Guest guest Posted October 27, 2006 Report Share Posted October 27, 2006 [Moderators note: Combined posting. Gisselquist and Corea raised some fundamental aspects of HIV response in India. The following are the abstract of these articles from the International Journal of STD & AIDS, Volume 17, Number 11, November 2006,] 1)India flawed by focus on sex in campaign against AIDS: study 2) A passage to India's HIV epidemics: sending out an SOS 3) Routes of HIV transmission in India: assessing the reliability of information from AIDS case surveillance 4) How much does heterosexual commercial sex contribute to India's HIV epidemic? 5) Reconnaissance assessment of risks for HIV transmission through health care and cosmetic services in India ____________________________ 1) India flawed by focus on sex in campaign against AIDS: study PARIS (AFP) - India is making perilous mistakes in its fight against AIDS by assuming the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) is being spread overwhelmingly by sex and especially by prostitutes, a study warns. India is considered by many specialists to be an easy target for AIDS, despite the health authorities' insistence that they are making headway against the disease. In May, the Geneva-based agency UNAIDS said India had 5.7 million people living with HIV/AIDS -- the highest figure in the world, ahead of South Africa where the figure stands at 5.5 million. The government says the tally is 5.2 million. The new study, published by Britain's prestigious Royal Society of Medicine, does not wade into the row over these figures, but instead lashes India's assumption that sex, especially with prostitutes, is the main driver for new infections. " It is inconsistent with evidence and very likely wrong, " is the blunt verdict delivered by US researchers Gisselquist and Mariette Corea in the society's International Journal of STD and AIDS. According to India's National AIDS Control Organisation (NACO), 86 percent of HIV infections are from sexual transmission, and according to three studies that have helped underpin the country's AIDS strategies, prostitutes account for 27 percent of the total. But Gisselquist and Corea -- who did extensive field research in India -- say these calculations are terribly wide of the mark. The total estimate of infections comes from hospital staff, who assess and report routes of transmission for patients admitted with AIDS. But many personnel routinely assign cases to the category of sexual acquisition without asking if the patient may have been exposed to infection through blood, the authors say. And they argue the official tally of prostitutes in India, their number of clients and the frequency of clients' visits are probably huge overestimates. In addition, there is evidence that commercial sex workers are far likelier to use condoms and less likely to have HIV than health officials believe, the study says. Its best estimate is that prostitutes account for just two percent of HIV infections -- and a high estimate would be 13 percent, less than half that of NACO's figure. This means that India is ignoring threats from other sources, in particular the re-use of unsterile instruments in hospitals, cosmetic services, dental surgeries and tattoo parlours. In one incident, commercial sex workers reported they had stood in line for tattoos that were administered without changing needles or inkpot between customers. And the researchers found a common mistaken belief among the general public as well as the medical profession that HIV survives no more than seconds or a few minutes outside the body. " The official sexualisation of the HIV epidemic has blinded just about everybody to considering (and protecting against) non-sexual routes of transmission, " the journal said in an editorial. http://news./s/afp/20061026/wl_sthasia_afp/healthaidsindia_0 61026232005 _____________________________ 2) A passage to India's HIV epidemics: sending out an SOS Author: Potterat, J.1 Source: International Journal of STD & AIDS, Volume 17, Number 11, November 2006, pp. 718-719(2) Abstract: The official view is that India's epidemics are driven, directly and indirectly, by heterosexual prostitution. Review of available evidence by researchers in India undermines this weakly supported orthodoxy and suggests that correcting weaknesses in its AIDS surveillance system can lead to a more reliable picture of HIV propagation and hence to evidence-based interventions. Contenders for leading roles in HIV transmission are under-suspected and unmeasured skin-puncturing exposures _____________________ 3) Routes of HIV transmission in India: assessing the reliability of information from AIDS case surveillance Authors: Correa, Mariette1; Gisselquist, 1 Source: International Journal of STD & AIDS, Volume 17, Number 11, November 2006, pp. 731-735(5) Abstract: India's AIDS case surveillance system attributes 86% of HIV infections to sexual risks, 2.4% to injection drug use, 2.0% to blood transfusions, 3.6% to perinatal transmission, and 6.0% to others or not specified. To assess the reliability of this information, we examined the process of AIDS case surveillance in four high HIV-prevalence districts in southern India. We reviewed forms and interviewed doctors, counsellors, officials of State AIDS Control Societies, and a convenience sample of people living with HIV/AIDS. Current surveillance practices are not sensitive to parenteral exposures; forms have no space to report blood exposures other than transfusions and injections, and counsellors often ignore parenteral risks. The system does not distinguish high from lower risk sexual behaviours; all cases with sexual risks are reported in one category. We propose changes in forms and practices to improve the reliability and usefulness of information on risks from AIDS case reporting. ________________________ 4) How much does heterosexual commercial sex contribute to India's HIV epidemic? Authors: Gisselquist, 1; Correa, Mariette1 Source: International Journal of STD & AIDS, Volume 17, Number 11, November 2006, pp. 736-742(7) Abstract: Through a search, we identified five models of India's HIV epidemic, all of which articulate the hypothesis that heterosexual commercial sex drives India's HIV epidemic. All five models assume more female sex workers (FSWs) than have been mapped (counted), and more than can be inferred from men's sexual behaviour. With best and highest plausible evidence-based estimates (15-20% of 300,000-700,000 FSWs are HIV-positive; FSWs have 570 client contacts per year; clients use condoms with 60-75% of FSW contacts; and the rate of HIV transmission from FSWs to clients is 0.0011-0.002 per unprotected contact), FSWs and clients account for 2-15% of HIV-infected adults, far less than model-based estimates of 44-68%. Overestimating the contribution of commercial sex to India's HIV epidemic misleads prevention programmes to ignore other risks, and promotes the stigmatizing assumption that HIV infection is a sign of immoral behaviour. _____________________ 5) Reconnaissance assessment of risks for HIV transmission through health care and cosmetic services in India Authors: Correa, Mariette1; Gisselquist, 1 Source: International Journal of STD & AIDS, Volume 17, Number 11, November 2006, pp. 743-748(6) Abstract: Available information shows frequent unsterile medical injections in India, but less is known about other invasive procedures. To assess the variety and frequency of blood exposures in health care and cosmetic services, we interviewed people living with HIV/AIDS in four districts with high HIV prevalence. Eighty percent reported from 1-300 injections in the five years before testing HIV-positive. Common lifetime exposures include dental care (31%), surgery (20%), blood tests (100%), and tattooing (47%). Through observation and interviews with doctors, dentists, and others, we found evidence for common to routine re-use of unsterilized equipment for blood tests (lancets), dental care, tattoos, and surgery. Health-care professionals and the public are misinformed about HIV survival outside the body and underestimate HIV transmission efficiency through blood exposures. The challenge to implement infection control for all invasive procedures remains undefined, while attention focuses on partial solutions, including single use of disposable syringes. Affiliations: 1: 29 West Governor Road, Hershey, PA 17033, USA Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 29, 2006 Report Share Posted October 29, 2006 Dear forum I feel validated when I read a report like this. Every time some one has told me that this is what they have picked up from their field surveys my eyebrow has taken a sharp turn. Simply we do not talk straight sex in India. We live in the closet. All alleged interviews are more the bewildering imagination of the individual being interviewed. Without the 'masala' how can you sell a good story? I must take off my hat to the majority of organizations that claim concerned individuals for the HIV positive. I visit a state run ART center to collect my ARV'S monthly. The doctor in charge avoids me as routine. Reason: I objected to the X'mas tree he had made of the ART center. And I have to sit out side it so the world without difficulty can identify me as HIV positive. Isn't there an overstated policy saying it is not correct to point out HIV positive people? Added to it, it has, I am told NACO's blessings. I see no alternative left, but to take the Press in one day and tear down the hoardings, placards, red curtains etc. Today was the 5th time I visited the ART center, my objections were registered the first time. Where are the Oh so ever sweet people who want to help (incl NACO)? They don't see a red herring, they prefer a red ribbon that tells the world of their great concern for 'US'. It's nice to be seen, as the good concerned citizen working for the unfortunate is my assumption with regards to most people working in this area of work. The late Indira Gandhi was close to death as a young woman when TB had no cure. Yet no one talked about TB. Its association with sexual behavior has plagued HIV on the other hand and so is a taboo subject per say. India is conservative till date because we are a developing country. The educated Indian knows a lot about HIV, but has not come to terms with the fact that HIV is 'not' knocking on our doors, but has already come inside. The number of time bombs walking around is yet to hit us hard in the face. As of date we are still squabbling over how an ART center must look? When will we get down to some serious work? NACO for all the good work you are being validated for lets not assume you have it all right please. Regards Capt(retd) Kumar e-mail: <kumar.captretd@...> Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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