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Explore the potential risks associated with the FIFA World Cup and its impact on HIV/AIDS spread, analyzing past events like the 2006 World Cup in Germany and implications for the 2010 event in South Africa. Discover the influencing factors, such as legal prostitution, law enforcement, fan demographics, and regional HIV statistics. Investigate the role of commercial sex work, potential consequences of increased risk behaviors, and the importance of education and prevention strategies to address these risks.
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2010 FIFA World Cup and HIV/AIDS “Football and sex belong together”
Risks • Intuitively assume that “football and sex” go together • Link between staging a FIFA world cup and risky sexual activity • Possible increase in HIV infection
World Cup 2006 - Germany • First world country • Legalised prostitution in 2002 – prostitutes have legal rights, entitled to receive social benefits and health insurance • Expected 40 000 extra commercial sex workers to be trafficked into Germany • Research – no huge increase in demand documented. Why? • Planning and coordination started more than a year before the event • Increased law enforcement during the cup • Fan-base – many families and children; many low-budget tourists who did not have extra money for sex • Fan parks also decreased demand • Not profitable enough event for traffickers • National hotlines set up
South Africa 2010 • Third world country – high levels of unemployment and poverty • Surrounded by countries who are poor • Region has highest rates of HIV infection in the world
Eastern Europe & Central Asia 1.6 million [1.2 – 2.1 million] Western & Central Europe 760 000 [600 000 – 1.1 million] North America 1.3 million [480 000 – 1.9 million] East Asia 800 000 [620 000 – 960 000] Middle East&North Africa 380 000 [270 000 – 500 000] Caribbean 230 000 [210 000 – 270 000] South & South-East Asia 4.0 million [3.3 – 5.1 million] Sub-Saharan Africa 22.5 million [20.9 – 24.3 million] Latin America 1.6 million [1.4 – 1.9 million] Oceania 75 000 [53 000 – 120 000] Adults and children estimated to be living with HIV, 2007 Total: 33.2 (30.6 – 36.1) million
Eastern Europe & Central Asia 150 000 [70 000 – 290 000] Western & Central Europe 31 000 [19 000 – 86 000] North America 46 000 [38 000 – 68 000] East Asia 92 000 [21 000 – 220 000] Middle East&North Africa 35 000 [16 000 – 65 000] Caribbean 17 000 [15 000 – 23 000] South & South-East Asia 340 000 [180 000 – 740 000] Sub-Saharan Africa 1.7 million [1.4 – 2.4 million] Latin America 100 000 [47 000 – 220 000] Oceania 14 000 [11 000 – 26 000] Estimated number of adults and children newly infected with HIV, 2007 Total: 2.5 (1.8 – 4.1) million
Percent of adults (15+) living with HIV who are female, 1990–2007 70 Sub-Saharan Africa 60 GLOBAL 50 Percent female (%) Caribbean 40 Asia 30 E Europe & C Asia 20 Latin America 10 0 1990 ‘91 ‘92 ‘93 ‘94 ‘95 ‘96 ‘97 ‘98 ‘99 ‘00 ‘01 ‘02 ‘03 ‘04 ‘05 ‘06 2007 Year 5
The tipping point Epidemics: • Takes smallest of changes to shatter an epidemic’s equilibrium • Different ways of tipping an epidemic – depends on different agents of change • tiny % of people do the majority of the work • Change happens in a hurry • 1% = tipping point • E.g. SA – took 5 years for prevalence rates to move from 0.5% - 1%; then only 7 years to jump from 1% to 20%.
HIV prevalence in adults in sub-Saharan Africa, 1988−2003 20% − 39% 10% − 20% 5% − 10% 1% − 5% 0% − 1% trend data unavailable outside region
Size matters: the number of prostitutes and the global HIV/AIDS pandemic • Infection rates among CSWs (commercial sex workers) higher than the general population (Study of data available from 77 countries) • On average, Africa = 4X as many CSWs as rest of world (as % of pop) & CSW community in Africa more than 4X as likely to be HIV infected as rest of world • “To visualise the potential power of CSWs in spreading the virus, one need only assume that in a country with 4% of its adult females working as CSWs, if each CSW has sex with 10 new male clients in a week, assuming no repeat customers in the week, this leads to contact with 40% of the adult male population in just one week”.
Male clients = spread HIV into general population – back to their mother countries. • Many illegal immigrants seeking means to survive – world cup = income generating event • Attract sex workers from neighbouring countries and from all over SA • Possibility that commercial sex work and public drinking will be legalised over world cup period – condom use?
So what are the risks? • 2010 likely to increase risk of HIV infection • Spread of infection from area with one of the highest prevalence rates back to countries of origin of fans (bring them nearer to the tipping point) • Fan base? Two scenarios – ‘rich’ fans from first world countries – mainly men? Fans from neighbouring countries – poorer, also mainly men? Will this equate with unprotected casual sex?
So what are the risks? • Worst case scenario: Further spread and reinfection in SA – particularly if we have an influx of sex workers from high prevalence neighbouring countries • Unlikely that people will plan to have safe sex- unlikely that fans will know about risk (unless aggressively educated and informed) • Unlikely that sufficient condoms will be freely available • Likely that there will be lots of unprotected casual sex to ‘celebrate’ & ‘drown sorrows’
Opportunities • Deliver effective preventive education – particularly targeting young people • Generate income – eg Alive and Kicking in Kenya • Use celebrity sports stars and coaches as role models • Use sports to break down stigma and discrimination • Use events as a point of access to VCT and other health service • Use sports media profile to communicate and promote AIDS messages to a wider audience
What now? • Early and sound situation assessment – regional experts (police & NGOs) • Need co-ordinated advocacy and effective public awareness campaigns (also targeting arriving fans) • Condom availability • Hotlines • Information kiosks • Training of key staff