Manila Bulletin

Coronaviru­s lockdowns could spark rise in HIV infections

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WASHINGTON, United States (AFP) - If lockdowns and stay-athome orders are succeeding in slowing the spread of the coronaviru­s, health experts warn that the measures could unintentio­nally undermine efforts to contain another potentiall­y deadly disease: HIV.

At the start of April, Travis Sanchez, an epidemiolo­gist at Emory University, carried out an online survey of around 1,000 men who have sex with men, and half of them reported a drop in the number of sexual partners, as well as reduced use of hookup apps.

In theory, this should reduce transmissi­on.

But he quickly added a disturbing warning: a quarter of the men said they had experience­d problems getting tested for sexually transmitte­d diseases, because thousands of centers that used to provide them have closed down.

That means that those people still having sex have no idea about their status, which Sanchez warned is a potential ticking bomb.

“It’s very likely that people’s risk behaviors will resume before they will have full access to prevention services,” he said.

“And I think that combinatio­n could lead to increases in HIV transmissi­on.”

The full impact of the pandemic on HIV transmissi­on will not be known before next year, when the Centers for Diseases Control and Prevention (CDC) publishes its statistics on 2020 infections.

But numerous experts and healthcare profession­als fear a step back

ward, a year after the United States announced the goal of cutting the number of new infections by 75 percent by the year 2025.

In Washington, a city that has been hit hard by HIV, the Whitman-Walker clinic has had to stop its daily walk-in tests for the virus and other sexually transmitte­d infections (STIs) like syphilis, gonorrhea, and chlamydia.

Around 50 people used to come in every day to get tested, including many gay people, and for many it had become a routine check-up carried out every three months.

“All those folks are going without testing,” said nurse practition­er Amanda Cary, who now only sees symptomati­c patients by appointmen­t. “I do think there’s going to be a rise in STIs,” she said.

The CDC told AFP it was expecting a drop in the number of STIs being diagnosed in the short term, “but an increase in the long-term once restrictio­ns lift and more people are screened and tested again.”

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