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Plan HIV/AIDS © Plan Life Expectancy Loss Country/国家 Before AIDS/流行前 2010 Angola 41.3 35.0 Botswana 74.4 26.7 Average life expectancy in 11 African Countries Lesotho 67.2 36.5 Malawi 69.4 36.9 Mozambique 42.5 27.1 Namiba 68.8 33.8 Rwanda 54.7 38.7 South Africa 68.5 36.5 Swaziland 74.6 33.0 Zambia 68.6 34.4 © Plan (age in years) 2 What is AIDS • When HIV enter the human body, it will attack the CD4 cells, a kind of white blood cell which is an integral part of the human immune system. In this way it destroys the immune response. • It make the infected vulnerable to attack by virus and bacteria, causing opportunistic infections, malignant tumors and multi-system organ injury. © Plan 3 Definition AIDS: HIV: Acquired Human Immuno Immunodeficiency Deficiency Virus Syndrome HIV infection Advanced to AIDS On average 8-10 years Identified sickness Looks normal © Plan 4 HOW DO PEOPLE GET AIDS? • UNPROTECTED SEX • INFECTED NEEDLES • FROM MOTHER TO CHILD • INJECTION DRUG USE © Plan 5 AIDS DOES NOT SPREAD THROUGH • SALIVA • SWEAT • AIR • TOUCH • FOOD © Plan 6 How to prevent being infected • IDU transmission : keep off drugs, do not share needles, sterilize needles • Sex transmission: ABC principle ABC A: abstinence (100% effective) B: be faithful (requires trust and fidelity) C: condom (less than 100% Plan effective) © 7 HIGH RISK GROUPS • INJECTION DRUG USERS • GAY MEN • SEX WORKERS AND THEIR CLIENTS BUT THE EPIDEMIC IS SPREADING FROM HIGH RISK GROUPS TO THE GENERAL POPULATION AND THERE IS A POTENTIAL RISK THAT THE EPIDEMIC WILL SPREAD FURTHER © Plan 8 Some Notes Window Period • The period between the initial infection and the period in which antibodies are detectable (which can be from 2 weeks to 6 months, but is usually 3 months) Latency Period • The time period between becoming infected with HIV and developing symptoms of AIDS is known as the latency period. The latency period can last from 2-10 years. • Before developing symptoms, people with HIV can look and feel healthy. but they can still infect others through blood to blood or sexual © Plan contact. 9 HIV/AIDS AWARENESS REMAINS UNACCEPTABLY LOW, AND MANY PEOPLE STILL DO NOT KNOW ENOUGH ABOUT HOW TO PROTECT THEMSELVES AGAINST HIV Once infected, not only must you take drugs and will you become ill, but you (and those affected by you) will often be discriminated against. © Plan 10 AIDS Impacts … On household: • Loss of income and production of a household member • Create extraordinary care needs • Household expenditures rise On labor and the workplace: • Less labor supply • Loss experienced workers • Decreased productivity • Increase cost of doing business (health insurance, recruit and train new employees) © Plan 11 © Plan 12 History of HIV in China 1985: First reported HIV/AIDS case in China 1989: First HIV Epidemic among IDUs in Yunnan 1995: First outbreak of HIV among commercial plasma donors 1995: First time HIV in IDU outside Yunnan 1998: HIV reported in all 31 mainland provinces 2002: HIV reported in IDUs in all 31 mainland provinces 2005: 650,000 cases estimated 2006: Estimated to be close to 1m 2007: Revised downwards to 650,000-750,000 © Plan 13 Reported HIV Case, by Province (1985-2005) © Plan 14 Background Unique epidemic & unique opportunity • Population size: 1.3 billion • Estimated HIV infection: 650,000 (0.05%) • Tripling HIV infection from 0.05% to 0.15%, will add 1.3 million infections • Increase rate to 4%, will have 52 million infections © Plan 15 New Infections in 2005 • 70,000 new infections • i.e. approx. 192/day • Among them: • Sexual contact: • Injecting drug use: • Mother-to-child transmission: © Plan 49.8% 48.6% 1.6% 16 The Trends of Epidemic By report and by estimated time of infection Plasma Donation 2003/2004/2005 IDU & Sex & Blood Testing Campaign 50000 50000 40000 40000 30000 30000 20000 20000 10000 10000 0 0 AIDS 85-90 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 5 HIV(+) 492 3 5 23 29 216 261 274 531 © Plan 52 38 126 136 230 233 714 1028 6120 12652 7550 HIV 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 HIV 5 1 12 9 222 389 505 657 854 4500 16500 11000 3000 3900 5070 6591 8568 11139 14480 18825 1567 2649 3343 3306 4677 5201 8219 9732 21691 47606 36614 17 Proportion of HIV Infected, Tested and Managed 650,000 Infected 145,000 tested Tested 22% Managed 6% © Plan 40,000 ± managed 18 Proportion of Tested vs Untested by Risk Factors Plasma/blood IDU Sexual MTCT Tested Untested Blood related © Plan 19 Government Leadership • Establishment of State Council AIDS Working Group (2004) and provincial AIDS Working Committees 05 20 04 03 20 20 02 20 00 01 20 20 99 98 19 19 19 19 © Plan 97 120 100 80 60 40 20 0 96 • Promoting anti-stigma US$ (millions) • Substantial increase in government funding 20 Supportive Legislation • “Four Free and One Care” Policy • • • • • free ARV drugs, free prevention of mother-to-child transmission, free voluntary counselling and testing, free schooling for children orphaned by AIDS, and care to people living with HIV/AIDS • AIDS Regulations (promulgated on March 1, 2006) • • Identifies responsibilities and necessary actions to control HIV transmission Prohibits discrimination towards PLHA and their families • Issued a new 5-year plan • Infectious Disease Act • Protects confidentiality • Blood Safety Law © Plan 21 Surveillance and Testing • 329 national sentinel surveillance sites • >400 provincial surveillance sites • >3,000 free VCT clinics • 3,756 screening labs and 57 confirmatory labs © Plan 22 Management Strategies Chain from identification to follow-up services AIDS HIV HIV Testing Follow-up Treatment Death Monitor Resist Death 23 GOAL in New Five-Year Action Plan By 2010, China will limit people living with HIV/AIDS no more than 1,500,000 China Center for AIDS/STD Control and Prevention Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention 24 … 25