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a d v e r t i s e m e n t
 

HEALTH NEWS

UN Initiative Combats AIDS in Children

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 25 October, 2005  19:55 GMT

HIV AIDS children UN UNICEF
Of the 600,000 babies born HIV positive every year, 500,000 die before their first birthday. 'It is critical that the world unite for children and unite against AIDS,' says UNICEF executive director Ann Veneman.
The United Nations on Tuesday launched a global campaign to combat the AIDS pandemic which is threatening children as never before: every minute a child under the age of 15 dies as a result of AIDS and every day nearly 1,800 youngsters are newly infected with the HIV virus.

At the kickoff at UN headquarters, Secretary-General Kofi Annan urged the world to "unleash all our energy and imagination" to help fight "one of the cruelest tragedies of our time."

"Millions of children and young people are already affected by the pandemic -- including those infected through the most heart-reading from of transmission, mother to child," Annan said. "They often lack simple and fundamental information that is crucial to their safety. As we know, in the world of AIDS, silence is death."

'Problem Is Staggering'

At a pre-launch press briefing on Monday, UNICEF's Executive Director Ann Veneman said children are the "invisible face" of a very visible disease and are missing out on the help that is going to adults to fight AIDS and help prevent its spread.

According to a new report from UNICEF and UNAIDS, children under 15 account for 1 in 6 global AIDS-related deaths and 1 in 7 new global HIV infections. An estimated 15 million children have lost one or both parents to AIDS, but less than 10 percent receive any public support.

"It is critical that the world unite for children and unite against AIDS," Veneman said. "The size of the problem is staggering, but the scale of the response has been inadequate."

At the launch, the secretary-general joined Veneman, UNICEF goodwill ambassador Sir Roger Moore, Rwanda's first lady, UNAIDS Executive Director Peter Piot, Pakistani pop-group "Strings" and young people affected by AIDS.

Events were also being held in India, El Salvador, Brazil, Mozambique, Djibouti, the Netherlands, Ireland, Trinidad and Tobago, and Australia.

On Tuesday, UNICEF sent 15 million text messages to mobile phone customers in Africa and Asia to seek support for the new initiative.

Children of Sub-Saharan Africa

The campaign's message is simple: AIDS is a growing threat to children and if serious action isn't taken immediately the world will not achieve the UN Millennium Development Goal of halting and reversing the AIDS pandemic by 2015.

According to the report, the children of sub-Saharan Africa have been hardest hit, accounting for more than 85 percent of all children under 15 living with the disease. The next largest group of youngsters with HIV and AIDS is in South and East Asia, but new HIV infections are increasing rapidly in Eastern Europe and parts of Central Asia.

"In Latin America, low national prevalence is disguising epidemics that are concentrated in major urban areas and among certain populations," the report said. "In countries in the Middle East and North Africa potential epidemics are being overlooked, in part because of cultural inhibitions against discussing sexual and reproductive health."

Veneman said the campaign to reduce HIV/AIDS among children is targeted at governments and policy-makers. She urged countries to follow the example of the United States, Britain and most recently Ireland which have earmarked part of the funds they contribute to the global fight against AIDS to youngsters.

Prevent Mother-to-Child Transmission

Peter McDermott, chief of the HIV/AIDS division at the UN Children's Fund, said the campaign has set international goals, and UNICEF will work with UNAIDS, voluntary organizations, the private sector and governments to achieve them.

At present, over 600,000 babies are still born HIV positive, but by 2010 the campaign expects to reach 80 percent of women in need with treatment to prevent mother-to-child transmission of the virus, he said.

Of the 600,000 HIV positive babies born every year, 500,000 die before their first birthday, he said. By 2010, the campaign expects to provide either antiretroviral treatment or a US$10-a-year (€8.3) antibiotic to 80 percent of the children in need to improve their life expectancy.

Most importantly, McDermott said, the campaign will focus on prevention because 15- to 24-year-olds now account for half of all HIV infections. By 2010, the campaign expects to achieve a 25 percent drop in infections by providing education, information and services to young people, he said.

By 2010, the campaign also aims to provide support for 12 million of the 15 million AIDS orphans, McDermott said.

"The magnitude of the problems of children affected by HIV/AIDS dwarfs the scale of the existing response," the report said. "Children and adolescents around the globe are increasingly at risk of infection, and many of those affected by HIV/AIDS are being left to grow up alone, grow up too soon, or to not grow up at all."

A global campaign is essential to work towards an AIDS-free generation where not one child will die of AIDS, be infected with the HIV virus, or lose a parent, teacher or friend, it said.




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