Short films about AIDS are screening after an ad on the electronic
screen in a bus station waiting room in Nanning, capital of south
China's Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region.
In
China today, few people would feel as sick, shy or surprised at
such scenes as they might once have, for the country is
intensifying its spread of information on AIDS to prevent and
control the deadly disease, using a range of channels.
Statistics show that the number of HIV carriers in China reached
30,736 by the end of 2001. But experts estimate that the actual
number may have already climbed to more than 600,000.
Fearing the further spread of the infectious disease among its
people, China is setting up a comprehensive system for AIDS
prevention and aiming to reduce the number of HIV carriers to below
1.5 million by 2010.
However, "the mass media should first raise the general public' s
awareness and draw attention to the AIDS threat," said Dong Boqing,
an AIDS prevention expert.
A
study by the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences reported that
China's major mass media broadened its coverage of AIDS between
1995 and 2001, with non-trade newspapers publishing at least one
story every 2.8 days on average.
Open reporting by the media on the facts of the AIDS epidemic,
which was once considered "taboo", is becoming increasingly common
in China.
High-profile reports and programs on AIDS patients can be seen
frequently in the media. Even a few brave AIDS patients have broken
their silence and appealed to the public for respect by citing
their own experiences via the media.
Thousands of health officers, university students and volunteers go
to the countryside and offer people brochures and audio-visual
material on AIDS prevention.
In
Guangxi, bus companies are screening AIDS prevention videos on
their buses and major courses are running in schools. Authorities
are also planning to publicize AIDS prevention information on
trains and other public transport.
(Xinhua News Agency August 8, 2002)
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