Guest guest Posted September 3, 2006 Report Share Posted September 3, 2006 [Moderators note: What is Hon. Health Minister Anbumani Ramadoss trying to convey? A narrowly focused strategy of 'Wear A Condom', instead of a much broader perspective on Prevention, including linking Prevention to Treatment, and striving towards Universal Access to Prevention?. And, what is the phrase below mean, 'AIDS sufferers?' is it ministers own words?] India's Ramadoss Says Condom Use Will Spearhead AIDS Campaign By Mrinalini Datta Sept. 1 (Bloomberg) -- India will promote condoms as the best defense against HIV/AIDS in a $2.5 billion program to prevent it spreading from more than 5 million Indians already carrying the virus, Health Minister Anbumani Ramadoss said. The five-year program, funded by the government, companies, aid agencies and charities including the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, aims to prevent infection as 86 percent of India's cases are sexually transmitted, Ramadoss said. " Eighty percent of the money and focus will go for prevention, " Ramadoss said in an interview in his New Delhi office on Aug. 30. " I say hit the condom directly " as the major preventative method. India has 5.7 million people with human immunodeficiency virus, more than any other country, according to UNAIDS, a United Nations agency. Unless it's checked, HIV/AIDS could slow India's economic growth by 0.86 percentage points between 2002 and 2016, the UN's Development Program said in a July report. AIDS-related illnesses and deaths will increase health spending in the world's second-most-populous country, and shrink labor supply, leading to a drop in productivity, the UNDP said. HIV/AIDS affects 0.9 percent of adults in India, which has a total population of 1.1 billion. In South Africa, 18.8 percent of adults are infected, UNAIDS said in its Global AIDS Epidemic report in May. To date, 124,000 sufferers in India have disclosed their illness to authorities, Ramadoss said. India's infection rate is underreported because of the discrimination and social isolation that plagues those afflicted, he said. The government is counting on anti- discrimination policies and public awareness programs to encourage infected people to admit they have the disease and to seek treatment. Anti-discrimination Policies A bill aimed at banning HIV/AIDS discrimination in workplaces, treatment centers and educational institutions may be debated in parliament as early as November, Ramadoss said. While unprotected heterosexual intercourse is the main cause of infection in India, in northern and eastern states, injecting drug use is the biggest cause. The most affected states are Tamil Nadu, Karnataka and Andhra Pradesh in the south, Maharashtra in the west and Nagaland and Manipur in the north-east. The states account for 72 percent of the estimated HIV infections in the country, according to India's National AIDS Control Organization. The government agency estimates the number of HIV infected Indians last year at 5.2 million. Lack of education is a challenge in fighting HIV in India's rural areas. About two-thirds of country dwellers are familiar with condoms, compared with 80 percent of the country's urban population. " We have spent a whole load of money on awareness, " Ramadoss said. " But the actual usage of condoms, that's my problem. That's what we're trying to tackle now. " Vending Machines The government has installed 11,000 condom vending machines in colleges, such as New Delhi's Jawaharlal Nehru University, and in restrooms at railway stations, gas stations, roadside eateries and hospitals. It plans to have 100,000 vending machines by the end of next year, Ramadoss said. It plans to expand surveillance units to 1,200 by next year from about 700. The number of centers providing counseling, testing, treatment, and antenatal checkups will almost double to 5,000 in two years, from 2,875 at present, Ramadoss said. The government aims to treat 100,000 AIDS sufferers free by 2007, from 45,000 now. In five years, the number receiving free treatment is planned to triple to 300,000, he said. By the end of this month the number of centers dispensing antiretroviral drugs will reach 100 from 60. The government's AIDS control agency has enough medicine to treat 90,000 people and has spent the past six months training doctors and nurses and installing equipment, Ramadoss said. Gates Foundation The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation is among groups building AIDS awareness by targeting educational institutions, sex workers, truck drivers and migrant laborers, using television advertising and media campaigns, and road shows. In 2003, Bill Gates, the world's richest man, doubled donations to India for preventing the spread of HIV/AIDS to $200 million. Former U.S. President Bill Clinton last year introduced a program to train 150,000 Indian physicians working in private practice to care for sufferers. Efforts to educate the public about how to avoid contagion have slowed the spread of the disease. The prevalence of the AIDS virus unexpectedly declined in southern India, helped by the use of condoms among sex workers, according to a study published in the Lancet on March 30. The prevalence of HIV-1 decreased by more than a third in young women in south India, the journal said, citing Rajesh Kumar, a medical professor at the School of Public Health in Chandigarh, India, who studied data from about 294,000 women and 59,000 men aged between 15 and 34 years. To contact the reporters on this story: Mrinalini Datta in New Delhi at mdatta1@... Foxwell in New Delhi at sfoxwell@... . http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news? pid=20601080 & sid=af88YifJuxCU & refer=asia Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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