Providing "comprehensive care" to thousands of HIV/AIDS victims and
curtailing the spread of the virus are becoming urgent priorities
in China because the country is experiencing an annual rate of
increase of more than 50 percent.
The efforts made by China, a developing country, to treat HIV
carriers and AIDS patients are not up to par with countries such as
the United States, said Zhang Fujie, director of the Treatment and
Care Department of the National Center for AIDS/STD Prevention and
Control under the Chinese Center for Disease Prevention and
Control.
Experts said the number of HIV cases in China has reached 850,000
while the number of AIDS patients has reached 200,000.
The central government's goal is to contain HIV infections to 1.5
million people by 2010. But experts warn that if the number of
cases increases at the current rate, it will reach 10 million by
2010.
Zhang's center, following the guide of the central government, is
preparing a national comprehensive care strategy to create a better
living environment for HIV/AIDS patients.
Public awareness about respecting and understanding HIV/AIDS
patients will be stressed.
And the rights of HIV/AIDS patients and their widows and children
will be better protected, said Xu Lianzhi, a professor specializing
in HIV/AIDS treatment from Beijing You'an Hospital, where dozens of
HIV/AIDS patients are receiving medical and psychological treatment
in a special department.
"Comprehensive care," a phrase coined by World Health Organization
(WHO) in the early 1990s, means providing HIV/AIDS patients with
medical treatment and economic support in a humane way.
When formulating such a strategy, China must stress the importance
of educating the public about showing compassion for HIV/AIDS
patients and their families, said Joel Gallant, associate professor
of medicine at Johns Hopkins University, who attended a symposium
last weekend in southwest China's
Yunnan Province on AIDS treatment.
Comprehensive care centers will soon be established in some
provinces with comparatively more HIV/AIDS cases, such as Yunnan
Province.
If
the center thrives, a national network of such sites will be
established in the future, Zhang said.
Medical treatment is a vital part of such care, Zhang said, since
most HIV/AIDS patients cannot afford the cost of drugs. They range
from 2,000 yuan (US$240) to 3,000 (US$360) yuan a month.
Insurance companies in China refuse to cover HIV/AIDS.
So
some departments under the State Council, such as the State
Development Planning Commission, are negotiating with foreign drug
companies, such as Germany's Boehringer Ingelheim, to reduce the
cost of AIDS drugs.
And HIV/AIDS patients in some rural areas have been exempt from the
agriculture tax.
(China
Daily May 27, 2002)