HIV infections and deaths fall as drugs have impact
Greater access to anti-retroviral drugs has helped cut the death toll from HIV by more than 10% over the past five years, latest figures show.
The World Health Organization and the Joint UN Programme on HIV/Aids (UNAids) say an estimated 33.4 million people worldwide are infected with HIV.
That figure is up from 33 million in 2007 because fewer are dying with HIV.
The latest report also shows there has been a significant drop in the number of new HIV infections.
UNAids and WHO say better access to powerful drug treatments has helped save many lives.
The report estimates that since the availability of effective treatment in 1996, some 2.9 million lives have been saved.
In total, almost 60 million people have been infected by HIV and 25 million people killed by causes related to the virus since the epidemic started.
Prevention programmes
The report also suggests that HIV prevention programmes have had a significant impact.
It says new HIV infections have been reduced by 17% over the past eight years.
In sub-Saharan Africa, the epicentre of the global pandemic, the number of new infections has fallen by around 15% since 2001 – equating to about 400,000 fewer infections in 2008 alone.
In the same period, infection rates were down by nearly 25% in East Asia, and by 10% in South and South East Asia.
In Eastern Europe, after a dramatic increase in new infections among injecting drug users, the rate of infection has levelled off considerably.
Director general of the World Health Organization Dr Margaret Chan said: “International and national investment in HIV treatment scale-up has yielded concrete and measurable results.
“We cannot let this momentum wane. Now is the time to redouble our efforts, and save many more lives.”
Child infections
Anti-retroviral therapy has also made a significant impact in preventing new infections in children as more HIV-positive mothers gain access to treatment preventing them from transmitting the virus to their children.
Around 200,000 new infections among children have been prevented since 2001.
In Botswana, where treatment coverage is 80%, Aids-related deaths have fallen by more than 50% over the past five years and the number of children orphaned is also coming down as parents are living longer.
UNAids executive director Michel Sidibe said although prevention programmes had helped cut new infections, they were often “off the mark”.
“If we do a better job of getting resources and programmes to where they will make most impact, quicker progress can be made and more lives saved,” he said.