|
International News Advocates in Mexico Call for Increased Efforts to Combat HIV/AIDSMarch 4, 2009 AIDS-related mortality rates in Mexico have remained somewhat steady over the past 12 years, despite increased access to antiretroviral drugs in the country, officials at the National Institute of Public Health, or INSP, said recently, The News/Individual.com reports. A 2008 INSP report said that AIDS-related diseases represent the 16th leading cause of death in Mexico and that they are the fourth highest cause of death among men ages 25 to 34. Josac Antonio Izazola Licea, director of the National Center for the Prevention and Control of HIV/AIDS, said that the country's "almost universal availability" of antiretrovirals would lead experts to "expect the percentage of patients dying from the virus to be much lower, and for there to be a steady decline in the ratio." However, he added that "this is just not the case." According to The News/Individual.com, Mexico has been successful in some areas of HIV/AIDS prevention, including the 1986 implementation of the "Sangre SegurO," or Safe Blood, program that prohibits the commercialization of blood and helped to reduce HIV transmission through transfusions. A program encouraging condom use also was implemented by the Health Secretariat as early as 1987. Bertozzi said the country has "made great strides in combating the spread of HIV/AIDS, but now we need to be even more aggressive and take a new approach concentrating on the long-term treatment of the problem." According to del Rio the primary goals in addressing HIV/AIDS must be prevention and research. Bertozzi said, "We need to look beyond just providing medication to treat HIV. We need to concentrate again on prevention." According to The News/Individual.com, a provision in a 2000 Health Secretariat outline for HIV/AIDS control specified that Mexico should be spending more than 2.5 billion pesos -- about $163 billion -- for prevention in 2009. Only about 100 million pesos -- about $6.5 million -- has been allocated for such efforts, The News/Individual.com reports. Izazola Licea said the government will need to invest 5.6 billion pesos -- about $365 billion -- by 2012 for prevention. Bertozzi said that it is time officials in Mexico "rethink how we deal with" HIV, adding that the country needs "new programs that focus on prevention, improved training for medical personnel and more public awareness" (Margolis, The News/Individual.com, 3/2). Back to other news for March 2009
![]() Using Respondent-Driven Sampling in a Hidden Population at Risk of HIV Infection: Who Do HIV-Positive Recruiters Recruit? This article was provided by Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. It is a part of the publication Kaiser Daily HIV/AIDS Report. Visit the Kaiser Family Foundation's website to find out more about their activities, publications and services.
|
|