Important note: Information in this article was accurate in 2004. The state of the art may have changed since the publication date.
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Reuters - November 23, 2004
Patricia Reaney
"Increasingly the face of AIDS is young and female," said Dr Kathleen Cravero, deputy executive director of the Joint United Nations Program on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS).
In every region of the globe, the number of women infected with the deadly virus has risen during the past two years. East Asia had the highest jump with 56 percent, followed by Eastern Europe and Central Asia with 48 percent.
In sub-Saharan Africa, three-quarters of all 15-24 year olds living with HIV are female.
"Young women are almost an endangered species in southern Africa from AIDS for several reasons," Cravero told Reuters.
Many women have no access to education or jobs. They are often economically dependent on men and may not have the power to resist sex or ask their husband or partner to use a condom.
Teenage girls are acquiring the virus at a younger age and from older men. Violence against women also makes them more vulnerable to infection.
"We will not be able to stop this epidemic unless we put women at the heart of the response to AIDS," UNAIDS Executive Director Dr Peter Piot told a news conference in Brussels.
WORST EPIDEMIC IN HUMAN HISTORY
The annual report by UNAIDS and the World Health Organization (WHO), released ahead of World AIDS Day on December 1, shows the number of adults and children living with HIV reached its highest level ever in 2004 with an estimated 39.4 million, compared to about 36.6 million two years ago.
Over 3 million people died of the illness this year.
"As in previous years, it's very sobering news," said Piot. "It confirms that this is the worst epidemic in human history, and it is still expanding."
New infections climbed by nearly 50 percent since 2002 in East Asia, mainly because of growing epidemics in China, Indonesia and Vietnam.
In Eastern Europe and Central Asia, there has been a 40 percent jump in the past two years, fueled by the growing number of infections in Russia and Ukraine.
"Over 80 percent of HIV positive people in Eastern Europe are under 30 years of age," Cravero told a news conference.
But sub-Saharan Africa, where 25.4 million people are infected with the virus, is the worst affected region of the world. The epidemic appears to have stabilized in the region, which means an equal number of people are being newly infected with and dying of AIDS.
Sixty-four percent of all HIV positive people worldwide and 76 percent of all women with the virus are in sub-Saharan Africa.
The Caribbean, with an average adult HIV prevalence rate of 2.3 percent, is the second most affected region in the world.
Although spending to battle HIV/AIDS has almost tripled from $2.1 billion in 2001 to $6.1 billion this year, less than one in five people in low and middle-income countries has access to HIV prevention services.
As many as 6 million people need HIV treatment.
The WHO has launched a "3 by 5" program to get three million people on treatment by the end of 2005. An estimated 440,000 people in the developing world had access to life-prolonging antiretroviral drugs by June 2004.
"It will be difficult to reach 3 million people with these drugs but what this campaign for "3 by 5" has done is (ensure) treatment for HIV is now on the agenda in every developing country," Piot said.
"That was not the case before. Now there is far more money and we will make enormous progress."
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