Bangkok Post

HIV infects one teenage girl every 3min

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Every three minutes, a girl between the ages of 15 and 19 is infected with the virus that causes Aids, said a UN report recently that warned of a “crisis” fuelled by gender inequality.

Girls and young women made up two-thirds of 15- to 19-year-olds infected with HIV in 2017, according to data unveiled at the 22nd Internatio­nal Aids Conference in Amsterdam.

Henrietta Fore, head of the UN Children’s Fund (Unicef ), referred to it as a “crisis of health”.

“In most countries, women and girls lack access to informatio­n, to services, or even just the power to say no to unsafe sex,” she said.

“HIV thrives among the most vulnerable and marginalis­ed, leaving teenage girls at the centre of the crisis.”

Last year, 130,000 youngsters aged 19 and under died from Aids, while 430,000 — almost 50 every hour — were newly infected, the agency said.

While Aids-related deaths have decreased since 2010 in all other age groups, among older adolescent­s aged 15 to 19 they have remained stubbornly constant.

About 1.2 million 15- to 19-year-olds were living with the immune system-destroying virus in 2017, three in five of them girls, said Unicef.

“The epidemic’s spread among adolescent girls is being fuelled by early sex, including with older males, forced sex, powerlessn­ess in negotiatin­g about sex, poverty, and lack of access to confidenti­al counsellin­g and testing services,” it pointed out.

Actress and activist Charlize Theron raised the issue in an address to conference delegates on Tuesday.

The Aids epidemic is “not just about sex or sexuality”, the South African celebrity said. “We know it is linked to the second-class status of women and girls worldwide.”

Robert Matiru, director of operations for Unitaid, which funds HIV drug projects, said young people are disproport­ionately affected by the epidemic that has claimed some 35 million lives since it erupted in the 1980s.

“They are the most affected now, across Sub-Saharan Africa in particular,” he told AFP, adding that “unless we can reach young people and curb the epidemic among them ... then we’re not going to meet the targets” of the UN to end Aids as a public health threat by 2030.

This requires limiting infections to 500,000 per year by 2020. Last year they numbered 1.8 million.

A recent report of the Internatio­nal Aids Society (IAS) highlighte­d the epidemic’s “extraordin­ary impact” on adolescent girls and young women.

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