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Subject:
From:
Ylva Hernlund <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
The Gambia and related-issues mailing list <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Sat, 2 Dec 2000 09:19:53 -0800
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Date: Fri, 1 Dec 2000 23:03:33 EST
From: [log in to unmask]
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Subject: [AfricaMatters] Fact Sheet: HIV/AIDS in Africa

UNAIDS Fact Sheet: HIV/AIDS in Africa
-------------------------------------

http://www.unaids.org/wac/2000/wad00/files/FS_Africa.htm


For the first time there are signs that HIV incidence may have stabi-
lized in sub-Saharan Africa. First, effective prevention has helped 
reduce infection rates and second, with over one in four adults al-
ready infected in some countries, fewer people are still likely to 
become infected. New infections in 2000 totalled an estimated 3.8 
million, compared with 4 million in 1999. However, this may change if

rates go up in countries where they are still relatively low.

* The total number of Africans living with HIV or AIDS is now 25.3 
million. In 8 African countries, at least 15% of adults are infected.

In these countries, AIDS will claim the lives of around a third of 
today's 15-year-olds in Africa. 

* During 2000, millions of Africans infected in earlier years began 
falling ill, and 2.4 million people died of HIV-related causes, com-
pared with 2.3 million in 1999. 

* Africa is home to nearly 70% of adults and 80% of children living 
with HIV in the world, and has buried three-quarters of the more than

20 million worldwide who have died of AIDS since the epidemic began. 

* Infection rates in young African women are far higher than in young

men, with rates in teenage girls in some countries five times higher 
than in teenage boys. Among young people in their early 20s, the 
rates were three times higher in women. In Africa, women's peak in-
fection rates occur at earlier ages than men's. This helps explain 
why there are an estimated 12 women living with HIV for every 10 men 
in this region. 

* A recent study estimates that in 1997, public health spending for 
AIDS alone already exceeded 2% of gross domestic product (GDP) in 7 
of 16 African countries sampled - a staggering figure in nations 
where total health spending accounts for 3-5% of GDP. 

* Studies on economic impact have estimated that in South Africa, GDP

is expected to be 17% for 2010 lower than it would have been without 
AIDS. It will also wipe out US$ 22 billion from the economy. In Bot-
swana, AIDS will slice 20% off the government budget and reduce in-
come for the poorest by 13%. 

* In Botswana, a shocking 35.8% of adults are now infected with HIV, 
while in South Africa, 19.9% are infected, up from 12.9% just two 
years ago. The adult HIV prevalence rate in Botswana has more than 
tripled since 1992, when it was an estimated 10%. 

* In Botswana, life expectancy at birth is now estimated to be 44 
years instead of 69 without AIDS. In Zimbabwe, life expectancy is 43 
instead of 65. 

* With a total of 4.2 million infected people, South Africa has the 
largest number of people living with HIV/AIDS in the world, as well 
as one of the world's fastest-growing epidemics. Already, 1 in 4 
South African women between ages 20 and 29 are infected with the vi-
rus. 

* More than 1 in 4 adults living in Zambian cities are HIV-positive, 
and more than 1 in 7 Zambian adults are infected in the country's ru-
ral areas. 

* On the other hand, the percentage of pregnant girls aged 15-19 in-
fected with HIV in the capital, Lusaka, has on average dropped by al-
most half in the last six years. The percentage of unmarried women 
who were sexually active fell from 52% to 35% between 1990 and 1996. 

* A study in Zambia showed that in one hospital, deaths among health 
care workers increased 13-fold over the 10-year period from 1980 to 
1990, largely because of HIV. 

* West Africa is relatively less affected, with prevalence rates of 
under 2% in some countries. However, C“te d'Ivoire is already among 
the 15 worst-affected countries in the world. In Nigeria, by far the 
most populous country in sub-Saharan Africa, over 2.7 million people 
are infected with HIV. 

* By the year 2010, crude death rates in Cameroon will have more than

doubled as a result of HIV/AIDS. An estimated 340,000 people in Ghana

are currently living with HIV. 

* In North Africa, there is insufficient data but localized studies 
in southern Algeria show rates of around 1% in pregnant women attend-
ing antenatal clinics. Surveillance sites in both northern and south-
ern Sudan indicate that HIV is spreading among the general popula-
tion. In North Africa and the Middle East, there were some 80,000 new

infections in the region in 2000. 

* Infection rates in East Africa, once the highest on the continent, 
hover above those in West Africa but have been exceeded by the rates 
now being seen in the southern cone. 

* The prevalence rate among adults in Ethiopia and Kenya has reached 
double-digit figures and continues to rise. 

* Through strong prevention programmes, Uganda has brought its esti-
mated prevalence rate down to around 8% in 1999 from a peak of close 
to 14% in the early 1990s. HIV prevalence among 13-19-year-old girls 
has fallen significantly over an eight-year period, while the rate in

teenage boys - always much lower because boys are less likely than 
girls to have partners in the older, more heavily infected age groups

- has remained roughly stable. The percentage of teenage girls who 
had ever used a condom tripled between 1994 and 1997. 

* HIV-positive patients have occupied 39% of the beds in Kenyatta Na-
tional Hospital in Nairobi, Kenya, and 70% of the beds in the Prince 
Regent Hospital in Bujumbura, Burundi. 

December 2000
UNAIDS



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