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Africa, the West, and the Fight against AIDS. By Helen Epstein June 6, 2007 UCLA School of Public Health. The countries in Africa most affected by AIDS. Adult HIV Prevalence Worldwide. Source: UNAIDS 2004: 2004 Report on the Global AIDS Epidemic
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Africa, the West, and the Fight against AIDS By Helen Epstein June 6, 2007 UCLA School of Public Health
The countries in Africa most affected by AIDS
Adult HIV Prevalence Worldwide Source: UNAIDS 2004: 2004 Report on the Global AIDS Epidemic This map does not reflect a position by the UN on the legal status of any country or territory or the delimitations of any frontiers.
“HIGH RISK GROUP” MODEL • ACCORDING TO “HRG” MODEL, THE EXTENT OF SPREAD OF HIV IN A POPULATION WILL DEPEND ON: • FRACTION OF PEOPLE IN “HRG”s (CSWs, MIGRANT LABORERS, ETC) AND • THE DEGREE OF “MIXING” BETWEEN HIGH AND LOWER RISK GROUPS.
Frequency of concurrent and suspected concurrent relationships.Redrawn from Carael M. “Sexual Behavior” Chapter 4 in Cleland and Ferry 1995
Concurrency Slides By Stewart Parkinson
HIV Negative Male Effects of Concurrency HIV Positive Viremic Male HIV Positive Non-Viremic Male HIV Negative Female HIV Positive Viremic Female HIV Positive Non-Viremic Female
Concurrency December
Concurrency January
Concurrency February
Concurrency March
Concurrency April
Concurrency May
Concurrency June
Concurrency July
Concurrency August
Serial Monogamy December
Serial Monogamy January
Serial Monogamy February
Serial Monogamy March
Serial Monogamy April
Serial Monogamy May
Serial Monogamy June
Serial Monogamy July
Serial Monogamy August
WHERE DID MARTINA MORRIS GET THE IDEA THAT LONG TERM CONCURRENCY WAS DRIVING THE HIV EPIDEMIC IN AFRICA? • UGANDAN DOCTORS……
Premarital sex: % of never married women 15-24 years old who had sex in the past year Early 90s/late 80s Mid 90s Late 90s/early 2000s 48 52 33 35 32 39 34 26 35 22 27 18 13 15 Cameroon Zimbabwe Uganda Zambia Kenya ORC Macro
Reported condom use last higher-risk sex for ages 15-24 (UNAIDS, 2001 & BAIS 2001) Percent Given that Botswana has for some time featured some of the highest rates of (self-reported) condom use in the world, why isn’t Botswana hailed alongside of Uganda as a major success story? Condoms? Since the beginning of the HIV/AIDS epidemic, a considerable amount of programmatic effort has focused on condom promotion…
HIV Prevalence Condom sales The condom quandary
Uganda: Botswana: C is for condomize “Ever” use of condoms among adults increased from 15 to 30 percent in men, and from 7 to 20 percent for women, from 1989 to 19951 Botswana may have the highest levels of reported condom use in Sub-Saharan Africa 1Shelton, et al (2004)
“CONSISTENT” CONDOM USE PROTECTS, BUT NOT TOTALLY….(PROBABLY BECAUSE THE USE IS NOT AS CONSISTENT AS IT SHOULD BE.)
Uganda: Botswana: B is for be faithful Uganda1: Uganda coined (from agricultural tradition) the “zero-grazing” approach to prevention 1Shelton, et al (in press) 3BAIS (2001) 2UNAIDS (2002)
From Warren Winkelstein Jr et al, “The San Francisco Men’s Health Study: Continued Decline in HIV Seroconversion Rates among Homosexual/Bisexual Men.” AJPH November 1988 vol 78, pp. 1472-4
The HIV rate is beginning to decline in several African countries, including Kenya, Zimbabwe and I think maybe Malawi and Zambia. But—why did it take so long? And why is the HIV rate still so high in southern Africa?