Khaleej Times

Among children, Aids epidemic is far from over, Unicef finds

- Reuters

new york — Eighteen children every hour were infected with HIV last year, a sign of scant progress in protecting the world’s young from the deadly Aids-causing virus, the United Nations’ children’s agency said on Friday.

At the current rate of infection, there will be 3.5 million new cases of HIV among adolescent­s by 2030, according to projection­s in the 2017 Unicef Statistica­l Update on Children and Aids.

Around the world, nearly 37 million people — the equivalent of the population of Canada — were living with HIV last year, according to Unicef.

Among these, 2.1 million adolescent­s had HIV, a 30 per cent increase from 2005, while 55,000 adolescent­s aged 10 to 19, and 120,000 children younger than 14, died from Aids-related causes.

Infected children younger than 4 years old faced the highest risk of Aids-related deaths compared with other age groups.

“The Aids epidemic is not over; it remains a threat to the lives of children and young people,” said Dr. Chewe Luo, chief of HIV for Unicef, in a statement accompanyi­ng the report.

“It is unacceptab­le that we continue to see so many children dying from Aids and so little progress made to protect adolescent­s from new HIV infections.”

Unicef said nearly all the adolescent deaths were in sub-Saharan Africa and, worldwide, more adolescent girls than boys are infected.

The testing and treatment of babies is also lagging, with fewer than half of HIV-exposed infants getting tested in their first two months of life.

Unicef said some progress had been made in preventing motherto-child transmissi­on, with about 2 million new infections averted since 2000, it said, but that progress was slowing. —

chief of HIV for Unicef

It is unacceptab­le that we continue to see so many children dying from Aids and so little progress made to protect adolescent­s from new HIV infections

Dr. Chewe Luo,

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