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HIV treatment tablets which are given for free to patients in the Philippines. Sherbien Dacalanio via PA Images

For the first time, over half of people with HIV are taking AIDS drugs

The United Nations report’s authors claimed that the data proved the “scales have finally tipped”.

THE NUMBER OF AIDS-related deaths have been halved in the past 12 years, and more people than ever are receiving treatment for HIV, in a shift that’s seen as a victory against the stigmatised virus for which there’s no known cure.

AIDS claimed a million lives in 2016 – almost half the 2005 toll that marked the peak of the deadly epidemic.

The information was published in a United Nations report today, ahead of an AIDS science conference opening in Paris this Sunday.

“AIDS-related deaths have fallen from 1.9 million in 2005 to one million in 2016,” said the authors, adding that “for the first time the scales have tipped”.

“In 2016, 19.5 million of the 36.7 million people living with HIV had access to treatment,” said the UNAIDS global roundup. That data marks the first time that more than half of infected people were receiving anti-retroviral treatment, which subdues the AIDS virus but does not kill it.

Prince Harry visits School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine Prince Harry meets Tlotlo Moilwa from Botswana, who is HIV positive, during a visit to the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. PA Images PA Images

The year 2016 saw 1.8 million new infections, almost half the record number of some 3.5 million in 1997, said the report.

In total, 76.1 million people have been infected with HIV – the virus that causes AIDS – since the epidemic started in the 1980s. Some 35 million have died.

“Communities and families are thriving as AIDS is being pushed back,” said UNAIDS executive director Michel Sidibe.

As we bring the epidemic under control, health outcomes are improving and nations are becoming stronger.

As yet, there is no HIV vaccine or cure, and infected people rely on lifelong anti-retroviral therapy to stop the virus replicating.

HIV prevention drug Truvada The HIV prevention drug Truvada - pictured in a doctor's office in Berlin. Maurizio Gambarini via PA Images Maurizio Gambarini via PA Images

Without treatment, HIV-infected people go on to develop AIDS, a syndrome that weakens the immune system and leaves the body exposed to opportunistic infections such as tuberculosis, and some types of cancer.

Treatment carries side effects and is costly, but allows infected people to be healthier for longer.

‘More work to do’

Most progress has been made in east and southern Africa, the region that was hardest hit by the epidemic and where many interventions were focused.

Since 2010, AIDS-related deaths in the region declined by 42%. The region accounts for half the world’s infected population, with women and girls disproportionately affected at 60%.

Sixty percent of all people who receive anti-retroviral therapy live in east and southern Africa which, along with west and central Europe and the Americas, is on target to meet the so-called 90-90-90 targets set by the UN, said the report.

By 2020, states the plan, 90% of infected people must know their status, of whom 90% must be on treatment. In 90% of those, the virus will be “suppressed” by medicine to the extent that it cannot function or replicate.

By 2016, 70% of infected people knew their status, said the new report. Of those, 77% were on treatment, and 82% had virus suppression.

UNAIDS expressed concern about two regions with worsening AIDS trends: the Middle East-North Africa, and eastern Europe-central Asia. Both are areas marred by conflict and political uncertainty.

New HIV infections rose by 60% in eastern Europe and central Asia, and deaths by almost a third from 2010 to 2016.

In the Middle East and North Africa, the number of AIDS deaths increased by a fifth in the last six years.

“Globally, progress has been significant, but there is still more work to do,” the authors said in a statement.

“Around 30% of people living with HIV still do not know their HIV status, 17.1 million people living with HIV do not have access to anti-retroviral therapy, and more than half of all people living with HIV are not virally suppressed.”

Of the total infected population, over two million were children younger than 15, said UNAIDS. Only 43% of them were on treatment.

New infections among children almost halved from 300,000 in 2010 to 160,000 last year, said the report.

This was partly due to more and more HIV-infected pregnant women – 76% in 2016 – having access to drugs blocking virus transmission to their offspring.

© – AFP, 2017

Read: Gonorrhoea ‘sometimes impossible’ to treat due to antibiotic-resistance – WHO

Read: Calls for prevention medication to be made available following over 500 HIV diagnoses in 2016

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    Mute Brian Conmy
    Favourite Brian Conmy
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    Jul 20th 2017, 12:12 PM

    Now think of how much lower transmission rates could be if PrEP was available globally. When are we getting it in Ireland?

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    Mute Paul
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    Jul 20th 2017, 12:38 PM

    @Brian Conmy: you can already get it, if you think you were exposed within 72 hours.

    Not sure if its available full time here.

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    Mute Finn Uwu
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    Jul 20th 2017, 12:39 PM

    @Paul: thats PEP not PrEP

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    Mute Harry Hutchinson
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    Jul 20th 2017, 1:09 PM

    @Paul: PrEP and PEP are different. Pre-exposure and post-exposure!

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    Mute dangermouse
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    Jul 20th 2017, 12:15 PM

    If any one has a issue they should go to there local HSE sex clinic or “itchy and scratchy” clinic .there so laid back and water off a ducks back with them.. full of bi gaa lads and married men.. how times have changed

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    Mute Mark Gerard Lochlain
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    Jul 20th 2017, 4:49 PM

    Very interesting article I have to say. The number of babies born with HIV is staggering. Blocking transmission to offspring should be a priority in the Developing World. Also easy accessibility to PrEP should be standard. What’s with the making it all so difficult to obtain at the moment??

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    Mute Fiona Fitzgerald
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    Jul 20th 2017, 6:17 PM

    @Mark Gerard Lochlain: It’s such a widespread tragedy in Africa. Reminds me of when malnutrition and TB were rife in Ireland.

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    Mute John B
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    Jul 20th 2017, 6:33 PM

    @Mark Gerard Lochlain: in Africa obviously they don’t have the same resources. In Ireland it is based on allocation of resources. It is very expensive and I guess it is a case of the will is lacking. It still beggars belief that the population this is aimed at (men who have sex with men) have such unsafe sexual practices.

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    Mute Trevor W
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    Jul 20th 2017, 4:11 PM

    Great news tho regardless of the conspiracists.

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    Mute Ian Oh
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    Jul 20th 2017, 1:24 PM

    What a load of nonsense: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KvTAirNj80s HIV does not cause AIDS. There is not 1 shred of scientific evidence to back up this assumption which every news source blasts at us. There are many many doctors who are asking for the proof (because they cant find it), but they are just being screamed down by the fear-mongers.

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    Mute Darren Norris
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    Jul 20th 2017, 1:34 PM

    @Ian Oh: Thankfully that crazy video you posted is about as factual as leprechauns and only have a few views.

    Go back to bed

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    Mute Larissa Caroline Nikolaus
    Favourite Larissa Caroline Nikolaus
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    Jul 20th 2017, 1:37 PM

    @Ian Oh: Take a short walk over a long cliff, troll

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    Mute Ian Oh
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    Jul 20th 2017, 1:47 PM

    No I won’t go back to bed. At least not because you say so. That video is just contextual information. Read 2 books about this which are full of facts and science written by doctors, professors and scientists. “Deadly Deception, the Proof That Sex And HIV Absolutely Do Not Cause AIDS” & also “Inventing the AIDS Virus”. Your response is typical of the hysteria surrounding HIV and Aids and shows complete ignorance on the subject apart from the bull that the media feeds you. When you have read the 2 books and disgested the facts, get back to me.

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    Mute Greirat
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    Jul 20th 2017, 2:56 PM

    Source for any of this shite?

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    Mute Larissa Caroline Nikolaus
    Favourite Larissa Caroline Nikolaus
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    Jul 20th 2017, 4:10 PM

    @Ian Oh: Yeah, you have the best of science, the bigly science, and of course you’re not a blithering (rhymes with banker)

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    Mute Daniel Rea
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    Jul 20th 2017, 5:33 PM

    @Ian Oh: attack the man and not the arguments, bravo. HIV is absolutely a hoax, it’s a way of clumping diseases of low immunity that have been around since the dawn of time into one heading. The test isn’t for HIV it’s for non-specific antibodies. It’s so innacurate that they have to use it in conjunction with a questionnaire about your sexual practices. In poorer African countries they only use symptoms as a criteria such as weightloss- you can imagine how that skewed the statistics. The reason it kills less people today, or at any rate more slowly, is because first they reduced the dose of the drugs, and today they use drugs which are less toxic.

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    Mute Thomas O' Donnell
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    Jul 20th 2017, 6:28 PM

    @Greirat: Just checked this out. One of the sources won the Nobel prize for Chemistry in 1993. I thought it was a load of sh*t too but I’m starting to wonder now.

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    Mute John B
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    Jul 20th 2017, 10:31 PM

    @Ian Oh: any peer reviewed non cherry picked articles?

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