New optimism about stemming spread of AIDS virus
Source: The Sangai Express / Agencies
Washington, July 07 2012:
An AIDS-free generation: It seems an audacious goal, considering how the HIV epidemic still is raging around the world.
Yet more than 20,000 international HIV researchers and activists will gather in the nation's capital later this month with a sense of optimism not seen in many years - hope that it finally may be possible to dramatically stem the spread of the AIDS virus.
"We want to make sure we don't overpromise," Dr.Anthony Fauci, the National Institutes of Health's infectious disease chief, told The Associated Press.
But, he said, "I think we are at a turning point" .
The big new focus is on trying to get more people with HIV treated early, when they're first infected, instead of waiting until they're weakened or sick, as the world largely has done until now.
Staying healthier also makes them less likely to infect others.
That's a tall order.
But studies over the past two years have shown what Fauci calls "striking, sometimes breathtaking results," in preventing people at high risk of HIV from getting it in some of the hardest-hit countries, using this treatment-as-prevention and some other protections.
Now, as the International AIDS Conference returns to the U.S.for the first time in 22 years, the question is whether the world will come up with the money and the know-how to put the best combinations of protections into practice, for AIDS-ravaged poor countries and hot spots in developed nations as well.
"We have the tools to make it happen," said Dr.Elly Katabira, president of the International AIDS Society, which organizes the world's largest HIV conference, set for July 22-27 .
He points to strides already in Botswana and Rwanda in increasing access to AIDS drugs.
But Fauci cautioned that moving those tools into everyday life is "a daunting challenge," given the costs of medications and the difficulty in getting people to take them for years despite poverty and other competing health and social problems.
In the U.S., part of that challenge is complacency.
Despite 50,000 new HIV infections here every year, an AP-GfK poll finds that very few people in the United States worry about getting the virus.
Also, HIV increasingly is an epidemic of the poor, minorities and urban areas such as the District of Columbia, where the rate of infection rivals some developing countries.
The conference will spotlight this city's aggressive steps to fight back: A massive effort to find the undiagnosed, with routine testing in some hospitals, testing vans that roam the streets, even free tests at a Department of Motor Vehicles office, and then rapidly getting those patients into care.
"These are the true champions," Dr.Mohammed Akhter, director of the city's health department, said of patients who faithfully take their medication.
"They're also protecting their community" .
About 34 million people worldwide have HIV, including almost 1.2 million Americans.
It's a very different epidemic from the last time the International AIDS Conference came to the United States, in 1990.Life-saving drugs emerged a few years later, turning HIV from a death sentence into a manageable chronic disease for people and countries that can afford the medications.
Prospects for a vaccine are so far elusive and health disparities are widening, so why the optimism as expressed by the Obama administration's goal of getting to an AIDS-free generation? .
Consider the potential strategies, to add to tried-and-true steps such as condom use and treating HIV-infected pregnant women to protect their unborn babies: .
-Studies found treatment-as-prevention could lower an HIV patient's chance of spreading the virus to an uninfected sexual partner by a stunning 96 percent.
In the U.S., new guidelines recommend starting treatment early rather than waiting until the immune system has weakened.
Abroad, the United Nations hopes to more than double the number of patients being treated in poor countries to 15 million by 2015 .
-Other studies show a longtime AIDS medication named Truvada can prevent infection, too, if taken daily by healthy people who are at risk from their infected sexual partners.
The U.S.Food and Drug Administration is expected to decide by fall whether to formally approve sale of Truvada as an HIV preventive.
-A study from South Africa found a vaginal gel containing anti-AIDS medication helped protect women when their infected partners wouldn't use a condom, generating more interest in developing women-controlled protection.
-Globally, experts also stress male circumcision, to lower men's risk of heterosexually acquired HIV.
Testing is a key step in improving prevention.
The AP-GfK poll found 57 percent of adults say they've been tested at some point, a bit higher than federal estimates, but not enough.
The government recommends at least one test for adults, and that populations at higher risk get tested at least once a year.
Following those recommendations depends in part on people's concern about AIDS.
The poll found just over half of Americans consider HIV as much or more of a problem now than two decades ago.
But less than 20 percent are worried about getting it themselves, and even populations at higher risk don't consider HIV a big threat.
Some 16 percent of black respondents said they're very worried about HIV, compared with 4 percent of whites.
"We've become complacent about HIV in America, and it's a real tragedy because hundreds of thousands of people in our own country aren't getting the care they need," said Chris Collins of amFAR, The Foundation for AIDS Research.
The drugs can cost up to $15,000 a year in the U.S., and overall treatment costs are rising as people with HIV live longer.
In developing countries, those drugs can cost less than $400 a year.
The AP-GfK Poll was conducted June 14-18 by GfK Roper Public Affairs and Corporate Communications.
It involved landline and cellphone interviews with 1,007 adults nationwide.
Results for the full sample have a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 4.0 percentage points.