Threat of global AIDS epidemic over, says WHO
A quarter of a century after AIDS first appeared, the World Health Organisation has for the first time said the threat of a global heterosexual pandemic outside Africa might have passed.
NEW DELHI: A quarter of a century
after AIDS first appeared, the World Health Organisation has for the first time
said the threat of a global heterosexual pandemic outside Africa might have
passed.
According to Dr Kevin de Cock, one of the world's leading
epidemiologists and head of the organisation's HIV/ AIDS department, there has
been a shift in the understanding of the risks posed by the virus.
HIV was earlier regarded as a risk to populations everywhere,
irrespective of the percentages that practised unsafe sexual behaviour. But
experts now believe that outside of sub-Saharan Africa, the disease is largely
confined to high-risk groups like men having sex with men, sex workers and their
clients.
Speaking to
TOI
from New York, Dr de Cock said, "If the virus had to cause an epidemic among the
general population in India and China, as originally feared, why hasn't it
happened till now? It doesn't look likely anymore."
Dr de Cock, who
expressed doubts about predictions of an Africa-type situation developing in
India, said prevention strategies need to be focused where HIV transmission is
occurring. "India needs to look at who are getting infected more often and then
target that section of society," he said. He called for massive investments in
educating those most at risk rather than focus on a school AIDS programme.
"Countries need to go where transmission is occurring, which they have not
always been good at," he said.
The WHO expert said that unlike
Africa, specially in its southern and eastern parts, where the virus has been
found to be "self-sustaining" in the general population, a similar trend has not
emerged in Asian countries. In these nations, the prevalence is mostly
concentrated in groups at risk and their partners. "It is very unlikely that
there will be a heterosexual epidemic in other countries outside Africa," Dr de
Cock said, while emphasising that this should not breed
complacency.
UNAIDS chief Dr Dennis Broun, too, agreed with Dr de
Cock. He told TOI, "We made a mistake with our predictions.
However,
the gloomy predictions were made seeing evidence that was available to us 10
years ago, which was minimal. Today, with all the accumulated information, it is
unlikely that Asian countries will see a generalised epidemic."
Nearly 2.45
million Indians live with HIV with prevalence rate in the general population of
0.36%.
Source>>> Times of India