The Social & Economic Impact

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Presentation transcript:

The Social & Economic Impact HIV/AIDS The Social & Economic Impact

Interact Worldwide Interact Worldwide believes in the fundamental right of all human beings to access quality sexual and reproductive health services. We believe that unless people have access to these services they will never be able to lift themselves out of poverty. As such, we provide sexual and reproductive health services in some of the worlds poorest communities and campaign internationally for the right of all people to these services.

HIV/AIDS HIV: Human Immunodeficiency Virus AIDS: Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome

? How can you get HIV? 1. Through these bodily fluids BREAST MILK VAGINAL SECRETIONS BLOOD CERVICAL SECRETIONS SEMEN 2. Through these acts: H INFECTED MOTHER: DURING 1. PREGNANCY 2. BIRTH 3. BREAST FEEDING UNPROTECTED PENETRATIVE INTERCOURSE (HOMOSEXUAL OR HETEROSEXUAL) WITH SOMEONE WHO IS INFECTED 1. INJECTION OR TRANSFUSION OF INFECTED BLOOD / BLOOD PRODUCTS 2. SHARING UNSTERALISED NEEDLES WITH SOMEONE WHO IS INFECTED

HIV Myths 1 ! You cannot catch HIV from kissing. You cannot catch HIV from sitting on a toilet seat You cannot catch HIV from coughing or sneezing 4. You cannot catch HIV from sharing cutlery

HIV Myths 2 ! You cannot catch HIV from drinking out of the same glass holding hands You cannot catch HIV from hugging

Adults and children estimated to be living with HIV as of end 2005 Total: 40.3 (36.7 – 45.3) million Western & Central Europe 720 000 [570 000 – 890 000] North Africa & Middle East 510 000 [230 000 – 1.4 million] Sub-Saharan Africa 25.8 million [23.8 – 28.9 million] Eastern Europe & Central Asia 1.6 million [990 000 – 2.3 million] South & South-East Asia 7.4 million [4.5 – 11.0 million] Oceania 74 000 [45 000 – 120 000] North America 1.2 million [650 000 – 1.8 million] Caribbean 300 000 [200 000 – 510 000] Latin America 1.8 million [1.4 – 2.4 million] East Asia 870 000 [440 000 – 1.4 million] map in the back of epi update

Country Level Swaziland 38.8% Botswana 37.3 Lesotho 28.9 Zimbabwe 24.6 S. Africa 21.5 Namibia 21.3 Zambia 16.5 Malawi 14.2 CAR 13.5 Mozambique 12.2 S. Africa 5,300,000 India 5,100,000 Nigeria 3,600,000 Zimbabwe 1,800,000 Tanzania 1,600,000 Ethiopia 1,500,000 Mozamb 1,300,000 Kenya 1,200,000 DRC 1,100,000 USA 950,000

SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA 25.8 MILLION INFECTED AIDS HAS LEFT BEHIND OVER 13 MILLION ORPHANS 66% OF THE PEOPLE WITH HIV LIVE HERE. 57% OF THE INFECTED ADULTS ARE WOMEN HERE AIDS IS THE LEADING CAUSE OF DEATH SWAZILAND HAS THE HIGHEST PREVALENCE OF HIV IN THE WORLD. 38.8% OF THE ADULT POPULATION INFECTED. 2.4 MILLION ESTIMATED DEATHS AT THE END OF 2005

Western & Central Europe Estimated number of adults and children newly infected with HIV during 2005 Total: 4.9 (4.3 – 6.6) million Western & Central Europe 22 000 [15 000 – 39 000] North Africa & Middle East 67 000 [35 000 – 200 000] Sub-Saharan Africa 3.2 million [2.8 – 3.9 million] Eastern Europe & Central Asia 270 000 [140 000 – 610 000] East Asia 140 000 [42 000 – 390 000] South & South-East Asia 990 000 [480 000 – 2.4 million] Oceania 8200 [2400 – 25 000] North America 43 000 [15 000 – 120 000] Caribbean 30 000 [17 000 – 71 000] Latin America 200 000 [130 000 – 360 000] map in the back of epi update

From “Health Issue” to “Development Crisis” Destruction of social capital Knowledge base of society Production sectors: agriculture, industry Weakening of institutions - Civil service, judiciary, armed forces, education, health - Inhibition of private sector growth Wider, deeper poverty

Estimated adult and child deaths from AIDS during 2005 Total: 3.1 (2.8 – 3.6) million Western & Central Europe 12 000 [<15 000] North Africa & Middle East 58 000 [25 000 – 145 000] Sub-Saharan Africa 2.4 million [2.1 – 2.7 million] Eastern Europe & Central Asia 62 000 [39 000 – 91 000] East Asia 41 000 [20 000 – 68 000] South & South-East Asia 480 000 [290 000 – 740 000] Oceania 3600 [1700 – 8200] North America 18 000 [9000 – 30 000] Caribbean 24 000 [16 000 – 40 000] Latin America 66 000 [52 000 – 86 000] map in the back of epi update

Percentage of 15-year-old males who will die of HIV/AIDS based on current risk levels

Projected population structure with and without the AIDS epidemic, Botswana 2020 80 Projected population structure in 2020 75 70 Males Females 65 Deficits due to AIDS 60 55 Age in years 50 45 40 35 30 25 20 15 10 5 140 120 100 80 60 40 20 20 40 60 80 100 120 140 Population (thousands) Source: US Census Bureau, World Population Profile 2000

Women Women are infected up to 10 times more easily than men Social and economic factors increase women’s vulnerability In SSA 75% of 15-24 years olds infected are women, globally 47% of total infections are in women Women bear the social and economic burden of the epidemic

Household Impact In Zambia and South Africa household incomes fall by 66-80% In Vietnam one fifth of children in AIDS households had started to work A study from Uganda shows that 25% of households are providing for an orphan In Zambia when a mother dies 65% of households break up

Demand & Supply for Education The school enrollment rate among orphans was 39% in Central African Republic, two thirds of the national rate of 60% Source: Survey from CAR, UNICEF, 1999 Supply: Over 30% of all educators in Malawi and Zambia were estimated to be HIV positive in 2000 In Tanzania 27,000 teachers will have died by 2020

Bed occupancy required for AIDS patients, Zimbabwe 1990 2000 AIDS beds Non-AIDS beds Source : UNAIDS, 2000

Potential AIDS treatment costs as a percent of the Ministry of Health Budget 70 % of MOH Budget 60 50 40 30 20 10 Ethiopia 2014 Kenya 2005 Zimbabwe 2005 Source: Stover & Bollinger, 1999

HIV/AIDS affects rural areas 69% of the population of the most affected countries lives in rural areas AIDS affects economic sectors with mobile/ migratory workers (agriculture, mining) AIDS-related traditional practices are more prevalent in rural areas AIDS-affected urban dwellers often return to rural areas

HIV/AIDS and food insecurity: deadly Poverty and Inequality New HIV infections Food Insecurity Faster progression HIV to AIDS NUTRITION: ROLE Malnutrition Risky survival activities Source: Mullins

NAPHAM Malawi “We go to schools to warn youth about the dangers of HIV. We teach about HIV/AIDS stigma and discrimination and after we summarise with a play. And also we go to community outreach. When we go to community outreach we just perform a play. We first find out what problems the community has, and we do a play about their problems, their concerns such as about VCT (voluntary counselling and testing), about HIV/AIDS information in general, positive living, stigma and Discrimination.” Victoria Kambemba, voluntary youth worker for NAPHAM, performing to a lively crowd at a marketplace to raise awareness of HIV/AIDS.

SOME POSITIVES UGANDA, ZAMBIA, SENEGAL UGANDA: HIV PREVALENCE RATES DROPPED TO 7%. GOVERNMENT TALKED OPENLY ABOUT HIV AND IT IS NOW FIRMLY ON THE POLITICAL AGENDA SENEGAL: HIV HAS BEEN KEPT AT PREVALENCE RATES OF 0.8% THANKS TO VIGOROUS PREVENTION PROGRAMMES SENEGAL UGANDA ZAMBIA ZAMBIA: PREVALENCE AT 16.5% BUT: URBAN MEN & WOMEN REPORT LESS SEX, FEWER PARTNERS AND A HIGHER RATE OF CONDOM USE

2005: success stories Zimbabwe: number of new HIV infections has gone down, mainly due to increased use of condoms and fewer partners Caribbean: Haiti may be turning a corner, particularly in urban areas, due to increased abstention and faithfulness to one partner, however condom use among young people has decreased as has the age of first sex.