Paul
Goble
Staunton, December 1 – Academician Vadim
Pokrovsky, the head of the Federal Center for Prevention and Struggle with HIV
Infections, says that 37,000 Russians died from HIV/AIDS, the highest annual
toll since the epidemic began and nearly four percent of the just over one
million who are officially registered as infected.
Among Russian men, the highest rate
of infection is of those between 30 and 40; among women, those between 30 and
35, the medical specialist says. Over half – 57 percent – were infected via
heterosexual contacts, three percent via homosexual ones, and 40 percent by
drug use (znak.com/2019-12-01/chislo_smertey_ot_spida_v_rossii_dostiglo_rekordnoy_otmetki).
Despite rumors to the contrary, very
few Russians have been infected while receiving medical care, Pokrovsky continues.
Over the past three years, there have been only 62 such cases reported,
although they have received more attention in the media and appear to be widely
believed.
What makes this latest Russian death
toll so depressing is that it almost certainly could have been much smaller. In
most countries where HIV/AIDS has spread, the number of deaths has long been
falling as a result of the use of medical innovations like anti-retroviral
drugs. And those infected with HIV no
longer view it as a death sentence.
But in Russia, such drugs are not as
widely available as they should be thanks to “the optimization” of health care being
carried out by the Putin government; and treatment is often delayed far too
long because social prejudices against those with the disease not only are
widespread but not effectively countered by any media campaign.
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