Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, northwest
China, reported 16,035 HIV carriers at the end of June, a rise of
4,732 in just nine months, according to the local disease control
center.
The region reported 11,303 HIV carriers at the end of September
last year, according to the regional center.
The new cases were found in 15 prefectures and cities, including
the regional capital, Urumqi.
In June, Xinjiang had 563 reported AIDS cases, including 105
deaths. The region reported 213 AIDS patients from the beginning of
2001 to June last year, including 54 deaths.
Hao Yang, deputy head of the diseases prevention and control
bureau of the Ministry of Health, said HIV infection was severe in
Xinjiang, calling on local governments and medical departments to
make concerted efforts to curb the spread of the disease.
Hao said AIDS was spreading from high-risk groups such as
prostitutes to ordinary groups, including pregnant women, most of
who were infected by their husbands who contracted HIV through drug
use.
Clinical monitoring showed the incidence of HIV infection among
women lying-in had been up to one percent in Xinjiang's Yili area,
but normally stood at 0.3 percent, said Ni Mingjian, head of the
regional Venereal Disease and HIV/AIDS Department of the Diseases
Control Center.
The central and local governments have run AIDS education
campaigns and HIV/AIDS treatment programs, and provided assistance
to HIV carriers in attempts to curb the spread of the disease.
China had 144,089 reported HIV carriers by the end of last year,
including 32,886 AIDS patients and 8,404 fatalities, according to
the Ministry of Health.
(Xinhua News Agency October 20, 2006)