A spiraling outbreak of HIV in debt-stricken Greece could run out of
control unless urgent action is taken, European health officials said on
Friday. The European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC) said
infections with the AIDS-causing virus among drug users and other high-risk
groups were rising fast, and that a failure to act would mean far higher costs
in future.
Governments across the globe pledged on December 1, 2008 to step up the fight against HIV, combating the stigma associated with the disease and promising to bankroll treatment programs on World AIDS Day. (Louisa Gouliamaki, AFP/Getty Images)
ECDC director Marc Sprenger was in Athens on Friday visiting hospitals and
needle exchanges. He said he would tell officials that free syringes and
methadone programs must be stepped up, and testing and treatment for the human
immunodeficiency virus made available to all. "Immediate concerted action
is needed in order to curb and eventually stop the current outbreak," he
told Reuters as the ECDC published a report on Greece's HIV problem.
Since 2009, recession in Greece has reduced economic output by a fifth
and sent unemployment to a record high. The healthcare system is under extreme
pressure, making it harder for the poor, unemployed or homeless to get
treatment. The ECDC said it was unclear how much Greece's debt crisis is
contributing to the HIV outbreak, but it was evidently having "a
significant social and health impact". There were fears in Athens that
"HIV treatment services have reached a ceiling" because of a leap in
case numbers in 2012.
While Greece has only 7.4 HIV infections per 100,000 people, compared to
10 per 100,000 in Britain or 27.3 in Estonia, rates have soared since 2011 in
high-risk groups such as drug users. From 2007 to 2010, there were only 10 to
15 cases a year of HIV infection in injecting drug users. But during 2011,
there were 256 such cases - or 27 percent of the total. Another 314 drug use
HIV cases were reported between January and August 2012, bringing the total HIV
cases for the year to August to 768.
Combination drugs can give patients with HIV near-normal life
expectancy, but the drugs must be taken for life, and cost 10,000 to 22,000
euros ($13,000 to $28,500) a year. "If a scale-up (in prevention and
testing) is not achieved, it's likely that HIV transmission among people who
inject drugs in Athens will continue and even accelerate - and could eventually
spread," Sprenger said. "The cost of prevention ... will be
significantly less than the provision of treatment to those who become
infected."
The ECDC said waiting times for methadone programs in Athens were more
than seven years in August 2010, and only around seven syringes a year were given
to each drug user. Efforts by authorities to address this have now brought
waiting lists down below four years and increased the number of syringes to 15
a year in 2011 and an expected 45 in 2012, but this is well below the
international standard of 200 needles. Rates of other health problems such as
depression and suicide have been rising in Greece, which is also battling the
re-emergence of mosquito-borne diseases such West Nile Virus and malaria.
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Source: Chicago Tribune
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