The Citizen (Gauteng)

HIV/Aids, 30 years on

PROGRESS: SCIENTIFIC COMMUNITY HAS MADE HUGE TREATMENT STRIDES

- Hayden Horner haydenh@citizen.co.za

Widespread ignorance and indifferen­ce remain hard barriers to cross.

When HIV/Aids was announced to the world in the 1980s, it was defined by fear, stigma and ignorance. And rightfully so. Killing thousands of people within months, the world was in shock and medical experts were left dumbfounde­d.

Was this the biblical apocalypse we’d been waiting for? It may well have been. Thousands of deaths quickly became millions and, to date, the World Health Organisati­on (WHO) says an estimated 30 million people have died.

“Antiretrov­irals weren’t yet available, so although we could offer treatment for opportunis­tic infections there was no treatment for their HIV. It was a very sad and difficult time,” said WHO coordinato­r of HIV testing and prevention, Dr Rachel Baggaley in a statement on World Aids Day.

She said the outlook for people with HIV in the early days of the epidemic were grim.

First isolated in 1983 by experts at the Institut Pasteur, HIV was thought to only affect specific groups, such as drug users and homosexual males.

South Africa quickly became one of the African countries with the highest prevalence rates.

There was little hope for the infected as government made every excuse not to roll out treatment.

But our understand­ing of the virus has changed in 30 years and the scientific community has made remarkable treatment strides.

Riaan Norval, who is brand champion for Anova Health Institute’s Health4Men, acknowledg­es the tremendous advancemen­ts in the medical field and people’s attitudes over the last three decades.

“A widely published Partner 1 and Partner 2 scientific study has recently proven that an HIV-positive person with an undetectab­le viral load can’t pass HIV on to their partner … an important medical breakthrou­gh,” Norval told The Citizen.

He says it’s also significan­t for people living with HIV in how they view their own status and deal with internalis­ed shame.

Stigma and shame have presented major obstacles to how people viewed HIV and those living with the virus, even when testing, counsellin­g and treatment where made available in South Africa. However, with medical advancemen­ts such as the one-a-day pill and broader education outreach, there has been a notable change in the HIV/Aids landscape.

“Another major influencer of public perception about HIV has been the efficacy of PrEP [which lowers the chance of HIV-negative people becoming infected]. This has aided better health outcomes for people getting tested and going onto treatment,” says Norval.

He does, however, point out that wide-spread stigma, ignorance and indifferen­ce remain the hardest barriers to cross when it comes to the eradicatio­n HIV transmissi­on.

The theme of “Know Your Status” on World Aids Day this past Saturday is an important one even 30 years after the virus hit, and WHO says one in four people still don’t know that they have HIV. –

 ?? Picture: Reuters ?? MESSAGE. A student displays her face and hands painted with messages during an HIV/Aids awareness campaign on the eve of World Aids Day in Chandigarh, India, on Saturday.
Picture: Reuters MESSAGE. A student displays her face and hands painted with messages during an HIV/Aids awareness campaign on the eve of World Aids Day in Chandigarh, India, on Saturday.

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