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Huge funding shortfall for global AIDS epidemic
By Trevor Johnson and Chris Talbot
26 July 2004
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The UNAIDS report released at the fifteenth International AIDS
Conference last week shows that there is an escalating shortfall
in the funding required to deal with the global spread of AIDS.
Using the most up to date statistics and medical studies, UNAIDS
conclude that worldwide an estimated $12 billion will be needed
to combat AIDS by 2005, increasing to $20 billion by 2007. This
would provide antiretroviral therapy for over six million people,
support for 22 million orphans, HIV voluntary counseling and testing
for 100 million adults and include education for 900 million students.
Total funding in 2003 was less than $5 billion, not even half
of the amount required. This includes all AIDS spendingthe
UN Global Fund to Fight AIDS, western governments, nongovernmental
organisations and private individuals. In 2003 only 400,000 patientsseven
percent of those needing antiretroviral medicines in low and middle-income
countriesactually received them. The report explains that
even those that did get drug treatment may not get the necessary
advice and treatment to make it effective: It is important
to avoid the kind of chaos reported from some countries, where
desperate patients buy antiretrovirals without medical advice
and often without prescriptions.
The UNAIDS report does not mention the failure of the majority
of rich countries to meet even their own inadequate target of
contributing 0.7 percent of their Gross Domestic Product (GDP)
to fighting AIDS. Mohga Kamal-Smith, a health policy adviser for
Oxfam commented, As the epidemic spread, the donor contributions
from richer countries went down. Hardly any of the governments
have achieved the 0.7 per cent GDP contribution that they committed
to.
The cost of combination antiretroviral treatments has fallen
from more than $10,000 a year in 2000 to only $300 a year for
certain types of generic drugs. However, availability of such
generic drugs depends on the existence of producers and trade
agreements.
Many so-called middle income countries that are
now facing rapid increase in AIDS, such as Russia and others in
Eastern Europe, are still paying extremely high prices for drugs.
Another aspect of drug pricing was highlighted by the NGO Médecins
Sans Frontières (Doctors without Borders) in relation to
backup antiretroviral drugs, used when a patient does not respond
to the usual drugs, or has an adverse reaction to them. MSFs
spokesperson explained that whilst the average price for the first
line of treatment is around $350 a year per patient, the drugs
for the second line of treatment cost around $3,000. This means
that the average cost of treatment will rise significantly as
the first line drugs become more widely used, and strains of HIV
that are resistant to them become more common.
The UNAIDS report provides the most accurate statistics yet
available on the spread of AIDS, basing their estimates on data
collected from 78 countries. The number of people infected with
HIV is still growing, from 35 million in 2001 to 38 million in
2003. In 2003 almost three million people died with AIDS.
In sub-Saharan Africa AIDS is taking a devastating and increasing
toll, with about 25 million living with HIV. In 2003, around three
million people became infected with HIV, and 2.2 million died.
AIDS is reducing life expectancy to less than 33 years in some
areas of sub-Saharan Africa. With nearly a quarter of its population
HIV-positive, Zimbabwe has seen the greatest drop in life expectancyfalling
from 57 in 1990 to 39 in 1999, and to 34 in 2002.
The profile of those affected by the disease is also changing.
On a global scale, the number of women suffering from HIV is now
greater than the number of men. In sub-Saharan Africa, 57 percent
of the infected adults are women, and 75 percent of the young
people (15 to 24) infected are women and girls. The increase in
the proportion of women suffering from HIV is also apparent in
North America and several other regions of the world. The young
are also being hit disproportionately hard by HIV: 15-24-year-olds
account for half of all new HIV infections worldwide; more than
6,000 contract the virus every day.
If current infection rates continue in the worst-affected countries
of sub-Saharan Africa, without any new large scale treatment programme
being started, up to 60 percent of todays 15-year-olds
will not reach their 60th birthday.
In sub-Saharan Africa HIV is now spreading throughout the general
population, rather than being confined to particular groups such
as drug users or gay men. The report makes the point that the
speed with which AIDS has spread across the region is bound up
with the very high levels of poverty.
The report confirms the alarming trend that other reports have
highlighted in the last year in Asia and Europe. In Asia the epidemic
is rapidly expanding. The report estimates that 7.4 million people
are living with HIV, with 1.1 million people becoming infected
in 2003more than any previous year. In China, the report
warns, 10 million people may become infected by 2010 unless action
is taken to prevent it. Although current levels of HIV in China
are low (between 0.1 and 0.2 percent), current incidences are
concentrated in several areas and the national rates are rising.
The report points out that although the infection is mainly concentrated
among groups such as injecting drug users, prostitutes and gay
men if Asian governments fail to target them, the epidemic
will affect much greater numbers in the general population.
Expansion of the epidemic is also continuing across Eastern
Europe and Central Asia, caused mainly by injecting drug use.
About 1.3 million people were living with HIV at the end of 2003a
big increase compared to the figure of 160,000 in 1995. During
2003, the report estimates that 360,000 people in the region became
infected, while 49,000 died of AIDS. In Russia, HIV infection
levels among pregnant women increased from less than 0.01 percent
to 0.1 percenta 10-fold increase between 1998 and
2002. In St Petersburg, figures increased a 100-fold in the same
period.
Whilst UNAIDS and the NGOs are of necessity concentrating their
efforts on the provision of antiretrovirals, HIV testing and counseling,
and educationlittle development has been made in providing
a cure for the disease. Seth Berkley, president and chief executive
of the International AIDS Vaccine Initiative (IAVI), said at the
conference that the number of potential vaccines in clinical trials
had doubled since 2000, but the research effort remained inadequate:
The world is inching toward a vaccine, when we should be
making strides... Only a vaccine can end the epidemic.
Protesters at the conference concentrated their fire on the
US administrations AIDS policy. The much-heralded aid programme
announced in January 2003 to provide $15 billion over five years
to fight AIDS in 14 of the most affected African and Caribbean
countries has so far spent just $350 million, with President Bush
promising a further $500 million shortly. This year
the US has contributed a mere $540 million to the UN Global Fund
to Fight AIDS and Bush is proposing a cut back to $200 million
in 2005. MSF singled out the Bush administration for its policies
aimed at undermining the use of generic AIDS drugs. The Global
Fund uses these medicines, but the projects backed by the US will
not do so.
Only a tiny official delegation from the US was sent to the
conference, primarily because the overwhelming majority of AIDS
experts advocate the use of condoms to stop the spread of AIDS
and refuse to promote the abstinence approach of the
Christian right favoured by the Bush administration.
However, the catastrophe that the whole of humanity faces from
the AIDS epidemic cannot be tackled by condemning some governments,
like the US, and praising others, as many AIDS campaigners have
done in relation to Britain. (Prime Minister Tony Blair pledged
to double spending after the AIDS conference). AIDS, more than
any other disease, has shown the necessity of a bold, well-planned
international response that has become impossible in the present
political order.
Not only is the funding pledged from Britain$2.8 billion
over the next three yearsstill well below the levels required,
but most of it will be targeted at only the poorest countries
and the NGOs that the UK decides are acceptable. In other words
it will follow the example of the US in moving away from coordinated
responses and tying aid to neocolonialist foreign policy considerations.
See Also:
South Africa's health minister
says of AIDS sufferers: Let them eat garlic
[16 February 2004]
Eastern Europe faces
HIV-AIDS epidemic
[12 December 2003]
Bushs AIDS appointee
spells out corporate agenda
[9 October 2003]
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