New targets set for controlling the HIV/AIDS epidemic in the Caribbean – PAHO
MEXICO CITY, Mexico, CMC – The Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) says Latin America and the Caribbean have established new targets for expanding diagnosis and antiretroviral treatment (ART) and reducing patients’ viral loads by the year 2020.
The accord with partner agencies is viewed as a move by the region to jointly address the HIV epidemic and improve the lives of people living with the virus,
PAHO said that the new targets “dubbed “90-90-90,” were adopted during the First Latin American and Caribbean Forum on the HIV Continuum of Care, which is being held here this week.
It said the forum was organized by a coalition of partners, including Mexico’s Secretariat of Health and UNAIDS.
“Expanding early diagnosis and treatment combines the clinical benefits of early treatment for patients with benefits to the population of preventing transmission,” said César Nuñez, Regional Director of UNAIDS for Latin America.
The head of PAHO’s Hepatitis, Tuberculosis and Sexually Transmitted Infections Unit, Massino Ghidinelli, said the new targets are a step forward in controlling the HIV/AIDS epidemic.
“If we want more people to be on treatment and to achieve undetectable viral loads, they have to know their diagnosis and begin treatment early,” he said.
UNAIDS estimates that, in 2012, some 1.8 million people in Latin America and the Caribbean were living with HIV, and some 98,000 people became newly infected, according to.
New PAHO estimates for 2013 suggest that 70 per cent of people living with HIV in Latin America and the Caribbean know they are infected, adding this is an average based on data from countries that account for 62 percent of the region’s HIV epidemis.
However, it said in some countries fewer than half know their HIV diagnosis.
Expanding testing by increasing the availability of tests and involving communities and civil society in the effort will lead to more people with HIV seeking the treatment they need, PAHO said.
It said about 725,000 people with HIV were receiving antiretroviral treatment in Latin America and the Caribbean as of December 2012, stating that preliminary estimates suggest this number increased to more than 800,000 by December 2013.
PAHO said treatment coverage rates in Latin America and the Caribbean are higher than in any other low- and middle-income region.
However, it said World Health Organization’s (WHO) newest HIV guidelines recommend earlier initiation of treatment, when one’s CD4 cell count falls to 500 cells/mm³ or less, which has increased the number of people who meet the criteria for receiving treatment.
PSHO said applying the new criteria to 2012 data would reduce the region’s coverage rate to 43 per cent and that expanding treatment would contribute to better health for people with HIV, reduce cases of AIDS and prevent new infections.
PAHO said as a result, regional countries agreed to revise their models of care to make treatment more accessible.
It said data indicate that about 66 per cent of people with HIV in Latin America and the Caribbean had suppressed viral loads in 2013.
PAHO said reaching the 90 per cent target will require improved patient adherence to treatment.
“Suppressed viral load is critical for controlling the harmful effects of HIV infection on people?s health and also significantly reduces the risk of infecting others.
“To promote adherence and keep patients under treatment, HIV health care must be decentralized to levels that allow greater interaction with the community, PAHO said, noting that countries also agreed on a fourth target: reducing delayed diagnosis.
As of 2013, it said half of countries providing data reported that at least a third of people with HIV were at an advanced stage of immunological disease at the time of their diagnosis.
PAHO said this situation has been improving, however, with late diagnoses declining from 40 per cent to 35 per cent between 2012 and 2013, reflecting expanded HIV testing in a number of countries.
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HIV in the Caribbean: science, rights and justice
By Dr. Ernest Massiah, UNAIDS
May 28th, 2014 — Recently, the discussion on HIV has been a mix of the selective review of scientific evidence, comments on an administrative procedure at the regional university, and perceptions on the existence of agendas that seek either to change or hold back Caribbean societies. Lost in this debate is a Caribbean reality. At the end of 2012, UNAIDS estimated that there were 260,000 people living with HIV in the region. In many countries, approximately one in three new cases is among men who have sex with men. How do we deal with this as we work to end the epidemic in the Caribbean?
First we must recognise that HIV is a virus, not a crime. Laws that criminalise being HIV positive, sexual behaviours such as anal sex or sexual orientation, make it difficult to mount an effective HIV response. Persons who know their sexual behaviour or orientations are illegal are less likely either to go to health services or to speak openly about their sexual behaviour while there, thus limiting their treatment options and prevention efforts.
A soon to be released UNAIDS internet survey of more than 3,500 men who have sex with men across the Caribbean, the CARIMIS study, shows that about two in three men who got a negative HIV test result from the private or public health sector, did not talk to their doctors about their sex with men. Our laws should help create an environment in which there is no impediment to delivering targeted prevention and treatment services to a population particularly affected by HIV.
There is consensus around this among leaders of the region’s HIV response. Over the last ten years, under the umbrella of the Pan Caribbean Partnership against AIDS (PANCAP), civil society, national AIDS responses and international partners have supported the goal of removing laws that criminalise sexual orientations and behaviours. The 2008 – 2012 Caribbean Regional Strategic Framework reinforced this target. This is a regional goal and a global one. It is one of the key steps that must be taken to end AIDS.
Second, we must remember that stigma and discrimination still exist. It is not only the law that complicates people’s lives; it is the prejudice that the law codifies and reinforces. The UNAIDS CARIMIS study shows that within the month before responding to the survey, almost a quarter of the men were verbally abused because of their same sex attraction.
Recent surveys of doctors and nurses in two Caribbean countries show that approximately 25 percent reported seeing HIV positive persons receiving low quality medical treatment and about ten percent would rather not provide services to men who have sex with men. These workers had been trained. They had the clinical knowledge. What they did not have was the ability to overcome their prejudices. Until we overcome prejudice, people will not seek services and we will see a steady rise in new cases.
Sexual behaviour and sexual orientation exist in a social context in which prejudice, stigma and the fear of violence influence the behaviour of both those who seek health services and the medical professionals who offer those services. That’s why removing criminal laws against consensual same sex sexual conduct cannot be a stand-alone strategy. UNAIDS urges all governments to implement laws to protect men who have sex with men, lesbians, bisexuals and transgender people from violence and discrimination; to address homophobia and transphobia through public education campaigns; and to ensure that adequate health services are provided to address their needs. UNAIDS stands for all those living with or vulnerable to HIV, regardless of their social or legal status.
Finally, we must ensure the rights of all Caribbean citizens. Caribbean history is one of a struggle to ensure the inclusion of all citizens, against a backdrop of exclusions based on race, class, ethnicity and colour. The individuals who stood for the rights that we now enjoy were called names, jailed, beaten and killed. Today, those who stand up for the rights of gay, lesbian bisexual and transgendered citizens are labelled as supporting a “gay agenda”. There is no gay agenda. There is a human rights agenda which seeks to ensure that all Caribbean citizens are treated with respect and dignity. Every individual should benefit from HIV prevention, treatment, care and support and all people should have the same human rights everywhere.
All rights are coupled with responsibility. Freedom of expression carries the burden of responsibility for the consequences of one’s speech. In Belize, Mr. Caleb Orozco, the young man who asked the court to determine whether the sodomy law violated his constitutional rights, faced verbal abuse, physical violence and death threats. The recent media coverage has led to increased threats against him.
The voices speaking for the removal of punitive and discriminatory laws are women, adolescents, gay men, public health professionals, human rights supporters, researchers, leaders in the regional HIV response, priests, pundits, and imams. These are people from different walks of life, with differing backgrounds and beliefs, united against prejudice. This is what standing up for justice and freedom should be about. This is what will be required if we are to end AIDS and leave no Caribbean citizen behind.
Contact UNAIDS Caribbean | Cedriann Martin | tel. +868 625-4955 ext. 96519 / +868 371-7195 | [email protected]
UNAIDS UNAIDS, the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS, is an innovative United Nations partnership that leads and inspires the world in achieving universal access to HIV prevention, treatment, care and support. Learn more at unaids.org and unaidscaribbean.org
PHOTO: Ernest Massiah From Barbados news
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