High-risk group protected against HIV in Guangxi (Xinhua) Updated: 2004-12-01 14:17 High-risk group protected
against HIV in Guangxi
People with high risk for contracting HIV -- drug abusers and sex
workers primarily --are receiving special education and treatment in South
China's Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region. Guangxi shares more than 1000
kilometers border with Vietnam. The autonomous region reported its first
HIV-caused death case in 1996. A local disease control official said that as
the two nations' border trade has grown, the increasing population flow has
added greater difficulties to AIDS prevention and control in the area. To
control the situation, the Chinese government is building an anti-HIV network in
the zone, with the help from foreign nongovernmental organizations and local
volunteers. A huge sign saying "prevent and control AIDS with joint efforts "
is now the most striking thing in the central square of the county of Ningming,
located near the border. In October 2002 the two nations jointly launched an
AIDS prevention and control program in Ningming and Vietnam's Lang Son
Province. Since then, AIDS prevention and control has become one of the
long-term and major tasks of the county government, said Meng Donghua, vice head
of the county's epidemic prevention station. The community health education
center, attached to the station, hired 13 people with drug abuse records to
popularize AIDS-related knowledge and collect used needles from the more than
500 drug addicts in Ningming's four townships. "The center pays them 300 yuan
(US$36) every month. Besides, they can get 0.1 yuan (one cent) for each
reclaimed needle," said Meng. "Most of time they do the work
voluntarily." Twenty-six-year-old Liu Jun is very proud of his current work.
Once one of the county's 1500 registered drug users, Liu is now an active
participant of the peer education program. Liu said he started taking drugs
at 18 and quit several times. He is responsible for exchanging clean needles
for the used ones from the drug addicts and distributing them publicity
pamphlets of AIDS prevention. Liu said he is happy with what he does now. The
Ningming Health Department said the county has distributed 270,000 needles since
the program started and collected 250,000. In the nearby city of Pingxiang,
sex workers frequently receive sexual and AIDS education from the municipal
epidemic prevention station. Liang Fengqin, director of the station's health
education institute, said it was difficult for them to spread HIV-related
knowledge to sex workers with formal educational formats, because of their poor
education backgrounds. Instead, the four female workers from the institute
choose to go to the city's 33 hotels and inns and more than ten public
entertainment places, popularizing AIDS-related knowledge to the sex workers
through free conversations. "They are willing and happy to talk with us,"
Liang said. "They lack sexual and AIDS knowledge and we teach them a
little." She said sometimes they have to show the sex workers how to use
condoms. They have been laughed at and despised in the past, she
said. "Anyway, as an efficient way of AIDS prevention, the use of condoms is
now well accepted by all," Liang said. In the Jinliancheng Hotel in Puzhai,
the biggest Sino-Vitenamese frontier trade market, condoms are provided in every
room. Hotel manager Chen Liang said they started the service in March 2003,
and have given out more than 10,000 free condoms. "We thought this might
bring about some negative influences to our business, but the majority of the
guests show their understanding and acceptance of it," Chen said. The joint
efforts of local government and people are rewarded with a low HIV rate in the
area. According to Pingxiang Municipal Health Administration, only one sex
worker has been reported HIV- positive by the end of 2003. Huang Xiufang,
deputy mayor of Pinxiang, said the continuously hard work of all levels of
HIV/AIDS control departments in Guangxi, in addition to the support and
understanding of the public, protects high-risk people and effectively controls
the spread of HIV.
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