Kenya ranked fourth worldwide in HIV infections
Health
cabinet secretary James Macharia delivers a speech at Kenyatta
International Convention Centre on 18th June 2014 during the 6th
International Conference on Peer Education, sexuality, HIV and Aids.
PHOTO | AFP
IN SUMMARY
- HIV HEALTH REPORT: The report identifies discordant couples (where one partner is infected and the other is not), sex workers, homosexuals, drug users, prison communities, uniformed forces and truck drivers, among others, as priority segments in the fight against the scourge. In 2011, an estimated 18.3 per cent of people who inject drugs (PWID) in Kenya were living with HIV. The majority of PWID are concentrated in specific geographical areas such as Nairobi and Mombasa.
- One study found that 3.8 per cent of new HIV infections occur among PWID. In the capital Nairobi, this rises to 5.8 per cent.
The study by the National
Aids Control Council and the National Aids and Sexually Transmitted
Infections Control Programme calls for a revolution in the HIV
prevention approaches.
Nairobi, Thursday. Kenya
has the fourth highest number of Aids infections in the world. The HIV
prevalence in the country stands at 1.6 million people, the ministry of
Health revealed Wednesday.
South Africa, with a prevalence of 5.6 million leads, ahead of Nigeria
(3.3 million) and India (2.4 million), according to statistics from the
UNAIDS and World Health Organisation (WHO).
An estimated 191,840 of the people living with the HIV virus in Kenya
are children. Some 58,465 people died of HIV-related illnesses in 2013.
A new report, ‘The National HIV and Aids Estimates’, launched Wednesday
by Cabinet Secretary for Health James Macharia says there are at least
100,000 new infections in Kenya annually.
Mr Macharia called for concerted efforts, incorporating all stakeholders, to combat the scourge.
Kenya will need about Sh1.75 trillion by 2030 to prevent at least 1.5 million new HIV infections, the reports says.
The Treasury allocated Sh670 million to the National Aids Control Council in the 2014/15 Budget.
Between 2009 and 2013, spending on the HIV response in Kenya increased
from Sh63 billion to Sh72 billion with external funding accounting for
over 70 per cent of the expenditure.
“With a budget of Sh11.7 billion per year, Kenya would reduce the number of new infections by 66 per cent,” the report says.
The study by the National Aids Control Council and the National Aids and
Sexually Transmitted Infections Control Programme calls for a
revolution in the HIV prevention approaches.
“The estimates and recommendations inform a roadmap of evidence-based
interventions targeting specific populations and geographical zones for
the highest impact,” Mr Macharia said.
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