Eastern European, Central Asian Nations Must Make Greater Effort in Fighting AIDS, World Bank Strategy Report SaysSeptember 17, 2003 The governments of Eastern European and Central Asian nations must make a greater commitment to fighting HIV/AIDS in the region to prevent a "potentially catastrophic epidemic," according to a regional support strategy report released yesterday by the World Bank, BBC News reports. The region has the fastest growing number of HIV-positive people in the world. Currently, about one million HIV-positive people live in the region, but that number is expected to increase to more than eight million by the end of the decade, according to BBC News (Bamford, BBC News, 9/16). The report, titled "Averting AIDS Crises in Eastern Europe and Central Asia," identifies the potential costs of the epidemic, the current constraints on an effective response, possible means of resolving such constraints and the organization's plans for helping countries fight the epidemic as part of a multi-institutional effort. If left unchecked, HIV/AIDS could have devastating effects on health and development in the region, the report says. If HIV becomes widespread among the working age population, economic growth rates could decline by 0.5% to 1%. The effects of such a decline would be compounded by rising health care costs, which could increase by 1% to 3%, with greater impacts on the health budgets of poorer countries in the region, the report says. In addition, the dependency ratio -- the ratio of non-economically active people to economically active people -- could increase, which would substantially strain social systems, according to the report.
Recommendations Back to other news for September 17, 2003
This article was provided by Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. It is a part of the publication Kaiser Daily HIV/AIDS Report. |