As Nigeria today joins the rest of the world to mark 2015 World AIDS
Day, the World Health Organisation, WHO, yesterday announced that the
Millennium Development Goal that called for halting and reversing the
spread of HIV on a global basis was met with 7.8 million lives saved in
15 years.
WHO also announced that the number of HIV deaths was reduced by 42
per cent by 2014 from a peak of more than 2 million in 2004 to an
estimated 1.2 million.
The global health body, in a new report to mark this year’s World
AIDS Day however noted that the world is poised to end the AIDS epidemic
by 2030.
The report tagged; “Global Health Sector Response to HIV
2000-2015”also observed that the projections of an end to the epidemic
by 2030 once considered to be unattainable are now realistic.
According to the report, “The rapid scale-up of access to
Antiretroviral Therapy, ART, one of the greatest public health
achievements in recent times, has made treatment available to more than
16 million people living with HIV across the globe.
“Today, more than 11 million people in the WHO African Region alone
are receiving HIV treatment, versus about 11 000 who were taking the
medications 15 years ago,” the report added.
Describing the progress as a thousand-fold increase, the report which
noted that more must be done disclosed that globally 60 percent of all
people living with HIV have not yet enrolled in antiretroviral
treatment.
Reacting to the report in the statement, the WHO Regional Director
for Africa, Dr. Matshidiso Moeti explained that in the last 15 years,
new HIV infections have reduced by 41 per cent in the African Region,
more than in any region in the world.
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