HIV
in Africa
How
many people in Africa are infected with HIV/AIDS?
Africa
continues to dwarf the rest of the world in how the region has
been affected by AIDS. Africa is home to 70% of the adults and
80% of the children living with HIV in the world. The estimated
number of newly infected adults and children in Africa reached
3.4 million at the end of 2001. It has also been estimated that
28.1 million adults and children were livingwith HIV/AIDS in
Africa by the end of the year. AIDS deaths totalled 3 million
globally in 2001, and of the global total 2.3 million AIDS deaths
occurred in Africa.
In
sub-Saharan Africa HIV is now deadlier than war itself. In 1998,200,000
Africans died in war, but more than 2 million died ofAIDS. AIDS
has become a full-blown development crisis. Its social and economic
consequences are felt widely not only in health but in education,
industry, agriculture, transport, human resources and the economy
in general.
The
overall incidence of HIV infection in Africa does however now
appear to be stabilizing. Because the long-standing African
epidemics have already reached large numbers of people whose
behavior exposes them to HIV, and because effective prevention
measures in some countries have enabled people to reduce their
risk of exposure, the annual number of new infections has stabilized
or even fallen in many countries. These decreases have now begun
to balance out the still-rising infection rates in other parts
of Africa, particularly the southern part of the continent.
Overall,the total of 3.8 million infected people in 2000 was
slightly less than the regional total of 4.0 million in 1999.But
this trend willnot continue if countries such as Nigeria begin
experiencing a rapid increase.
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How
are different countries affected?
National
HIV prevalence rates vary widely between countries. They range
from under 2% of the adult population in some West African countries
to around 20% or more in the southern part of the continent,
with countries in central and East Africa have rates midway
between these. However, prevalence rates do not convey people's
lifetime risk of becoming infected and dying of AIDS. In the
eight African countries where at least 15% of today's adults
are infected, conservative analyses show that AIDS will claim
the lives of around a third of today's 15 year olds. Sixteen
African countries south of the Sahara have more than one -tenth
of the adult population aged 15 - 49 infected with HIV. In seven
countries, all in the southern cone of the continent, at least
one adult in five is livingwith the virus.
In
Botswana shocking 35.8 % of adults are now infected with HIV.
In South Africa 19.9% of adults are infected with HIV. With
a total of 4.2 million infected people, South Africa has the
largest number of people living with HIV/AIDS in the world.
West
Africa is relatively less affected by HIVinfection, but the
prevalence rates in some large countries are creeping up.
Cote
d1lvoireis already among the 15 worst affected countries in
the world. Nigeria,by far the most populous country in sub-Saharan
Africahas 5% of its adult population infected with HIV.
Infection
rates in East Africa, once the highest on the continent, hover
above those in the West of the continent but have been exceeded
by the rates now being seeing in the Southern cone.
The
prevalence rate among adults in Ethiopia and Kenya has reached
double digit figures and continues to rise. Ethiopia 10.6% and
Kenya 13.9% of the adult population (15-49)are livingwith HIV/AIDS.
More
details HIV/AIDS statistics for individual Africa countries
can be found here.
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What is the result of this?
Over
and above the personal suffering that accompanies HIV infection
wherever it strikes, the virus in sub-Saharan Africa threatens
to devastate whole communities, rolling back decades of progress
towards a healthier and more prosperous future.
Sub-Saharan Africa faces a triple challenge of colossal proportions:
Millions
of adults are dying young or in early middle age. They leave
behind children grieving and struggling to survive without a
parents care. Many of those dying have surviving partners who
are themselves infected and in need of care. Their families
have to find money to pay for their funerals, and employers,
schools, factories and hospitals have to train other staff to
replac them at the workplace.
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Who
is most affected? What
is the effect on education?
Just
as the better-educated segments of the population in the industrialized
countries where the first to adopt health-conscious life-styles,
a similar pattern now seems to be emerging in sub-Saharan Africa.
Studies focusing on 15-19 years olds, have found that teenagers
with more education are now far more likely to use condoms than
their peers with lower education. They are also less likely,particularly
in countries with severe epidemics, to engage in casual sex.
This
was not the case early in the African epidemic. At that stage,
education tended to go hand in hand with more disposable income
and higher mobility, both of which increased casual sex and
the risk of contracting HIV. But as information about HIV has
become more widely available, education has switched from being
a liability to being a shield.
The
effect on education is that AIDSnow threatens the coverage and
quality of education. The epidemic has not spared this sector
any more than it has spared health, agriculture or mining.
On
the demand side, HIVis reducing the numbers of children in school.
HIV positive women have fewer babies, in part because they may
die before the end of their child bearing years, and up to a
third of their children are themselves infected and may not
survive until school age. Also, many children have lost their
parents to AIDS, or are living in households which have taken
in AIDS orphans, and they may be forced to drop out of school
to start earning money, or simply because school fees have become
unaffordable.
On
the supply side, teacher shortages are looming in many African
countries In Zambia teachers are increasingly dying of AIDS
and for many teachers their teaching input is decreasing because
they are sick. Swaziland estimates that it will have to train
more than twice as many teachers as usual over the next 17 years
just to keep the services at their 1997 levels.
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What
is the economic impact?
It
is exceptionally difficult to gauge the economic impact of the
epidemic. Many factors apart from AIDS affect economic performance
and complicate the task of economic forecasting - drought, internal
and external conflict, corruption, economic mismanagement. Moreover,
economies tend to react more dramatically to economic restructuring
measures, a sudden fuel shortage, or an unexpected change of
government, than to long, slow difficulties such as those wrought
by AIDS.
But
there is growing evidence that as HIV prevalence rates rise,
both total and growth in national income~ gross domestic product,
or GDP- fall significantly. African countries where less than
5% of the adult population is infected will experience a modest
impact on GDP growth rate. As the HIV prevalence rate rises
to 20% or more, GDPgrowth may decline up to 2% a year.
In South Africa, the epidemic is projected to reduce the economic
growth rate by 0.3-0.4% annually, resulting by the year 2010
in a GDP170/0 lower than it would have been without AIDS and
wiping US $22billion off the country's economy. Even in diamond-rich
Botswana, the country with the highest per capita GDP in Africa,
in the next 10 years AIDS wil lslice 20% off the government
budget, erode development gains, and bring about a 13% reduction
in the income of the poorest households.
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What about prevention?
Continuing
rises in the number of HIV infected people are not inevitable.
Early and sustained prevention efforts can be credited with
the lower rates in some countries. For example in Senegal there
was effective an early prevention. Uganda has bought its estimated
prevalence rate down to around SO At from a peak close to 14%
in the early 1990's with strong prevention campaigns, and there
are encouraging signs that Zambia's epidemic may be followingthe
course charted by Uganda.
But elsewhere, where far less has been done to encourage safer
sex, the reasons for the relative stability remain obscure.
Research is under way to explain the differences between epidemics
in different countries. Factors that may play a role include
patterns of sexual networking, levels of condom use with different
partners, the availabilityof condoms and promptness in diagnosing
and curing other sexually transmitted diseases (which if left
untreated can magnify 20-fold the risk of HIV transmission through
sex).
The
overall provision of condoms to sub -Saharan Africais only 4.6
per man per year, so another 1.9 billion condoms need to be
provided If all countries are to have the same amount as the
highest six countries in Africa. Botswam South Africa, Zimbabwe,
Togo, Congo and Kenya are supplied with about 17 condoms per
man aged 15 to 59 years. It would cost an estimated $47.5 million
(£34m) a year to fill the 1.9 billion condom gap excluding service
delivery costs and production. Relative to the enormity of the
HIV/AIDS epidemic In Africa, providing condoms is cheap and
cost effective.
However
condoms are not without their drawbacks, especially in the context
of a stable partnership where pregnancy is desired, or where
it may be difficultfor one partner to suddenly suggest using
condoms. For many individuals and couples in Africa, where HIV
prevalence rates are high, finding out their infection status
could expand their range of HIV prevention options.
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How
much would it cost, and what needs to be done, to make a difference?
As
the illness and death from AIDS rose in Africa, some two decades
ago, one or two countries reacted quickly. Other countries waited
rather longer before intensifying their efforts, but they too
are being rewarded for their efforts. There have been a number
of success stories which include Senegi Uganda and Zambia. But
most countries in Africa lost valuable time because AIDS was
not fully understood and its significance as a new epidemic
was not grasped. Some action was taken, but not on the scale
that was required to stem the tide of the epidemic.
The
scale of action necessary does of course increase exponentially
along with the epidemic. Early on in a heterosexual epidemic,
most new infections are acquired and passed on by a minority
of people with an especially high turnover of partners. If condoms
are used in most of these transactions, the epidemic can be
contained relatively easily. But once HIV has become firmly
established in the general population most new infections occur
in the majority of adults who do not have an especially high
number of partners. This means that prevention campaigns have
to be expanded greatly, making them harder and costlier, though
still very worthwhile.
Most countries in Africa are at this stage. Yet few have expanded
their HIV prevention programmes to the scale that would be needed
to make a significant dent in the number of new infections.
Since past prevention failures eventually turn into current
care needs, failure to head off the epidemic early on also imposes
a greater burden of care on countries where HIVprevalence is
high. And as the HIV-infected fall ill and die, alleviating
the impact on orphans, other survivors, families and communities
becomes the third challenge.
Recently
researchers have tried to determine how much money would be
needed to make a real differenceto the AIDS epidemic in Africa,and
it is clear that scaling up the response to Africa's epidemic
is not only imperative but it is affordable.
At
least US $1.5 billion a year could makeit possible to achieve
massively higher levels of implementation of all the major components
of successful prevention programmes for the whole of sub-Saharan
Africa. These would cover sexual, mother-to-child and transfusion-related
HIV transmission, and would involve approaches ranging from
awareness campaigns through the mediato voluntary HIV counselling
and testing, and the promotion and supply of condoms.
In
the area of care for orphans and for people living with HIV
or AIDS, costs depend very much on what kind of care is being
provided. It is estimated that with at least US $1.5 billion
a year, countries in sub-Saharan Africa could buy symptom and
pain relief (palliative care) for at least half of AIDS patients
in need of it; treatment and prophylaxis for opportunistic infections
for a somewhat smaller proportion; and care for AIDS orphans.
Atthe moment, the coverage of care in many African countries
is negligible, so reaching coverage, at these levels would be
an enormous step forward.
Making a start on coverage with combination anti-retrovira ltherapy
would ad several billion dollars annually to the bill.
Of
course, providing AIDS prevention and care services involves
more than just these funds. A country's health, education, communications
and other infrastructures have to be well enough developed to
be able to deliver these interventions. In some badly affected
countries, these systems are already under strain, and they
are likely to crumble further under the weight of AIDS. Then,
too, money can only be used wisely if there are sufficient people
available and the shortage of trained men, women and young is
already acute.
These
are some of the serious challenges that African countries and
their partners in the global community willhave to do far about
if they are to make a really difference to the epidemic.