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AIDS around world
When AIDS first emerged, no-one could have predicted
how the epidemic would spread across the world and how many millions
of lives it would change. There was no real idea what caused it, and
consequently, no real idea how to protect against it. Now, in 2004,
we know from bitter experience that AIDS is caused by the virus HIV,
and that it can devastate families, communities and whole
continents. We have seen the epidemic knock decades off countries'
national development, widen the gulf between rich and poor nations
and push already-stigmatized groups closer to the margins of
society. We are living in an 'international' society, and HIV has
become the first truly 'international' epidemic, easily crossing
oceans and international borders.
Just as clearly, experience shows that the right
approaches, applied quickly enough with courage and resolve, can and
do result in lower national HIV infection rates and less suffering
for those affected by the epidemic.

The child of an HIV positive mother, Tanzania
Globally, we have learned that if a country acts
early enough, a national HIV crisis can be averted.
It has also been noted that a country with a very
high HIV prevalence rate will often see this rate eventually
stabilise, and even decline. This indicates, among other things,
that people are beginning to change risky behaviour patterns,
because they have seen and known people who have been killed by
AIDS. Fear is the worst, and last way of changing people's behaviour
and by the time that this happens it is usually too late to save a
huge number of that country's population.
Already, more than twenty million people around the
world have died of AIDS-related diseases. In 2004, 3.1 million men,
women and children have died. Around twice the amount who have died
until now - almost 40 million - are now living with HIV, and most of
these are likely to die over the next decade or so. The most recent
UNAIDS/WHO estimates show that, in 2004 alone, 4.9 million people
were newly infected with HIV.
It is disappointing that the global numbers of people infected with
HIV continue to rise, despite the fact that effective prevention
strategies already exist. |