Drug Users Are Majority of New AIDS Cases in Brazil

The global AIDS epidemic has been moving fast in affecting women. The 2004 World Epidemiological Bulletin, released yesterday, November 23, by the UN Joint HIV/AIDS Program (UNAIDS), reveals that half of the recently infected population is composed of members of the female sex.

According to the report, the number of people contaminated by AIDS is at an all-time high, approximately 39.4 million, compared with 36.6 million in 2002.


More than a third of the cases registered in Latin America are in Brazil. Even so, the country’s program for prevention and treatment of the disease was singled out for commendation in the document.


One of the high points is the increased life expectancy of HIV carriers.


In 1995 the remaining life expectancy for HIV carriers was only a year and a half. The following year it jumped to around five years.


Users of injectable drugs belong to one of the groups presently most vulnerable to the AIDS epidemic.


According to the UNAIDS Bulletin, the total of contaminated individuals rose from 8 million in 2003 to 13.5 million in 2004.


In the opinion of the representative in Brazil of the UN Commission on Drugs and Crime, Giovanni Quaglia, this is one of the means of contamination that is most on the rise. Over half of the new AIDS cases in Brazil involve drug users.


The report lauds the risk reduction program adopted in Salvador, in the Brazilian Northeast.


This type of infection fell from 50% in 1996 to 7% in 2001.


The risk reduction program provides disposable syringes to drug users, as well as other types of drugs to substitute the injectable kinds.


The report also points out that HIV contamination among injectable drug users in the South of Brazil remains high.


In the city of Porto Alegre, for example, the capital of the state of Rio Grande do Sul, the rate of victimization among members of this group amounted to 64% in 2003.


Agência Brasil
Translator: David Silberstein

Tags:

You May Also Like

American Journalist Warns Against Rio, Brazil, Until City Becomes Safer

American Stefanie Michaels, international travel expert and journalist returned from Brazil this month with ...

Brazil’s Gutsy and Spirited War Against Microsoft

After five months of  being unemployed, Catarine Fernandes, 25, applied for a secretary job ...

Tourism Among Brazil’s Top Ten Earners

Up to September, foreign visitors to Brazil spent US$ 2.325 billion in the country, ...

To Satisfy Its Appetite Brazil Goes Looking for Gas in Pipelines and Ships

Brazil’s oil and gas industry already represents 9% of the country’s GDP and should ...

Brazil Media’s Fear to Call Terror by Its Name

Brazil’s weekly newsmagazine Veja‘s cover story (edition 1896, 03/16) denouncing the financial resources offer ...

Brazil to Have Pavillion with 25 Companies at Dubai’s Dental Fair

At least 25 Brazilian companies are going to participate in the 10th edition of ...

Brazil’s PT Is Dying of Arrogance and Disregard for the Future

It appears that the Workers Party (PT) has suddenly died. That sentence, however, contains ...

Caribbean Experts in Brazil Learning AIDS Strategies

The Deputy Manager of Caribbean Community (Caricom) Programs, Edward Emmanuel, classified Brazilian program on ...

BNDES’s Role in Brazil’s Agriculture

The Secretary of Agricultural Policy of the Brazilian Ministry of Agriculture, Ivan Wedekin, was ...

World Bank Helps Care for Brazilian Indian Health

Brazilian Indians in 13 states will receive US$ 3.2 million (8 million reais) in ...