China plans database of HIV/AIDS victims
[Xinhua 21 March 2005]
http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2005-03/21/content_2723761.htm
BEIJING, Mar. 21 -- China plans to set up a national database containing
the records of its HIV/AIDS victims in a bid to get a better grip
of the extent of the epidemic.
The Ministry of Health had vowed to establish the database, with
entries for every reported HIV/AIDS patient, the Xinhua news agency
reported.
"One question is that we are still blind about some vital
aspects of HIV/AIDS control," said Wang Longde, vice-minister
of health.
China has an estimated 840,000 HIV carriers -- a figure disputed
by many independent observers -- and the government has precise
knowledge of only a small percentage even of that conservative number
of patients.
A mere 12.7 percent were registered with the health authorities,
and disease control centers only had detailed records of 4.2 percent,
according to Xinhua.
The draft of China's first HIV/AIDS prevention and control regulation
had almost been completed and would be given to the State Council
for further discussion this May, the agency said.
The regulation would mainly set out the rights and duties of regional
governments and residents in controlling the deadly disease, according
to Xinhua.
To identify more HIV/AIDS cases, every province wouldl offer free,
voluntary tests for the HIV virus this year, Wang said.
In a sign of future policies, southwestern Yunnan province, one
of the most seriously affected areas of the country, recently finished
testing 410,000 high-risk people.
While China is groping in the dark as it tries to cope with its
looming AIDS disaster, it is also hampered by a lack of resources.
Hao Yang, vice-director of the health ministry's Disease Control
Department, told Xinhua there were only about 200 professional health
workers engaged in HIV/AIDS treatment and prevention at the moment.
Many doctors who are employed in this field have not been well
trained in taking care of HIV/AIDS patients, he said.
The United Nations has predicted 10 million cases in China in five
years' time if the epidemic goes unchecked.
HIV/AIDS is already moving from high-risk groups to the general
public in China, the coalition said.
The primary transmission route in China is through drug injection,
but the proportion of sexually transmitted HIV infections and mother-to-child
transmissions has rapidly increased in recent years.
Many others were infected through insanitary blood-buying schemes
in the early 1990s.
(Source: Xinhua/Agencies)
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