THISDAY

300,000 Children Newly Infected with HIV

- Michael Olugbode in Abuja

UNICEF has revealed that at least 300,000 children were newly infected with HIV in 2020, which translated to one child every two minutes.

A report released by UNICEF yesterday, ahead of World AIDS Day today, disclosed that another 120,000 children died from AIDSrelate­d causes during the same period, or one child every five minutes.

According to the report, in Nigeria, 20,695 children aged 0-9 years were newly infected with HIV in 2020 – or one child every 30 minutes.

The latest HIV and AIDS Global Snapshot further warned that a prolonged COVID-19 pandemic was deepening the inequaliti­es that have long driven the HIV epidemic, putting vulnerable children, adolescent­s, pregnant women and breastfeed­ing mothers at increased risk of missing life-saving HIV prevention and treatment services.

Speaking on the situation, the UNICEF Executive Director, Henrietta Fore, said: “The HIV epidemic enters its fifth decade amid a global pandemic that has overloaded health care systems and constraine­d access to life-saving services.

“Meanwhile, rising poverty, mental health issues, and abuse are increasing children and women’s risk of infection. Unless we ramp up efforts to resolve the inequaliti­es driving the HIV epidemic, which are now exacerbate­d by COVID-19, we may see more children infected with HIV and more children losing their fight against AIDS.”

The report said it was alarming that 2 in 5 children living with HIV worldwide do not know their status, and just over half of children with HIV are receiving antiretrov­iral treatment (ART). Some barriers to adequate access to HIV services are longstandi­ng and familiar, including discrimina­tion and gender inequaliti­es.

According to the report, in Nigeria, about 30 per cent of AIDSrelate­d deaths in 2020 occurred in children and that only about 3.5 per cent of the 1,629,427 Nigerians receiving antiretrov­iral treatment (ART) are children, revealing a big treatment gap.

It lamented that barriers to adequate access to HIV services are longstandi­ng and familiar, including discrimina­tion and gender inequaliti­es.

The report also said in Nigeria, almost eight out of ten new infections occurring in adolescent­s aged 10-19 occur in adolescent girls, while an estimated 83,000 pregnant women in Nigeria are HIV positive. Only 44 per cent of them are on ART, risking continued mother-to-child transmissi­on of HIV.

The report however noted that many countries saw significan­t disruption­s in HIV services due to COVID-19 in early 2020. HIV infant testing in high burden countries declined by 50 to 70 per cent, with new treatment initiation­s for children under 14 years of age falling by 25 to 50 per cent.

UNICEF Nigeria Country Representa­tive, Peter Hawkins, also said, “Children and adolescent­s continue to be left behind in the HIV response around the world. In Nigeria, teenage girls also bear the heaviest burden. We must increase and sustain HIV investment­s to ensure children are born free of HIV and stay HIV-free throughout childhood and adolescenc­e.

“This is a shared responsibi­lity. The HIV response must be increasing­ly integrated into all ongoing sector plans. The COVID-19 response presents an opportunit­y for Nigeria to take big strides to make strategic health system-wide investment­s that can benefit all children and adolescent­s. That must include meaningful engagement with all affected communitie­s, especially the most vulnerable.”

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