Skip Navigation

Agriculture & Environment: Tuberculosis

Opinions

  • Print
  • Comment
  • | Share

HIV/AIDS: Many challenges remain

Source: The Lancet Infectious Diseases

5 February 2008 | EN | 中文

display, lights, aids, red ribbons

Flickr/joellaflickr

The revision of the number of Indians infected with HIV — from 5.7 million to 3.5 million — is not evidence that international organisations have inflated the epidemic, says the director of WHO's HIV/AIDS department.

"Some of the best minds in this business have worked on these estimates," says Kevin De Cock in an interview with The Lancet Infectious Diseases, pointing out that the quality of measurement of the epidemic is better than for any other global infectious disease.

The challenge with the revision, says De Cock, is explaining that the change in prevalence does not mean the epidemic has gone away, or that the response to it has adequate resources.

Worldwide, De Cock says, "we are not doing particularly well ... in the screening of HIV-infected people for tuberculosis".

He admits that some major diseases, such as schistosomiasis, have been overshadowed by HIV/AIDS, but insists that does not mean malaria, tuberculosis and HIV/AIDS efforts receive too much funding.

De Cock says that if South Africa, with all its resources, fails to get its HIV/AIDS policies right, "what is the likelihood of us doing it elsewhere in Africa?"

Link to full article in The Lancet Infectious Diseases*

*Free registration is required to view this article.

Add your comment

This is your network: share your views on any of our articles by adding your comments.

You need to be signed in to post a comment or to email a consenting comment author. Please sign in or sign up.

All comments are subject to approval and we reserve the right to edit comments containing inappropriate/unsuitable language. SciDev.Net holds copyright for all material posted on the website. Please see terms of use for further details.

All SciDev.Net material is free to reproduce providing that the source and author are appropriately credited. For further details see Creative Commons.

Back to Opinions
To the top