Iran Identifies 4,200 AIDS Cases, Estimates Total at 20,000November 7, 2002 Iran has identified more than 4,200 AIDS cases, of which
4,048 are men, but estimates the total number of people affected
by the disease to be five times higher, Ali Mansuri, a health
ministry disease control officer, told the official Islamic
Republic News Agency. "At the moment, prisons full of drug
addicts are the main centers for the spread of AIDS," he said.
According to official figures, two-thirds of Iran's prison
population are dealers or consumers of drugs, or detained for
drug-related crimes. "Other risks include prostitutes, due to
their hidden activities and since there is no official center to
properly supervise them." "The disappearance of the middle class
and creation of two social classes - poor and rich - has harmed
the social balance and caused the growth of different diseases,
including AIDS," Mansuri said. Of Iran's estimated 2 million
narcotics addicts, around 130,000 are intravenous users of heroin
and morphine.
Adapted from:Back to other CDC news for November 7, 2002 Agence France Presse 11.05.02 This article was provided by U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. It is a part of the publication CDC HIV/Hepatitis/STD/TB Prevention News Update.
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