Almost 16 million on HIV treatment as pandemic tide turns
"If we manage to sustain our investment and ... double the numbers
of people put on treatment, we can really break the backbone of this
epidemic."
Some 15.8 million people are now on HIV treatment and a five-year strategy to end the threat of a never-ending AIDS pandemic is starting to show results, the United Nations AIDS programme said on Tuesday.
Estimates
show new HIV infections have fallen by 35 percent since the peak of the
three-decade-old pandemic in 2000, and AIDS-related deaths have fallen
by 42 percent since a peak in 2004, UNAIDS said in a report timed for
release before World Aids Day on Dec. 1.
Even
before the agency set out its strategy last year , the roughly 16
million people being treated by June 2015 was double the number in 2010.
Barely 2.2 million were being treated ten years ago.
"Today
we can say we move from despair to hope. Every five years we have more
than doubled the number of people on life-saving treatment," Michel Sidibe, UNAIDS' executive director, told reporters at a briefing.
"If
we manage to sustain our investment and ... double the numbers of
people put on treatment, we can really break the backbone of this
epidemic."
By the end of 2014, 36.9 million
people were infected with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) that
causes AIDS, and more than half of them do not have access to treatment.
The
World Health Organization says all people diagnosed as HIV positive
should have immediate access to antiretroviral AIDS drugs, which hold
the virus in check and give patients a good chance of a long and
relatively healthy life.
Responding to the UNAIDS
report, Sharonann Lynch, a policy adviser for the medical charity
Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF), said all countries should "waste no time" in ensuring all HIV positive people are offered immediate treatment.
The
report identified 35 countries that account for 90 percent of all new
HIV infections. Focusing on them would have the greatest impact and reap
huge benefits, it said.
Comments
Post a Comment