BREAKING NEWS

Drastic acceleration of HIV fight needed to stop AIDS resurgence

LONDON - The global HIV epidemic could see a resurgence in just five years without a drastic acceleration in efforts to prevent and treat the AIDS virus, the United Nations and disease experts said on Thursday.
While good progress has been made in improving access to life-saving AIDS drugs, an analysis by UNAIDS and an expert panel commissioned by The Lancet medical journal found the rate of new HIV infections is not falling fast enough.
"We must face hard truths -- if the current rate of new HIV infections continues, merely sustaining the major efforts we already have in place will not be enough to stop deaths from AIDS increasing within five years in many countries," said Peter Piot, director of the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine and a lead author of the report.
He said this, plus high demographic growth in some affected countries, is increasing the number of people infected with the incurable virus who will need lifelong treatment.
"Expanding access to treatment is essential, but we will not treat ourselves out of the AIDS epidemic," he said, adding that HIV prevention is just as important.
The report said even just sustaining current HIV treatment and prevention efforts would require at least a third of total government health spending in the most affected African countries from 2014 to 2030.
"We have to act now," said Michel Sidibé, UNAIDS' executive director. "If we don't, the human and financial consequences will be catastrophic."
Some 35 million people currently have HIV, and since it began spreading 30 years ago, AIDS has already killed 40 million people worldwide.
Global data last year suggested a tipping point had been reached for the first time in the epidemic's history, with the annual number of new HIV infections lower than the number of HIV patients being added to those receiving treatment.
But recent detailed studies have found clear evidence of resurgent HIV epidemics among high risk populations, such as gay men, in Europe, North America and Asia.
Piot's team also noted that in Uganda, for example, trends in new HIV infections have begun rising again after a decade of success -- partly due to HIV prevention getting less attention.
Ben Neuman, a virologist at Britain's Reading University said the report, while encouraging, also acts as a warning: "Unless we find new ways to tackle HIV, this creeping killer disease will follow humanity into the twenty-second century."