| Report: Aids Epidemic Should be Classed as a Disaster |
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The AIDS epidemic in southern Africa is so severe that it should be classed as a disaster comparable to floods or famine, a new study by the Red Cross said Thursday. 26th June 08 - AFP Link to an online (pdf) version of the World Disasters Report 2008 - published by the Red Cross In its annual "World Disasters Report", the International Federation of the Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC) said that there was "no doubt" that HIV/AIDS matches the United Nations definition of a disaster.
The UN's Office for the
Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs classes a disaster as a "serious
disruption of the functioning of a society, causing widespread human,
material or environmental losses which exceed the ability of a society
to cope using only its own resources".
The IFRC said that such a situation exists in sub-Saharan Africa, which is home to about two-thirds of the world's HIV-positive cases.
At least one person in ten is living with HIV in nations such as South
Africa, Zimbabwe, Botswana, Lesotho, Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia,
Swaziland and Zambia, the report said.
The consequences of the epidemic are felt by all of society and not
just those who are sick, due to the economic strain and social
tensions.
"Reflecting on the lives of most people living in sub-Saharan Africa raises more alarm than hope," the IFRC said.
"The virus is directly responsible for restraining and reducing human
and resource capacities across societies because HIV infections and
AIDS deaths are common among workers of all qualifications and
expertise, and in all industries.
"Coupled with the high costs
of caring for people living with HIV, those capacity constraints lead
to withered health and education systems, declining food security,
skilled labour shortages and an increasingly ramshackled
infrastructure," the report warned.
The
World Health Organisation said earlier this month that the number of
people in developing countries receiving antiretroviral drugs to combat
HIV had risen sevenfold in the past three years to nearly three million
by 2007.
But a WHO co-authored report found that much more
needed to be done: despite the increase, an estimated 6.7 million
people in need of anti-retrovirals were still unable to access
medicines, out of a total of 9.7 million.
The report, produced
in conjunction with UNAIDS and UNICEF, said that the rise was due to
the increased availability of drugs, in part due to price cuts, but
also to delivery systems better adapted to specific country needs.
But there was also increased demand for the treatment, as the number of
people tested and diagnosed with HIV climbed, the WHO noted.
Earlier this year, a joint UN study found that more than two million
children worldwide were living with the HIV virus in 2007, most of whom
were infected before they were born.
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