China's worst-hit AIDS province, Henan,
has initiated a survey of blood buying medical stations in an
effort to discover the true extent of its AIDS epidemic, local
officials said.
The survey, which began on July 26, aims to poll over 1 million
people in 18 cities and 35 counties in the province believed to
have sold blood at unsanitary blood stations, China Youth
Daily reported.
The survey aims to clarify how many people in the province are
currently suffering from AIDS, how many are carrying the HIV virus
and how many people donated blood for money before 1995, said Ma
Jianzhong, director of the Henan Health Bureau at a press
conference over the weekend.
The Henan provincial government has so far documented some 21,703
HIV carriers who became infected after selling blood at illegal and
unsanitary blood stations in the 1990s, officials said.
In
a bid to make money, people in the Central China province, mostly
farmers, sold their blood to illegal blood stations and
individuals.
Tragically, many got more than they bargained for, contracting the
deadly HIV virus. The equipment used to take blood was not
sterilized.
Total HIV/AIDS cases in Henan have reached 25,036. Among those
infected, more than 97 percent come from rural areas, official
statistics show. More than 11,800 infected people have already
shown AIDS symptoms, Ma said.
More than 500,000 officials and medical specialists have formed 53
working groups to do the survey, which is said to be the largest
HIV/AIDS survey in the world, Ma said.
The need for the ongoing poll appears to indicate what
international medical experts have long feared, that the unsanitary
blood drives could have infected far more people with HIV/AIDS than
have been so far documented.
Many other regions, such as Shanxi, Sichuan and Hubei provinces,
are also suffering from the impact of the illegal blood
sales.
Moreover, the increasing number of AIDS patients is putting an
increasing strain on governments, which provide them with medical
treatment.
Since 2003, governments have been providing anti-virus medicine for
all rural HIV/AIDS sufferers for free. Nearly 80 percent of China's
HIV carriers live in rural and remote areas.
However, due to the poor medical services and under trained
personnel at grass-roots levels, many AIDS patients have stopped
taking the medicine, which has allowed the disease to
progress.
(China Daily September 13, 2004)
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