World AIDS Day 2016 �Hands Up for #HIV Prevention�
Highlights
- World AIDS Day 2016 is celebrated on December 1st 2016
- The theme for this year is "Hands up for #HIV Prevention"
- 78 million people affected with AIDS across the world
World AIDS day highlights the stigmas and issues associated with AIDS and HIV infections and to remove complacency that may have occurred in the fight against the disease. The theme for World AIDS Day 2016 is "Hands up for #HIV Prevention"
- HIV is one of the most significant disease in low and middle income countries
- 78 million people are affected with HIV across the world
- Anti-retroviral therapy has ensured that people live longer with HIV
- 35 million AIDS-related death
Target for HIV initiatives
Countries across the world are striving to eliminate HIV and concerted efforts are being taken to provide anti-retroviral therapies to everyone affected with HIV/AIDS. The target set on this day is to -
- Reduce the number of HIV infected to 500,000 by 2020
- Eliminate HIV/AIDS - by 2030
Challenges in Controlling HIV
The challenges faced in controlling HIV are access to testing, medical care and co-infection like pneumonia and cancer.
This Year's Theme "Hands up for #HIV Prevention"
The theme focuses on preventing the spread of the infection as it will lower the burden of disease and eliminate medical costs incurred due to infection. HIV is transmitted via contact with body fluids like saliva, semen, mucus from the rectum from anal sex as well as breast milk. One of the chief routes of transmission that is actively being prevented is mother to child transmission.
‘Prevention is better than cure, World Aids Day adopts age old stand.’
HIV Infection
HIV, stands for human immunodeficiency virus, which attacks the CD4 immune cells and grows in number over a period of years to result in symptoms associated with AIDS.
Michel Sidib� who is the Executive Director of UNAIDS, and Under-Secretary-General of the United Nations, published a statement for World AIDS Day 2016 "With access to treatment, people living with HIV are living longer. Investing in treatment is paying off, but people older than 50 who are living with HIV, including people who are on treatment, are at increased risk of developing age-associated non-communicable diseases, affecting HIV disease progression."
Dr.S.Shroff, who did the first kidney transplant on a HIV patient in India said, " we have come far in our fight against HIV/AIDS. The societal stigma is a lot less and we have better mechanisms in place to tackle the disease." He added, "when we first started there was a holocaust projection of the disease but over the years we have understood the disease better and the medication available has had the desired effect in controlling the infection. This is the right time to start considering on how to eliminate this disease"
Michel Sidib� also added that the fight against AIDS/HIV infection continues and is challenging. What we have learnt over the years is that we can tailor the response to individual needs of the infected patients. We have also learnt that whatever be our individual situation , we all need access to the tools to protect us from HIV and to access anti-retroviral medication should we need them.
He said that a life-cycle approach to HIV that finds solutions for everyone at every stage of life can address the complexities of HIV. Risks and challenges change as people go through life, highlighting the need to adapt HIV prevention and treatment strategies from birth to old age.
He concluded by saying, "The success we have achieved so far gives us hope for the future, but as we look ahead we must remember not to be complacent. We cannot stop now. This is the time to move forward together to ensure that all children start their lives free from HIV, that young people and adults grow up and stay free from HIV and that treatment becomes more accessible so that everyone stays AIDS-free."
References:
- HIV Overview - (https:aidsinfo.nih.gov/education-materials/fact-sheets/19/45/hiv-aids--the-basics)
- 10 facts on HIV/AIDS - (http://www.who.int/features/factfiles/hiv/en/)
- World AIDS Day message 2016 - (http://www.unaids.org/en/resources/presscentre/pressreleaseandstatementarchive/2016/november/WAD2016message)
- Renal transplantation in a HIV positive patient - Mann A, Soundararajan P, Shroff S : 2009 | Volume: 19 | Issue Number: 3 | Page: 119-121
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Amrita Surendranath. (2016, December 01). World AIDS Day 2016 �Hands Up for #HIV Prevention�. Medindia. Retrieved on Dec 27, 2024 from https://www.medindia.net/news/healthwatch/world-aids-day-2016-hands-up-for-hiv-prevention-165763-1.htm.
MLA
Amrita Surendranath. "World AIDS Day 2016 �Hands Up for #HIV Prevention�". Medindia. Dec 27, 2024. <https://www.medindia.net/news/healthwatch/world-aids-day-2016-hands-up-for-hiv-prevention-165763-1.htm>.
Chicago
Amrita Surendranath. "World AIDS Day 2016 �Hands Up for #HIV Prevention�". Medindia. https://www.medindia.net/news/healthwatch/world-aids-day-2016-hands-up-for-hiv-prevention-165763-1.htm. (accessed Dec 27, 2024).
Harvard
Amrita Surendranath. 2016. World AIDS Day 2016 �Hands Up for #HIV Prevention�. Medindia, viewed Dec 27, 2024, https://www.medindia.net/news/healthwatch/world-aids-day-2016-hands-up-for-hiv-prevention-165763-1.htm.