Why are key populations on the blindspot in the global HIV response?

26 Jul 2024 23:32:07
Bobby Ramakant – CNS
Contd from previous issue
Sinister link between funding genocide and defunding healthcare
Cindra Feuer of AVAC said: "AVAC and partners had launched the Global HIV Prevention Roadmap for Key Populations which outlines a strategy for the equitable expansion and delivery of HIV prevention services to key populations globally and regionally. It introduces a critical, coordinated approach led by key populations themselves to accelerate the implementation of existing and new HIV prevention interventions."
"We have to opera          tionalise the key recommendations that are in this glo- bal roadmap. We are doing this in the backdrop of ever-increasing diminishing of rights, resources, and validity of science…" said Cindra.
She courageously and with unwavering integrity added that "There is inherent relationship between funding genocide and defunding healthcare. Germany is among the right- wing led countries funding genocide in Palestine. This week (at AIDS 2024 in Munich, Germany) let us talk about Palestine." We at CNS stand with Cindra.
Key populations are being left behind in Asia Pacific region
Midnight Poonkaset-wattana who comes from northeast Thailand serves as Executive Director of APCOM. “Asia Pacific region has 6.7 million people living with HIV – which is the second largest number outside of Sub-Saharan Africa. We have 300,000 new HIV infections and 150,000 AIDS-related deaths in a year in Asia Pacific region. HIV epidemic is growing in certain countries of Asia Pacific, such as: Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Fiji, Laos, Papua New Guinea, and the Philippines. Coverage of lifesaving antiretroviral therapy in many countries is very low: it is about 50% in Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Fiji, Indonesia, Iran, Mongolia, Pakistan and the Philippines.”
UNAIDS report 2023 states that “Marked inequa-lities and diverse epidemic trends affect progress in the HIV response in Asia and the Pacific. The HIV epidemic in the region disproportionately affects people from key popu-lations, especially young people (15–24 years), and their sexual partners. Young people accounted for around a quarter of new HIV infections in the region in 2022. In Cambodia, Indonesia, the Lao People’s Democratic Republic, Myanmar, the Philippines and Thailand, nearly half of new HIV infections occurred among young people. Although the numbers of new HIV infections and HIV-related deaths have declined overall at the regional level since 2010, some countries have experienced an expansion of their epidemics in recent years.”
“Median HIV prevalence among people from key populations remains much higher than among the general population. Since 2010, estimated numbers of new HIV infections among gay men and other men who have sex with men increased by six times in the Philippines, tripled in Cambodia and almost doubled in the Lao People’s Democratic Republic. The increasing use of stimulants and synthetic opioids exacerbates the risks of HIV transmission among people who use drugs.”
David Bridger, UNAIDS Country Director for India said to CNS: "When we look at the HIV service cascade, key populations are lagging behind compared to general population in India. For example, among people who use and inject drugs, coverage of HIV prevention interventions is only 46%. Treatment uptake among people who use and inject drugs is also low - around 54%. HIV prevention interventions must reach all of them as it is so critical. We have to reinvigorate, innovate and find new and varied ways of reaching those who are currently not accessing treatment and prevention services."
Indian government's Sankalak report 2023 states that HIV prevalence in key populations is 9 to 43 times higher than that in general population: 1.85% among sex workers, 1.93% among inmates in prisons, 3.26% among gay men and other men who have sex with men, 3.78% among Hijra/ transgender persons and 9.03% among people who inject drugs. HIV prevalence among migrant workers and truckers is 4 times than the national average of 0.20%.
Germany’s Ministry of Health told CNS that "HIV infections have remained largely confined to a few population groups, such as, gay men and other men who have sex with men, people who inject drugs, and heterosexual contacts (often among individuals from countries with high prevalence of HIV in the general population)."
“Among gay men and other men who have sex with men, the estimated number of new HIV infections in Germany has decreased from about 2,800 in 2007 to about 1,000 in 2022 (from approximately 72% to around 52% of all new HIV infections). However, among people who inject drugs, there has been a significant increase in new HIV infections - from 6% in 2010 to 20% in 2022 of all new HIV infections - with 370 new infections occurring in 2022. Infections through heterosexual contact have also shown an increasing trend in recent years, with 520 new infections in 2022 (28% of all new HIV infections in 2022)- an increase of 24% from the previous year,” said German Ministry of Health to CNS.
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