More than 130,000 confirmed HIV/AIDS
carriers and patients have been reported nationwide by the end of
September about 50,000 higher than the figure in the end of June
last year.
"The HIV/AIDS situation in our
country remains grave and the task for prevention and cure remains
tough," said Vice Premier Wu Yi yesterday, at a national
audio-video conference on HIV/AIDS prevention.
But the number is only about 16.1
percent of the estimated HIV/AIDS cases in the country due to
insufficient testing and monitoring measures, Wu said.
While taking drugs through
injections, which accounts for 40.8 percent of HIV/AIDS infection
cases, remains the main channel for spreading the virus, the ratio
of infection from sexual transmission is also rising, according to
Wu.
The central government will soon
unveil the China HIV/AIDS Prevention and Care Project (2006-10) and
HIV/AIDS prevention and care regulation, serving as guidelines as
the country faces a host of challenges in the fight against the
deadly virus.
However, implementation of the
guidelines would be the biggest challenge.
Some local governments are still
sluggish in the HIV/AIDS prevention work because of concerns of
their "image," or a blind confidence that the virus would simply
not hit their jurisdiction. Some places are even stuck on the
debate of whether they should promote the use of condoms.
"It is my opinion that awareness is
the biggest problem in our work on HIV/AIDS, and it has to be
addressed," Wu said.
Strengthening publicity, monitoring
efforts and intervention measures will be the government's focus in
fighting the deadly virus, according to Wu.
The government will also mobilize
non-governmental organizations and resources in HIV/AIDS prevention
tasks, she added.
The government allocated 830 million
yuan (US$10.2 million) in the fight on HIV/AIDS last year.
(China Daily November 29,
2005)
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