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        Government reveals plan to combat AIDS
        By Zhang Feng/Wang Zhenghua (China Daily)
        Updated: 2005-06-02 00:17

        AIDS and HIV are to be fought on three fronts-prevention, intervention and treatment, announced the central government yesterday.

        The strategy is part of a five year plan to combat the deadly disease which affects nearly a million Chinese at least.


        A volunteer gets an injection of AIDS vaccine for human experiment in Nanning, Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region in this March 12, 2005 file photo. China's AIDS vaccine is now experimented on humans to test its effectiveness and safety. [newsphoto]
        Wang Longde, vice-minister of the Ministry of Health and the director of the Office of the Working Committee for HIV/AIDS Prevention and Control under the State Council, said the government had devised a wide range of measures for its second five-year plan to bring infection under control.

        Prevention first

        "First and foremost will be the emphasis on raising public awareness of HIV/AIDS prevention, which is vital to prevent the disease from spreading wider," he told China Daily.

        China's first five-year plan on HIV/AIDS prevention and control (2001-05) ends this year. The second-from next year to 2010-will be critical in combating the deadly disease, said Wang.

        AIDS/HIV first surfaced in the country in 1985, and is now mainly spreading among high-risk groups including blood sellers, drug abusers, prostitutes and homosexuals.

        The second part of the strategy "is to identify as many HIV carriers as soon as possible," said Wang.

        According to a report jointly prepared by the United Nations and the Ministry of Health in 2003, China has an estimated 840,000 HIV/AIDS recorded cases.

        But only 7.4 per cent of those infected have been reported. The figure last year was 12.4 per cent while the rate of reported cases around the world is 11 per cent of estimated sufferers.

        "Without knowing who the carriers are, how can governments provide the sufferers with a comprehensive care project?" asked Wang, who said the government wanted a holistic approach to combat the disease.

        China made extensive efforts last year to identify victims, especially in high-risk groups, said Wang.

        Thousands have been tested for HIV in Henan and other major provinces and regions where illegal and unsafe blood donations for cash and other forms of transmission were rampant in the 1990s, the minister said.

        A survey in Henan last year showed that 25,000 of 280,000 blood donors in the last decade tested positive for HIV, according to provincial health authority of Henan. The nationwide figure will be released on December 1, World AIDS Day, Wang said.

        Three high-risk groups which are targeted for prevention and intervention are prostitutes, homosexuals and prisoners, among whom the infection rate is believed to be worryingly high.

        "The nation had 190 State-level surveillance and monitoring sites last year and 57 will be added this year," Wang said. At provincial level, there are about 400 testing centres.

        Four free charges

        The third part of the strategy is to strengthen the "four free charges and one care" project, said Wang.

        The care scheme offers free medicine for HIV carriers, free and anonymous HIV tests, free education for orphans of HIV/AIDS victims and free prenatal treatment of infected pregnant women.

        Elderly people who have lost children to AIDS receive free care.

        The central and provincial governments will continue to increase spending on HIV/AIDS control and prevention. "We will not only treat the disease, but also help victims make a living," Wang said.

        (China Daily 06/02/2005 page1)

        Mystery infection is HIV

        At least 16 people have been affected by the HIV virus after contaminated blood was used for transfusions at a hospital in Bei'an County, Heilongjiang Province.

        An ongoing investigation by the county court and other officials has disclosed at least five farm workers received contaminated blood from 1999 to 2004. The nature of the disease, however, was undisclosed.

        Four others were infected by the original five with the "mysterious" disease at the farm 330 km north to provincial capital Harbin.

        But China Daily learned yesterday there could be as many as 16 infected by HIV.

        A statement from the Ministry of Health on Tuesday confirmed that nine victims "were infected" because five received tainted blood from a supply at Workers' Hospital, located on a construction farm.

        "We have admitted 16 AIDS patients from the farm since last September," said a nurse in the infectious disease department of the hospital, affiliated with the Heilongjiang General Bureau of State Farms in Harbin.

        "Now nine patients are still hospitalized and their status is stable," the nurse said in a telephone interview.

        A farm official with Bei'an Farm, who identified himself only as Li, said victims include farm workers and peasants around his farm-for which the hospital is their only medical resource.

        Li also said the Harbin hospital has been treating those patients, and their medical expenses, totalling around 1 million yuan (US$121,500), were covered by the farm, which the nurse also confirmed.

        An official with the Bei'an farm court said it is still investigating the incident. He said he was not sure how much in reparation each victim might receive.

        The statement from the Ministry of Health said some relevant officials have been disciplined within the Party and others are subjects of the criminal investigation.


        (China Daily 06/02/2005 page1)



         
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