Share

Aids lessons from Latin America

When it comes to the Aids epidemic, sub-Saharan Africa gets the most attention, followed by North America, Europe and Asia.

But an investigation by a veteran medical reporter finds that countries in another region - Latin America and the Caribbean - may offer up some of the world's best role models for the fight against Aids.

Nations like Brazil, Mexico and Peru are leading the way in embracing various levels of Aids treatment, prevention and research, reports journalist Jon Cohen in this week's special Aids-themed edition of Science.

"Poorer countries have greater challenges and by and large are doing worse," he said. "But there are so many exceptions."

Global outlook is dire
Globally, the situation remains dire, however. In a journal commentary, Dr Anthony Fauci - director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases at the US National Institutes of Health - writes that, despite the advent of powerful Aids drugs, "many important challenges remain, and in several of these the global effort is failing."

Fauci points out that, in 2005, the worldwide estimate of 4.1 million new HIV infections far outnumbered the 2.8 million AIDS deaths reported. Still, he writes, "we know that existing HIV treatments and prevention modalities, when appropriately applied, can be enormously effective."

And Cohen says the example of Caribbean and Latin American nations shows that countries can make real headway against HIV.

A prime example: Haiti, of the world's poorest countries, where 80 percent of people live below the poverty line. Even here, though, health workers have managed against great odds to create an effective treatment system for people with HIV.

Poor can be treated
According to Cohen, this shows that, "Even with the poorest people in the world, there's a way to get them treatment."

To gather information for the current report, Cohen visited a dozen countries in Latin America and the Caribbean - a region with an estimated two million people living with HIV, more than the US and Western Europe combined.

In some countries, HIV is mainly spread through sex between men. But in others - especially in the Caribbean - it's largely spread through heterosexual contact, especially via sex workers; Puerto Rico also has a big problem with infections from intravenous drug users.

While about 90 000 people die from AIDS in the region each year, in some ways it is much better off than Africa. An estimated 68 percent of the HIV-infected population in need of drug treatment are taking powerful Aids medications known as anti-retrovirals, compared to 17 percent in sub-Saharan Africa.

However, Cohen said the figures about Latin America and the Caribbean are a bit misleading because they're influenced by the high population of HIV-positive people in the world's fifth largest country, Brazil, which has made a priority of getting Aids drugs to those in need.

In his report, Cohen found a variety of differences between - and even within - various countries.

Mexico, for example, sets itself apart by being "pretty up front" about the ways that AIDS is transmitted, Cohen said. "They explicitly address the machismo in the region and the outright hatred toward gay men that often leads to violence."

Some countries play ostrich
It's not a routine approach. "A lot of countries play ostrich. They don't want to acknowledge that they have a lot of men having sex with men or sex workers or whatever it is."

Peru is another leader. The country has "become this magnet for research," and its scientists are launching major drug trials, according to Cohen.

"Something has gone right there," he said

Haiti's example also shows that poor people will follow the complicated Aids drug regimens, Cohen said. "There was a fear that poor can't do it, but Haiti showed that's a lot of nonsense. Poor people are just as motivated as wealthy people to stay alive."

Not every country is worthy of praise in Cohen's report. The Dominican Republic, which borders Haiti on the island of Hispaniola, is having a much harder time fighting the epidemic than its neighbour. Critics blame that on "government disinterest and outright obstructionism," Cohen said.

Politicians making things worse?
And he believes that many political and religious leaders across the region are making the epidemic worse.

"The virus doesn't see borders, it doesn't have any morals, it just wants to copy itself and spread," he said. "When countries drag their feet or when they let institutions like the church prohibit things like condom promotion, or let politics prevent things like methadone [treatment] or needle exchange, the virus will take advantage of those opportunities."

Overall, Cohen's report "points out that the HIV epidemic really is local, but that there are some generalities across specific situations," said Thomas Coates, an Aids specialist and professor of medicine at the University of California at Los Angeles.

Coates added that he is glad to see a focus on Latin America and the Caribbean. "The problems in Africa are so overwhelming that sometimes we forget about what's happening in the rest of the world."

New research may open doors
As countries worldwide wage their wars against HIV/Aids, research in the disease continues. In another article featured in this week's Aids-themed issue of Science, a team of Dutch and British researchers report that primates could give scientists special insight into new treatments for Aids.

That's because animals like chimpanzees are largely immune to Aids-like diseases, even when they display high levels of virus in their bodies, said a group led by Jonathan Heeney at Biomedical Primate Research Centre in Rijswijk, Netherlands.

There's a catch to this line of research, though: This type of species-specific immunity probably built up over millennia on an "evolutionary timescale," the researchers say, so humans won't develop any immunity on their own any time soon.

Nevertheless, study into the mechanisms driving this resistance could still yield valuable clues that might lead to new treatments, the experts said. – (HealthDayNews)

Read more:
HIV/Aids Centre

July 2006

We live in a world where facts and fiction get blurred
Who we choose to trust can have a profound impact on our lives. Join thousands of devoted South Africans who look to News24 to bring them news they can trust every day. As we celebrate 25 years, become a News24 subscriber as we strive to keep you informed, inspired and empowered.
Join News24 today
heading
description
username
Show Comments ()
Editorial feedback and complaints

Contact the public editor with feedback for our journalists, complaints, queries or suggestions about articles on News24.

LEARN MORE