Can we imagine a world without
AIDS
The world has halted and reversed the spread of HIV.
Since the year 2000, new infections have fallen by 35% and AIDS-related deaths
by 24%. Close to 16 million people are now receiving antiretroviral treatment.
In WHO South-East Asia Region, new infections declined by 32% between 2000 and
2014. Almost 1.3 million people are on antiretroviral treatment (ART). However,
gaps remain. More than half of the people with HIV are unaware of their status.
Those who test, do so late when they have symptoms and their immune systems are
already compromised. Only 36% of the people living with HIV in the Region are
on treatment; and fewer than 30% of people with HIV are able to get to the last
point when HIV virus multiplication in their body is suppressed which is
essential to prevent further transmission.
The new Sustainable Development Agenda includes the target
of ending the AIDS epidemic by 2030 – by reducing the number of new infections
by an additional 25% by 2020; ensuring that 90% of people living with HIV are
aware of their infection and 90% of them are on ART, and 90% of those on ART
have no detectable virus in their blood. Bold actions will be required to
achieve the target for ending AIDS by 2030, with the health sector playing a
central role. Countries need to prioritize HIV interventions to get the highest
impact. This includes using newer approaches for testing like community based
HIV testing, ensuring that all HIV positive people are started on treatment and
those identified negative, especially who are at risk have access to HIV
prevention and re-testing services.
The new targets are ambitious but achievable! By the end
of 2014, Thailand had tested and enrolled more than 60% of its people living
with HIV into treatment. It is one of ten countries in the world to have
achieved this distinction. Many other countries in the Region can and must
accelerate and scale up HIV testing and treatment programmes. Efforts over the
next five years will decide whether we will end AIDS by 2030 or face
resurgence. In over four decades of the epidemic, science, social mobilization,
political commitment and coordinated response among key stakeholders have made
it possible to end AIDS. History shall not be kind to us if we become
complacent now. Ending AIDS will require investments, but these will be worthwhile.
Countries in the Region are leading the way in funding HIV response through
domestic budgets, but more remains to be done. We need to ensure that HIV
response is firmly positioned in the development and health agenda of the
Sustainable Development Goals. We need to ensure that community responses are
not only sustained, but further scaled up and fully funded. Stigma,
discrimination and punitive laws still hamper access to key services for those
most in need. We need to reaffirm and renew our resolve to work towards
realizing our goal of ending AIDS in the WHO South-East Asia Region by 2030.
Source: www.thehealthsite.com 30.11.2015
Don’t walk
behind me; I may not lead. Don’t walk in front of me; I may not follow. Just walk
beside me and be my friend
Albert
Camus
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