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Fact sheet UNDER EMBARGO UNTIL 6 JULY 2004, 11.00 GMT AIDS epidemic in Eastern Europe and Central Asia In Eastern Europe and Central Asia, diverse epidemics are under way, and they show no signs of abating. In 2003, some 360,000 people were newly infected with HIV, bringing the number of people living with the virus to 1.3 million (range: 860 000–1.9 million). In the past year, AIDS claimed an estimated 49 000 lives. In Eastern Europe, Estonia, Latvia, the Russian Federation and Ukraine are the worstaffected countries in this region. However, HIV continues to spread in Belarus, Kazakhstan and Moldova. Injecting drug use is the driving force behind this region’s epidemic—an activity that has spread explosively in the turbulent years since the Soviet regime’s demise. In the Russian Federation alone, there are an estimated 3 million injecting drug users. The Ukraine has more than 600 000 and Kazakhstan has up to 200 000. In Latvia and Estonia, an estimated 1% of the adult population injects drugs. Most of these drug users are male. The epidemic’s most striking feature is the age of those infected—more than 80% are under 30. Condom use is also generally low among this population. By contrast, in North America and Western Europe, only 30% of infected people are under 30. The Russian Federation remains saddled with the region’s worst epidemic, with an estimated 860 000 people living with HIV. More than half the reported cases come from just 10 of the 89 administrative territories. The number of new cases registered in 2000 (56,630) was almost twice that of 1987. Although the number of reported cases dropped by 50% over the past two years, possibly due to changing testing patterns, the overall number of HIV-positive people continues to rise in Russia. Women account for an increasing share of newly diagnosed HIV infections in the Russian Federation—up from one-in-four in 2001, to one-in-three just one year later. The trend is most obvious in areas where the epidemic is oldest; this suggests sexual intercourse plays an increasing role in transmission or that women are increasingly involved in injecting drug use. From 1998 to 2002, infection levels among pregnant women increased from less than 0.01% to 0.1%—a 10-fold increase. In the Baltic States, overall infection numbers remain low, but HIV spread continues at an alarming pace. In Latvia, the number of HIV diagnoses has risen five-fold since 1999. In 2000, Estonia reported 12 new HIV cases; in 2002, it reported 899. Lithuania is on a similar path. In 2001, 72 new HIV cases were detected. The following year, this increased more than five-fold. Lithuania appears to be facing two distinct epidemics. In regions adjacent to Kaliningrad (Russia), HIV is affecting mainly injecting drug users; in Vilnius, it is spreading among men who have sex with men. In Poland, since the mid-1990s, newly reported HIV infections have remained stable (at roughly 500–600 annually). In parts of south-eastern Europe (especially in countries emerging from conflict and difficult transitions), drug injecting and risky sexual behaviour appears to be on the increase. This raises the prospect of possible HIV outbreaks unless preventive steps are swiftly introduced. In Ukraine, drug injecting remains the principal mode of transmission, but sexual transmission is becoming increasingly common, especially among injecting drug users and their partners. However, an increasing proportion of those who become infected through unsafe sex have no direct relationship with drug users. Several Central Asian countries—notably Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan— have reported growing numbers of HIV infections, most of them among injecting drug users. Central Asia is at the crossroads of the main drug-trafficking routes between East and West. In some places, heroin is said to be cheaper than alcohol. Throughout the region, estimates and trends are based on case reporting by the health services and the police, since there is little money or infrastructure for systemic surveillance. This raises concerns that HIV may be spreading among people who rarely come into contact with the authorities or testing services. For example, in the Czech Republic, Hungary, Slovenia and the Slovak Republic, sex between men is clearly the predominant mode of HIV transmission. Yet, men who have sex with men are widely stigmatized, so very little is known about how the epidemic affects this population. These epidemics are recent. They can be halted if targeted prevention efforts address higher-risk populations, such as injecting drug users, sex workers, men who have sex with men and young people. ________________________________ For more information, please contact Dominique De Santis, UNAIDS, Geneva, tel. +41 22 791 4509 or mobile (+41 79) 254 6803, or Abby Spring, UNAIDS, Geneva, tel. +41 22 791 4577 or mobile (+41 79) 308 9861. For more information about UNAIDS, visit www.unaids.org.