Regina Leader-Post

Record spending not slowing Sask.’s HIV rates

Province must ‘do better’ as levels surge 18%, health minister says

- ZAK VESCERA

The number of new HIV cases in Saskatchew­an grew last year despite record funding to slow the spread of the disease.

Preliminar­y data from the ministry of health reports 199 new cases of HIV in 2019, an 18 per cent increase from the prior year.

Saskatchew­an’s transmissi­on rate is roughly double the national average — and the highest among provinces — despite years of concentrat­ed efforts from provincial and federal government­s.

“I think it’s very concerning,” Minister of Health Jim Reiter said Wednesday.

The province has invested more than $43 million in its HIV strategy since it was launched in 2010.

It also put $450,000 in new annual funding into the province’s 31 harm-reduction sites, which aim to reduce issues associated with drug use such as the spread of HIV.

Reiter said further action is needed in light of these new results.

“Obviously with the new infection rates, it’s extremely concerning,” he said. “We’re going to have to look at what we’re doing in terms of education … we’re going to have to do better.”

Saskatchew­an First Nations have been disproport­ionately affected by HIV — but some evidence suggests they’re making strong headway toward preventing new cases.

Wednesday marked the fourth HIV Know Your Status forum in Saskatoon, a two-day forum hosted by Big River First Nation in partnershi­p with the Ahtahkakoo­p Cree Nation and the Saskatoon Tribal Council.

Big River First Nation may have been the first Indigenous community in the world to reach a United Nations goal of having 90 per cent of HIV sufferers tested and treated so they have repressed viral loads, meaning they can no longer transmit the disease.

“It’s basically bringing our youth and our elders together and recognizin­g that need,” Big River First Nation Chief Jack Rayne said.

Dr. Ibrahim Khan, the federal Indigenous Services Canada health officer who tracks infectious diseases on Saskatchew­an First Nations, cautions the agency does not yet have its figures looking specifical­ly at on-reserve HIV transmissi­on in the province.

But the rate of HIV among First Nations people has declined in recent years, even though it’s still higher than the provincial average.

Khan attributed that success to increased funding — Indigenous Services dispenses around $4 million across the province’s First Nations to combat HIV — and innovation on the part of the communitie­s. Twenty-two communitie­s have programs encouragin­g regular testing and 38 have harm-reduction sites.

“We want to see zero cases of HIV in Saskatchew­an First Nations within the next five years,” Khan said.

But Khan is worried about trends with other diseases. Preliminar­y data suggests there were six times as many syphilis cases in 2019 than in 2018 among Saskatchew­an First Nations. He warns that could suggest the potential for another HIV outbreak.

“If you have HIV rates going down but your other rates are going up, that is a concern for us, because that could lead to another outbreak or cluster of HIV in this province,” Khan said.

HIV medication­s are covered by provincial health plans and have relatively few side effects. Khan says someone with HIV who is treated within six months can be virally suppressed, meaning they will not pass the disease to others.

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