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HIV / AIDS IN KENYA

HIV / AIDS IN KENYA. IMPACT OF THE EPIDEMIC DR. MOHAMED S. ABDULLAH CHAIRMAN NATIONAL AIDS CONTROL COUNCIL. Children (<15 years) estimated to be living with HIV/AIDS as of end 2000. Eastern Europe & Central Asia 15 000. Western Europe 4 100. North America 11 000.

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HIV / AIDS IN KENYA

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  1. HIV / AIDS IN KENYA IMPACT OF THE EPIDEMIC DR. MOHAMED S. ABDULLAH CHAIRMAN NATIONAL AIDS CONTROL COUNCIL

  2. Children (<15 years) estimated to be living with HIV/AIDS as of end 2000 Eastern Europe & Central Asia 15 000 Western Europe 4 100 North America 11 000 East Asia & Pacific 7 200 North Africa & Middle East 16 000 South & South-East Asia 210 000 Caribbean 11 000 Sub-Saharan Africa 1.5 million Latin America 30 000 Australia & New Zealand < 200 Total: 2.0 million

  3. Estimated adult and child deaths from HIV/AIDS during 2000 Eastern Europe & Central Asia 14 000 Western Europe 7 000 North America 20 000 East Asia & Pacific 25 000 North Africa & Middle East 24 000 South & South-East Asia 470 000 Caribbean 32 000 Sub-Saharan Africa 3.0 million Latin America 50 000 Australia & New Zealand < 500 Total: 3.6 million

  4. Adults and children estimated to be living with HIV/AIDS as of end 2000 Eastern Europe & Central Asia 700 000 Western Europe 540 000 North America 920 000 East Asia & Pacific 640 000 North Africa & Middle East 400 000 South & South-East Asia 5.8 million Caribbean 390 000 Sub-Saharan Africa 28.3 million Latin America 1.4 million Australia & New Zealand 15 000 Total: 40.1 million

  5. Estimated deaths in children (<15 years)from HIV/AIDS during 2000 Eastern Europe & Central Asia < 500 Western Europe < 100 North America < 100 East Asia & Pacific 1 000 North Africa & Middle East 7 100 South & South-East Asia 40 000 Caribbean 3 100 Sub-Saharan Africa 500 000 Latin America 3 000 Australia & New Zealand < 100 Total: 600 000

  6. Estimated number of adults and childrennewly infected with HIV during 2000 Eastern Europe & Central Asia 250 000 Western Europe 30 000 North America 45 000 East Asia & Pacific 130 000 North Africa & Middle East 80 000 South & South-East Asia 780 000 Caribbean 60 000 Sub-Saharan Africa 4.2 million Latin America 150 000 Australia & New Zealand 500 Total: 6.0 million

  7. Estimated number of children (<15 years)newly infected with HIV during 2000 Eastern Europe & Central Asia 600 Western Europe < 500 North America < 500 East Asia & Pacific 2 600 North Africa & Middle East 11 000 South & South-East Asia 65 000 Caribbean 4 200 Sub-Saharan Africa 620 000 Latin America 7 300 Australia & New Zealand < 100 Total: 800 000

  8. Cumulative number of children estimated to have been orphaned by AIDS* at age 14 or youngerat the end of 1999 Eastern Europe & Central Asia 500 Western Europe 9 000 North America 70 000 East Asia & Pacific 5 600 North Africa & Middle East 15 000 South & South-East Asia 850 000 Caribbean 85 000 Sub-Saharan Africa 13.1 million Latin America 110 000 Australia & New Zealand < 500 Total: 15.2 million * HIV-negative children who have lost their mother or both parents to AIDS before the age of 15 years

  9. IMPACT OF AIDS IN KENYA Demographic Impact • Highest sero-prevalence in women is between 25-29 years • Highest sero-prevalence in men is between 30-39 years • Women five times more infected than men (15-19 years age group) • More than one million orphans generated by epidemic • More than 2.2 million Kenyans infected at present

  10. IMPACT OF AIDS IN KENYA Demographic Impact • Life expectancy: 52 years from 64 years • Infant mortality rate: 74 from 53 • Child mortality rate: 113 from 92 • Maternal mortality: 650 from 240

  11. IMPACT OF AIDS IN KENYA Impact in Education • Skilled and experienced teachers are dying • Significant others are alive but incapacitated • Newly trained teachers are reduced by illness and death. • Production has either stagnated or even reduced • Teaching, research production, national develop planning affected • Leadership in implementation of strategies affected

  12. IMPACT OF AIDS IN KENYA Impact in Education Large numbers of children are kept out of school because: ·they are needed to help at home, ·they haveto care for sick family members ·they have to work to increase the family income. ·families cannot afford school fees

  13. IMPACT OF AIDS IN KENYA Impact on Children • Increased proportion of vulnerable children • Increased incidence of child labour. • House holds are headed by children • No support from the state or family around them. • Rising rates of child sexual abuse

  14. IMPACT OF AIDS IN KENYA Impact in Agriculture • Agriculture is the primary economic sector of Kenya • Engages about 74% of the labour force • Accounts for 24.5% per cent of gross domestic product. • Main production of food either for themselves or for the country • A threat to the country’s food security • Fertile lands of families remain idle shortage of agricultural labour • Loss of skills and experience in large & small scale farming

  15. IMPACT OF AIDS IN KENYA Impact in Health • Increases number of people seeking health services • it increases demand on health care providers • Increases demand on health facilities • increases need for human resource production • it increases the overall cost of health care in the country.

  16. IMPACT OF AIDS IN KENYA • The Dilema • treating AIDS versus preventing HIV infection • treating AIDS versus treating other illnesses • spending on health versus spending on other demanding public services • skilled health personnel have died, Replacing them Vs Other cadre • Many are rendered incapable of further service, but need the income • direct cost of treating a new AIDS patient at Kshs.45,680, • indirect costs amount to Kshs 638,560 • access to and quality of health care have worsened

  17. IMPACT OF AIDS IN KENYA Industrial Sector • Industrial Sector accounts for 13.3% of GDP • Frequency of absenteeism increased • Expenditures on illness and death have increased • 52 per cent of total costs are HIV/AIDS-related costs.

  18. IMPACT OF AIDS IN KENYA Industrial Sector • loss of skilled manpower, • demand for manufactured products has reduced • industrial sector economically vulnerable. • per capita expenditure on health is $ 9 per year. • Cost per employee is $ 30 per year. • informal sector 47.4% of the GDP also affected

  19. IMPACT OF AIDS IN KENYA Social Impact • survivors are dependants left without economic support • epidemic has overwhelmed traditional systems of adoption • OVC without a steady resource base. • early teens heading households, • Children & Women are on the streets • increased crime rates • Increased psychologic and spiritual needs. • traumatic effects of bereavement

  20. IMPACT OF AIDS IN KENYA Presidents Statement: “AIDS is not just a serious threat to our social and economic development, it is a real threat to our very existence… AIDS has reduced many families to the status of beggars… no family in Kenya remains untouched by the suffering and death caused by AIDS… the real solution of the spread of AIDS lies with each and everyone of us”

  21. IMPACT OF AIDS IN KENYA Government Accelerated Intervention: - Declaration of AIDS as a national disaster - Formation of the National AIDS Control Council - Formulation of the National Strategic Plan - Formation of a comprehensive Institutional Framework - Formulation of Legal Framework and Policy Guidelines - Allocation of Dedicated Resources for HIV/AIDS - Enhancement of Political Commitment

  22. IMPACT OF AIDS IN KENYA Priority Interventions • Advocacy for Prevention • Treatment, Continuum of Care and Support • Mitigation of Socio-Economic Impacts • Monitoring, Evaluation and Research • Effective Management and Coordination of the National Response

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