso. Earlier, Uganda reported decreases. Dr. Piot said Cambodia and four states in India (Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, Maharashtra and Tamil Nadu) showed a drop in new infections, joining Thailand's earlier success. In the Caribbean, the world's second-most-affected region behind Africa, new infections have declined in urban areas of Haiti and in the Bahamas. AIDS is the region's leading cause of death in people aged 15 to 44. In Haiti, the percentage of pregnant women infected with H.I.V. declined to 3.7 percent in 2003-2004 from 9.4 percent in 1993, Dr. Piot said. Despite the positive trends, Dr. Piot reported grim findings from China, Indonesia, Papua New Guinea, Russia and Vietnam, with signs of outbreaks in Bangladesh and Pakistan. Ending the pandemic will depend largely on changing social norms like empowering women, reducing the stigma of the disease and encouraging a greater reduction in the number of sex partners, the report said. Most countries have strong foundations for building an effective response against AIDS, the report said, but systems to carry out the plans remain inconsistent. The thoroughness of the individual national reports varied, and many countries did not provide data for all categories, so summarizing them was difficult, Dr. Piot said in an interview. Still, the replies identified significant weaknesses, he said: ¶Fewer than 50 percent of young people achieved comprehensive knowledge levels about H.I.V., far fewer than the 90 percent goal. ¶Only 9 percent of gay men and fewer than 20 percent of intravenous drug users received any kind of H.I.V. prevention help in 2005. ¶Services to prevent H.I.V. infections in infants have not scaled up as rapidly as programs to provide antiretroviral therapy. Just 9 percent of pregnant women were covered. The United States, Britain, Canada, France and Germany gave no statistics on surveys about the percentage of young people who correctly identify ways to prevent H.I.V.; who had sex with casual partners in the last year; who had sex before 15; or who used condoms during the most recent sexual intercourse with casual partners. Thoraya Ahmed Obaid, the United Nations Population Fund executive director, said the world needed to increase its prevention efforts. The report shows that the epicenter of the epidemic remains in sub-Saharan Africa. There the epidemic has reached a peak, but incidence remains unacceptably high, Dr. Piot said. Across most of Africa, H.I.V. prevalence among pregnant women attending clinics has remained roughly level for several years. The United Nations disputed contentions by some observers that the leveling off showed a turning point in the AIDS epidemic in Africa. " Available evidence does not offer grounds for such conclusions, " Dr. Piot said, in part because " the actual number of people infected continues to rise because of population growth. " " (India) will need to improve its prevention efforts if it is to avoid serious HIV outbreaks " http://www.nytimes.com/2006/05/31/world/31aids.html?_r=1 & hp & ex=1149048000 & en=b58\ e7bf586cd6d02 & ei=5094 & partner=homepage & oref=slogin ********************** " We are at a real turning point in the balance between optimism and despair " Feachem, Global Fund Between hope and despair: why the fight against Aids is at a turning point By Jack Published: May 31 2006 03:00 | Last updated: May 31 2006 03:00 As leaders of nations corroded by Aids gather at the United Nations in New York today to discuss the disease, another group will be noticeably absent: leaders of the world's richest nations who pledged them significant help five years ago. The continued ambivalence - even as public health experts are heralding the first tentative signs of a slowdown in the growth of Aids since it was identified in 1981 - reflects both the enormity of the task ahead and the political and ethical sensitivities that underpin it. To consign Aids to history will require not only a big injection of cash over the long term. It will also demand a consensus on how best to distribute resources between prevention, diagÂÂnosis and treatment - and a new boldness in tackling the issues that debate will throw up. Piot, head of UNAids, the United Nations' co-ordinating body, reflects the mood of cautious optimism that has taken hold among experts in recent months. " There has been more progress in the last two years than in the previous 22, " he says. " In 1996, even working on Aids was stigmatising, let alone having it; 2005 was the least bad year yet. " On the positive side, science has made considerable progress in treating Aids through the development of antiretroviral medicines, and politicians have mobilised strong support to secure additional funding. Last July, the leaders of the G8 leading industrialised nations pledged at Gleneagles to achieve " as close as possible " to universal treatment for those who needed it by 2010. Spurred on by the previous UN General Assembly on Aids in 2001, the Global Fund to Fight Aids, Tuberculosis and Malaria was created. It has since become the biggest channel for multilateral support. Feachem, its head, says: " It's quite remarkable. Since our creation in 2002, we have committed $10bn [£5.3bn, €7.8bn] to projects in 130 countries and the impact is now starting to be seen. " Total support has risen substantially to more than $8bn a year, swollen further by the World Bank, bilateral programmes led by US President W. Bush's Pepfar and redoubled efforts by individual countries. There has also been a sharp drop in the price of drugs, through a mixture of discounts and donation programmes by pharmaceutical companies, price competition from copycat generic manufacturers and political leverage from groups such as the Clinton Foundation. Mr Piot can point to findings in the latest UNAids report published yesterday showing more than 1.3m HIV-positive people in low- and middle-income countries are now on treatment, up from 240,000 five years ago. But it is far too soon to claim victory. Aids remains one of the world's greatest health threats, responsible for 25m deaths since 1981. It has attacked teachers, doctors and all parts of the workforce, while creating hundreds of thousands of orphans, undermining economic development and even threatening global security. While 700,000 people are on treatment in the developed world - a high proportion of those who need it - the 1.3m in the developing nations represents only one-fifth of those with advanced HIV who should be on drugs. Nearly 3m people died from Aids last year, including hundreds of thousands of children unable to gain access to little-researched paediatric drugs. More worrying still, the number of new HIV cases was at its highest level ever in 2005 at 4m, while the life-prolonging effect of drugs means that a record 40m people are now living with the infection. Against such a background, there is no doubt that more money is required. " The world is on a trajectory that will fall significantly short of the interÂÂnationally endorsed universal access goal for 2010, leaving millions without life-saving care, " warns the International Treatment Preparedness Coalition, one advocacy group. The failure of the World Health Organisation's goal of " 3 by 5 " - or 3m on treatment by the end of 2005 - highlighted the challenges. Meeting the goal of universal treatment would mean placing and keeping up to 10m people on treatment by 2010. UNAids estimates that that will cost $23bn a year for at least a generation, orthree times current spending levels. " We are at a real turning point in the balance between optimism and despair, " says the Global Fund's Mr Feachem. " Without full funding, the G8 pledge is just pie in the sky. " He is forced to seek fresh support from donor countries every few months, with the latest " sixth round " recently launched with support from the UK, which is keen to see follow-through from the Gleneagles' G8 summit it hosted last summer. Other countries were more hesitant and little of the money has been raised so far. " Up till now, it has been about haphazard crisis management, " says Mr Piot. " Now we are starting to have a critical mass, we need a more sustainable, strategic, long-term response. The reality of dealing with Aids is it is not something we can run year by year. We need to count in decades. " Business could do much more. For Jim Kim, the former head of the WHO's 3-by-5 programme, that includes drug manufacturers. He believes they should sub-contract antiretroviral production to low-cost producers. " We've got to get serious about establishing a humanitarian corridor, " he says. " There is no way discount programmes will meet the target of 8-10m people on treatment by 2010. " Holbrooke, president of the 215-strong Global Business Coalition on HIV/Aids, called this month for support from many more companies. They can help not only through donations, but by enhancing their own activities in offering education, testing, counselling, treatment and a pledge of non-discrimination to employees and their families. Beyond new money, however, a second issue in the fight against Aids is how the funds should be spent. The G8 leaders, the WHO and the UN assemblies have focused primarily on accelerated treatment. They have been far less vocal about prevention and HIV-testing programmes, which lack the dramatic appeal of " saving lives now " . Yet both drugs, and the infrastructure required to ensure people receive them consistently, mean that treatment is costly and risks diluting other health initiatives in poor countries. Prevention and testing may prove cheaper, less disruptive and more effective in tackling the causes of the epidemic. " An increased emphasis on prevention is something that is sorely needed, " says Tedstrom, president of Transatlantic Partners Against Aids, a charity working in the countries of the former Soviet Union to raise the profile of the issue at this year's G8 summit in St sburg. While there are some indications from UNAids that infection rates may have begun to fall in parts of Africa where they had reached saturation point, he stresses that in other regions of the world - notably Russia, China and India - the situation remains parlous. The prospect of treatment may have induced complacency that has in turn led to new infections in the US and western Europe. Treatment on its own in any case does little to address the longer-term problem of stemming the rate of infection. The more survive thanks to antiretroviral drugs, the larger the pool of HIV-positive people. That, in turn, risks further spread of HIV - including a drug-resistant form of the virus - to others. " If you have treatment but it's inÂÂeffective and generating resistance, you are building up a problem for the future that is going to be almost insoluble, " warns Coker, reader in health at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. " Personally, I would be more cautious than the international community in advising that 'antiretrovirals for all' is feasible and will achieve the claimed benefits. If this doesn't work, we won't get another opportunity to revisit it with the same sense of urgency and support. " Most health officials are reluctant to argue for a reallocation of scarce resources. " The great lesson of the last couple of years is that there are no choices, " says Mr Feachem. " We need prevention, testing and treatment: all three, all big, all together. They feed off each other. " Experience in the field certainly suggests that the best way to ensure people are tested for HIV is to offer them the incentive of treatment. Testing also provides an opportunity to reinforce prevention messages. Yet if prevention and testing have been underplayed, even more neglected has been research into what works. Information on the extent and spread of drug-resistant HIV virus in the developing world is scant, for instance. The Global Fund is only now scrambling to commission a five-year evaluation of its own work and cannot even detail how its money has been split between prevention, treatment and testing. " We don't have the evidence of the effects on the rest of the public health system of HIV treatment, and for every prevention programme, the evidence is pretty muddled, " says Murray, professor at Harvard's School of Public Health. However, studies conducted in recent years point to a third barrier to enhanced Aids support. Many of the most effective methods clash with the values of countries struggling to fight the epidemic and with important funders and influences, such as the White House and the Vatican. Research suggests the role of condom distribution in cutting infection far outweighs any resulting rise in promiscuity and that free needle-exchange and substitution programmes for hard drug users reduce transmission without creating new addicts. But the US administrationemphasises abstinence and loyalty over condom use. Grant recipients must condemn sex workers and refrain from offering abortion advice. Critics say such policies risk undermining organisations best placed to tackle the epidemic, while handing funds to inexperienced religious groups. Other challenges lie ahead: curbing violence against women, encouraging circumcision and fighting prejudice against high-risk groups such as homosexuals, prostitutes, drug addicts and prisoners. If they are serious about turning their Aids rhetoric into reality, political leaders will need not only the financial resources to make a difference abroad but also the moral courage to defend controversial policies at home. http://news.ft.com/cms/s/c6e0de98-f041-11da-b80e-0000779e2340.html Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 1, 2006 Report Share Posted June 1, 2006 What they say about HIV/Aids, 25 years on " 2005 was the least bad year in the history of the Aids epidemic " Piot, Unaids Report Shows AIDS Epidemic Slowdown in 2005 By LAWRENCE K. ALTMAN Published: May 31, 2006 UNITED NATIONS, May 30 — New surveys suggest that the global AIDS epidemic has begun to slow, with a decline in new H.I.V. infections in about 10 countries, the leader of the United Nations AIDS program said Tuesday. Outside of those countries — which include Haiti, Cambodia, Kenya and Zimbabwe — the number of new AIDS infections continues to rise or hover at its current pace. Meanwhile, public health efforts are reaching only a small proportion of people at risk, Dr. Piot, the executive director of Unaids, said at a news conference here on Tuesday. " It's a very complex epidemic, " he said. " We can no longer talk about AIDS " as a single epidemic, but as many diverse ones. India, for example, is at about the same level as South Africa as the country with the largest number of H.I.V. infections. India has 5.7 million infected people and South Africa 5.5 million, but India's population is far greater. Showing no sign of decline, South Africa has a prevalence rate of about 19 percent of 47 million people. In India, the rate is less than 1 percent of its population of 1.1 billion. The progress against AIDS in some regions represents dividends from a surge in financing since 2001, when the United Nations pledged its commitment to stem the epidemic by 2010. That declaration called for countries to report regularly on their responses to AIDS. This week, the General Assembly will review the progress that 126 countries have said they have made. The report, the most comprehensive survey ever compiled from country data, pointed to the 2001 United Nations meeting as a turning point for AIDS financing. In 2005, the United States and the rest of the world spent $8.3 billion on AIDS, compared with $1.6 billion in 2001. " We are seeing the impact, " Dr. Piot said. " It's about time. " He cited increased condom use, a rise in the postponement of sexual intercourse and a decrease in the number of sex partners as factors in the slowing of the epidemic. Summarizing the report's findings, Dr. Piot said that " 2005 was the least bad year in the history of the AIDS epidemic, " first detected 25 years ago. The most promising news, Dr. Piot said, is that the number of new H.I.V. infections has dropped in three African countries — Kenya, Zimbabwe and urban areas of Burkina Faso. Earlier, Uganda reported decreases. Dr. Piot said Cambodia and four states in India (Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, Maharashtra and Tamil Nadu) showed a drop in new infections, joining Thailand's earlier success. In the Caribbean, the world's second-most-affected region behind Africa, new infections have declined in urban areas of Haiti and in the Bahamas. AIDS is the region's leading cause of death in people aged 15 to 44. In Haiti, the percentage of pregnant women infected with H.I.V. declined to 3.7 percent in 2003-2004 from 9.4 percent in 1993, Dr. Piot said. Despite the positive trends, Dr. Piot reported grim findings from China, Indonesia, Papua New Guinea, Russia and Vietnam, with signs of outbreaks in Bangladesh and Pakistan. Ending the pandemic will depend largely on changing social norms like empowering women, reducing the stigma of the disease and encouraging a greater reduction in the number of sex partners, the report said. Most countries have strong foundations for building an effective response against AIDS, the report said, but systems to carry out the plans remain inconsistent. The thoroughness of the individual national reports varied, and many countries did not provide data for all categories, so summarizing them was difficult, Dr. Piot said in an interview. Still, the replies identified significant weaknesses, he said: ¶Fewer than 50 percent of young people achieved comprehensive knowledge levels about H.I.V., far fewer than the 90 percent goal. ¶Only 9 percent of gay men and fewer than 20 percent of intravenous drug users received any kind of H.I.V. prevention help in 2005. ¶Services to prevent H.I.V. infections in infants have not scaled up as rapidly as programs to provide antiretroviral therapy. Just 9 percent of pregnant women were covered. The United States, Britain, Canada, France and Germany gave no statistics on surveys about the percentage of young people who correctly identify ways to prevent H.I.V.; who had sex with casual partners in the last year; who had sex before 15; or who used condoms during the most recent sexual intercourse with casual partners. Thoraya Ahmed Obaid, the United Nations Population Fund executive director, said the world needed to increase its prevention efforts. The report shows that the epicenter of the epidemic remains in sub-Saharan Africa. There the epidemic has reached a peak, but incidence remains unacceptably high, Dr. Piot said. Across most of Africa, H.I.V. prevalence among pregnant women attending clinics has remained roughly level for several years. The United Nations disputed contentions by some observers that the leveling off showed a turning point in the AIDS epidemic in Africa. " Available evidence does not offer grounds for such conclusions, " Dr. Piot said, in part because " the actual number of people infected continues to rise because of population growth. " " (India) will need to improve its prevention efforts if it is to avoid serious HIV outbreaks " http://www.nytimes.com/2006/05/31/world/31aids.html?_r=1 & hp & ex=1149048000 & en=b58\ e7bf586cd6d02 & ei=5094 & partner=homepage & oref=slogin ********************** " We are at a real turning point in the balance between optimism and despair " Feachem, Global Fund Between hope and despair: why the fight against Aids is at a turning point By Jack Published: May 31 2006 03:00 | Last updated: May 31 2006 03:00 As leaders of nations corroded by Aids gather at the United Nations in New York today to discuss the disease, another group will be noticeably absent: leaders of the world's richest nations who pledged them significant help five years ago. The continued ambivalence - even as public health experts are heralding the first tentative signs of a slowdown in the growth of Aids since it was identified in 1981 - reflects both the enormity of the task ahead and the political and ethical sensitivities that underpin it. To consign Aids to history will require not only a big injection of cash over the long term. It will also demand a consensus on how best to distribute resources between prevention, diagÂÂnosis and treatment - and a new boldness in tackling the issues that debate will throw up. Piot, head of UNAids, the United Nations' co-ordinating body, reflects the mood of cautious optimism that has taken hold among experts in recent months. " There has been more progress in the last two years than in the previous 22, " he says. " In 1996, even working on Aids was stigmatising, let alone having it; 2005 was the least bad year yet. " On the positive side, science has made considerable progress in treating Aids through the development of antiretroviral medicines, and politicians have mobilised strong support to secure additional funding. Last July, the leaders of the G8 leading industrialised nations pledged at Gleneagles to achieve " as close as possible " to universal treatment for those who needed it by 2010. Spurred on by the previous UN General Assembly on Aids in 2001, the Global Fund to Fight Aids, Tuberculosis and Malaria was created. It has since become the biggest channel for multilateral support. Feachem, its head, says: " It's quite remarkable. Since our creation in 2002, we have committed $10bn [£5.3bn, €7.8bn] to projects in 130 countries and the impact is now starting to be seen. " Total support has risen substantially to more than $8bn a year, swollen further by the World Bank, bilateral programmes led by US President W. Bush's Pepfar and redoubled efforts by individual countries. There has also been a sharp drop in the price of drugs, through a mixture of discounts and donation programmes by pharmaceutical companies, price competition from copycat generic manufacturers and political leverage from groups such as the Clinton Foundation. Mr Piot can point to findings in the latest UNAids report published yesterday showing more than 1.3m HIV-positive people in low- and middle-income countries are now on treatment, up from 240,000 five years ago. But it is far too soon to claim victory. Aids remains one of the world's greatest health threats, responsible for 25m deaths since 1981. It has attacked teachers, doctors and all parts of the workforce, while creating hundreds of thousands of orphans, undermining economic development and even threatening global security. While 700,000 people are on treatment in the developed world - a high proportion of those who need it - the 1.3m in the developing nations represents only one-fifth of those with advanced HIV who should be on drugs. Nearly 3m people died from Aids last year, including hundreds of thousands of children unable to gain access to little-researched paediatric drugs. More worrying still, the number of new HIV cases was at its highest level ever in 2005 at 4m, while the life-prolonging effect of drugs means that a record 40m people are now living with the infection. Against such a background, there is no doubt that more money is required. " The world is on a trajectory that will fall significantly short of the interÂÂnationally endorsed universal access goal for 2010, leaving millions without life-saving care, " warns the International Treatment Preparedness Coalition, one advocacy group. The failure of the World Health Organisation's goal of " 3 by 5 " - or 3m on treatment by the end of 2005 - highlighted the challenges. Meeting the goal of universal treatment would mean placing and keeping up to 10m people on treatment by 2010. UNAids estimates that that will cost $23bn a year for at least a generation, orthree times current spending levels. " We are at a real turning point in the balance between optimism and despair, " says the Global Fund's Mr Feachem. " Without full funding, the G8 pledge is just pie in the sky. " He is forced to seek fresh support from donor countries every few months, with the latest " sixth round " recently launched with support from the UK, which is keen to see follow-through from the Gleneagles' G8 summit it hosted last summer. Other countries were more hesitant and little of the money has been raised so far. " Up till now, it has been about haphazard crisis management, " says Mr Piot. " Now we are starting to have a critical mass, we need a more sustainable, strategic, long-term response. The reality of dealing with Aids is it is not something we can run year by year. We need to count in decades. " Business could do much more. For Jim Kim, the former head of the WHO's 3-by-5 programme, that includes drug manufacturers. He believes they should sub-contract antiretroviral production to low-cost producers. " We've got to get serious about establishing a humanitarian corridor, " he says. " There is no way discount programmes will meet the target of 8-10m people on treatment by 2010. " Holbrooke, president of the 215-strong Global Business Coalition on HIV/Aids, called this month for support from many more companies. They can help not only through donations, but by enhancing their own activities in offering education, testing, counselling, treatment and a pledge of non-discrimination to employees and their families. Beyond new money, however, a second issue in the fight against Aids is how the funds should be spent. The G8 leaders, the WHO and the UN assemblies have focused primarily on accelerated treatment. They have been far less vocal about prevention and HIV-testing programmes, which lack the dramatic appeal of " saving lives now " . Yet both drugs, and the infrastructure required to ensure people receive them consistently, mean that treatment is costly and risks diluting other health initiatives in poor countries. Prevention and testing may prove cheaper, less disruptive and more effective in tackling the causes of the epidemic. " An increased emphasis on prevention is something that is sorely needed, " says Tedstrom, president of Transatlantic Partners Against Aids, a charity working in the countries of the former Soviet Union to raise the profile of the issue at this year's G8 summit in St sburg. While there are some indications from UNAids that infection rates may have begun to fall in parts of Africa where they had reached saturation point, he stresses that in other regions of the world - notably Russia, China and India - the situation remains parlous. The prospect of treatment may have induced complacency that has in turn led to new infections in the US and western Europe. Treatment on its own in any case does little to address the longer-term problem of stemming the rate of infection. The more survive thanks to antiretroviral drugs, the larger the pool of HIV-positive people. That, in turn, risks further spread of HIV - including a drug-resistant form of the virus - to others. " If you have treatment but it's inÂÂeffective and generating resistance, you are building up a problem for the future that is going to be almost insoluble, " warns Coker, reader in health at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. " Personally, I would be more cautious than the international community in advising that 'antiretrovirals for all' is feasible and will achieve the claimed benefits. If this doesn't work, we won't get another opportunity to revisit it with the same sense of urgency and support. " Most health officials are reluctant to argue for a reallocation of scarce resources. " The great lesson of the last couple of years is that there are no choices, " says Mr Feachem. " We need prevention, testing and treatment: all three, all big, all together. They feed off each other. " Experience in the field certainly suggests that the best way to ensure people are tested for HIV is to offer them the incentive of treatment. Testing also provides an opportunity to reinforce prevention messages. Yet if prevention and testing have been underplayed, even more neglected has been research into what works. Information on the extent and spread of drug-resistant HIV virus in the developing world is scant, for instance. The Global Fund is only now scrambling to commission a five-year evaluation of its own work and cannot even detail how its money has been split between prevention, treatment and testing. " We don't have the evidence of the effects on the rest of the public health system of HIV treatment, and for every prevention programme, the evidence is pretty muddled, " says Murray, professor at Harvard's School of Public Health. However, studies conducted in recent years point to a third barrier to enhanced Aids support. Many of the most effective methods clash with the values of countries struggling to fight the epidemic and with important funders and influences, such as the White House and the Vatican. Research suggests the role of condom distribution in cutting infection far outweighs any resulting rise in promiscuity and that free needle-exchange and substitution programmes for hard drug users reduce transmission without creating new addicts. But the US administrationemphasises abstinence and loyalty over condom use. Grant recipients must condemn sex workers and refrain from offering abortion advice. Critics say such policies risk undermining organisations best placed to tackle the epidemic, while handing funds to inexperienced religious groups. Other challenges lie ahead: curbing violence against women, encouraging circumcision and fighting prejudice against high-risk groups such as homosexuals, prostitutes, drug addicts and prisoners. If they are serious about turning their Aids rhetoric into reality, political leaders will need not only the financial resources to make a difference abroad but also the moral courage to defend controversial policies at home. http://news.ft.com/cms/s/c6e0de98-f041-11da-b80e-0000779e2340.html Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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