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EPIDEMICS
Teenagers, children missing out in AIDS fight: US
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Dec 01, 2014


A quarter of SAfrica's HIV carriers are young women: deputy president
Johannesburg (AFP) Dec 01, 2014 - About one quarter of South Africans newly infected by HIV are girls and women between the ages of 15 and 24, Deputy President Cyril Ramaphosa said Monday.

The country counts 6.4 million people living with HIV, with some 400,000 new infections each year, Ramaphosa said in a speech marking World AIDS Day.

"One quarter of these new infections are in young women between the ages of 15 and 24," Ramaphosa said, or some 2,700 a day.

"Despite the progress that we have made in the past five years, the end of AIDS is not as near as we would like," he added.

"The social and economic cost of AIDS is enormous," he said.

Life expectancy has recovered to 61 -- from 53 in 2006 -- thanks to the distribution of anti-retroviral (ARV) drugs,

Recalling the international AIDS conference in Melbourne, Australia, in July, Ramaphosa reiterated the "90, 90, 90 targets".

"We need to test 90 percent of South Africans for HIV, initiate 90 percent of those that are HIV-positive on treatment, and ensure that 90 percent of those on treatment are (rid of the virus) by 2030."

Currently, "we have 2.7 million South Africans initiated on anti-retroviral treatment," he said.

"A recent survey estimated that two million South Africans who are living with HIV do not know their status," Ramaphosa lamented.

He said everyone could take precautions against AIDS by using condoms, staying faithful to one partner and putting off sexual relations.

South Africa, which has the highest incidence of AIDS in the world, will host the next global AIDS conference in the eastern port of Durban in July 2016.

Greater efforts are needed in the fight against AIDS to reach at-risk teenagers and children who are failing to get as much help as other communities, US officials warned Monday.

Marking World AIDS Day, US President Barack Obama said in a video address: "We've got to stay focused and committed. Science is on our side, momentum is on our side. It's up to us to finish the job."

The World Health Organization says some 35 million people were living with HIV worldwide in 2013. The virus has killed some 39 million people since it emerged in the 1980s.

But 80 percent of new HIV infections in those countries hardest hit by the virus are among adolescent girls, the State Department said.

And in the United States, "the fastest rate of infection is among 13- to 24-year old gay and bisexual African-American men," said national security advisor Susan Rice.

"Teenagers really. It's a small community with a much higher prevalence of HIV," she said, warning despite progress made in recent years to stamp out AIDS "the finish line is still not in sight."

Some "380,000 adolescent girls are infected each year in sub-Saharan Africa," Rice said, adding the infection rate among young girls was "about four times the rate of boys."

"We're not reaching nearly as many children with anti-viral remedies as we are adults."

So the State Department and the US President's Emergency Plan for Aids Relief (PEPFAR) are teaming up with the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and Nike with a $210 million initiative to help cut HIV infection rates among girls and young women.

"Our commitment to fight and end AIDS is unwavering," said Rice.

"We know where we've been, we remember the devastation and the heartbreak, the pain of an HIV diagnosis which was tantamount to a death sentence. And the shameful initial global response.

"And we know where we are going. The promise of an AIDS-free generation and an end to AIDS-related deaths," Rice added.

"An end to the suffering and the stigma of a terrible disease. An end to children born with HIV, their promise tragically cut short from birth. That's a goal that was unthinkable just five years ago."

PEPFAR, set up under previous president George W. Bush, is now supporting anti-retroviral drug treatment for 7.7 million people around the world, many of them in Africa.

It is also providing training for health workers, testing for millions of pregnant women and helping to fund male circumcisions to stop the spread of the virus.

"It is clear that we are at a real turning point," said Secretary of State John Kerry, but he also emphasized that the battle is "not yet won."

"There are major challenges ahead and they will require major commitments if we're going to control the HIV/AIDS pandemic and achieve this AIDS-free generation that is our dream."


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