Philippine Daily Inquirer

2013 UNAIDS REPORT LACKS SCIENTIFIC BASIS

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This refers to the May 16 Inquirer editorial, “Ignorance is main driver.” I would like to make it clear: Like the Inquirer, I am for lessening the incidence of new HIV infections in the Philippine­s. Even more, I am one with UNAIDS, whose 2013 report the editorial used as reference, in its “global vision of zero new HIV infections, zero discrimina­tion and zero AIDS-related deaths.” I cannot agree, however, with UNAIDS and the Inquirer on the means they advocate to achieve those goals, which appear to be based on prejudices and hasty assumption­s and, therefore, may turn out to be not scientific and incorrect.

As a scientist myself, I know that for a theory to be accepted as scientific, it needs to be subjected to peer review and very strict scientific protocols. It must have been repeated in many experiment­s and proven to be correct in each case.

The UNAIDS report gave very encouragin­g statistics about the reduction of HIV incidence (i.e., new infections) in the whole world. Then it noted that this was due to advances in antiretrov­iral treatment, widespread use of condoms, and informatio­n and education for safe sex.

The problem with this last statement is that it did not appear in a scientific journal and has not been subjected to peer review and verificati­on by experiment or by comparison with a control group.

Science tends to be very accurate and precise in assigning what thing causes what. Lumping together three causes to account to a decrease in some general variables will usually raise the eyebrows of honest scientists.

Reading other reports on this subject brings up many nuances. For example, a report by Liz Highleyman in 2015 about the incidence of HIV among American gay men indicated a decrease among the whites, but an increase among the blacks and latinos. A report about Haiti attributed the decrease in HIV incidence to “an increase in condom use with occasional partners at last contact and to abstinence and fidelity, and a decrease in the number of occasional partners.” The UNAIDS report itself affirmed that in Zimbabwe “declines in HIV incidence (new infections) were driven by behavioral shifts, notably a reduction in multiple sexual partners.”

UNAIDS must start to suspect something about its assumption­s. It thinks condoms and lubricants will reduce HIV to zero incidence. If after using billions of condoms for many years we only get a 30-percent reduction worldwide, what can you expect? Zero incidence after some years? It is said: He is a fool who does the same thing over and over while expecting different results.

I mentioned about a control group. It is defined as “the group in an experiment or study that does not receive treatment by the researcher­s and is then used as a benchmark to measure how the other tested subjects do.” If the goal is zeroincide­nce, then we must look for a group with zero-HIV incidence to compare with our test groups. I dare say that there is such a group—married people who practice fidelity.

What we need to end this epidemic is not informatio­n and condoms but education. What message will we send 16-year-olds if we give them condoms? We will not be educating them, we would be pushing them to adopt a very risky behavior which the UNAIDS report also precisely decried. The Department of Education was right in not giving condoms to 16-year-olds. Education means to form men and women of integrity who can be solid foundation­s on which society can build on. FR. CECILIO L. MAGSINO, cesmagsino@gmail.com

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