BLACKHERBALS.COM


New
Stats show Millions more HIV Positive
By Eleanor Momberg
Shocking new Aids statistics reveal that 2 million more South Africans are
infected with HIV than the most recent government estimates show.
According to statistics released by the Development Bank of South Africa (DBSA),
more than 7,6 million South Africans are HIV-positive - 2,2 million more than
the department of health's figures for 2007 state.
Of these, about 6,1 million are the economically active people between the ages
of 20 and 64, who could contribute to the country's economy.
What makes these statistics more alarming is the fact that the data on which
they are based are probably more reliable than the department of health's
because they were collected at grassroots level and not based on estimates.
The DBSA's 2007/2008 statistics state that:
7,6 million South Africans are HIV-positive;
more than 27 percent of men and women aged between 20 and 64 are HIV
positive;
more than 92 000 babies have been infected, either perinatally or through
mother's milk, in the past year;
the total number of Aids sick by mid-2007 was 1 287 844;
nearly 722 000 people have died of Aids-related diseases in the past year,
bringing the total number of such deaths since 2003 to more than 3,7 million;
in 2003, the accumulated total Aids-related deaths stood at just under 1
million; and
1,2 million of the country's 1,49 million orphans have lost their parents to
Aids and this number is expected to increase by more than 336 000 this year
alone.
In contrast, the department of health stated last year that there were 5,4
million HIV-positive people in South Africa in 2006. And the Actuarial Society
of South Africa (ASSA) estimated in its statistical summary for 2000 to 2015
that there would be 5,6 million HIV-positive people in the country this year.
The ASSA had also estimated that there would be 370 000 Aids deaths in 2008.
UNAids stated in its 2006 Global Report that 18,8 percent of the population of
South Africa was infected, and that 320 000 people died of Aids-related deaths
in the country during 2005.
The latest DBSA information on one of the biggest killers in South Africa was
collected from clinics, local municipalities, development planners, morgues and
funeral homes.
Updated annually, the figures are used by the bank to determine funding for
municipal projects, such as the upgrading of infrastructure.
Mark Heywood, the director of the Aids Law Project at the University of the
Witwatersrand, said the new data, although untested, reflected the fact that the
Aids pandemic remained a massive challenge for the country.
"If these figures are accurate, the number of people dying is increasing and the
number of people who should be receiving anti-retrovirals, and are not, is
increasing," said Heywood.
"The social cost of this is going to be enormous. We are not doing enough as a
country and there is a danger that we are becoming complacent because there are
now institutions such as the National Aids Council, as well as the fact that the
government's approach to HIV and Aids has changed."
The DBSA figures show that South Africa, a country with one of the highest HIV
and Aids rates in the world, is reaching the peak of HIV infections and that
intervention programmes are beginning to show some success.
Johan Calitz, a senior demographer at the DBSA, attributed the decrease in
infections in some regions to the success of nutrition schemes run by NGOs,
other non-governmental intervention programmes and the government's roll-out of
antiretroviral drugs.
He said the number of infections was expected to "level out" by 2010, but that
the death rate would continue to accelerate in the foreseeable future.
"I think it will drop from 2010, and that from 2014 the population will begin to
stabilise," he said, adding that this was on the condition that rates of
immigration did not increase.
Although the birthrate is declining nationally, and in particular in Gauteng,
there is an increase in the total number of HIV-infected babies being born.
Prevalence rates at antenatal clinics have increased to 31,67 percent - up 2
percent from last year.
The good news is that the number of new infections in KwaZulu-Natal - the
province worst affected by the pandemic - have dropped dramatically among adults
aged between 20 and 59, despite the dramatic increase in the number of its Aids
orphans.
Of concern, Calitz said, was the very high percentage of economically active
people between the ages of 20 and 64 who were HIV positive - more than 3,5
million women and more than 3,4 million men.
In Gauteng, there has been a marked decline in children under the age of four,
down about 21 000 since 2003. Yet, there are about 2 000 more children under the
age of four with HIV.
Some of the highest rates of infection now appear to be among men over 50 and
women over 40, with the rate among those adults of child-bearing age apparently
slowing down due to illness and death.
- This article was originally published on page 1 of
The Sunday Independent on May 04, 2008
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