Health experts want less funding for AIDS

It’s not often that you hear some­one ask­ing for less fund­ing, but health experts say that the great amount of fund­ing for AIDS have left other dis­eases in Africa ignored.

Hun­dreds of thou­sands of peo­ple die of malaria or from preg­nancy com­pli­ca­tions on the con­ti­nent, yet those ill­nesses receive only a frac­tion of the fund­ing that AIDS does. In fact, AIDS health aid has more money than many gov­ern­ment health budgets.

From the Guardian, writer Alex Duval Smith expands upon the con­tro­ver­sial over­haul request.

Top sci­en­tists are demand­ing a con­tro­ver­sial over­haul of health spend­ing in Africa, argu­ing that the bil­lions of pounds tar­geted at HIV dur­ing the past 20 years have led to a neglect of other killer dis­eases and basic health prob­lems such as diarrhoea.

Devel­oped coun­tries poured $13.2bn (£8.2bn) last year into efforts to com­bat HIV, chiefly for Africa, up from $480m in 1996. But only eight coun­tries, all in south­ern Africa, remain in the grip of a severe Aids cri­sis, while World Health Organ­i­sa­tion data show that five of the biggest killers in Africa are ill­nesses that affect chil­dren under the age of five.

Child­hood diar­rhoea kills an esti­mated 1.5 mil­lion chil­dren under five each year world­wide – at least half of them in Africa – although it is eas­ily treat­able with zinc tablets that cost lit­tle more than $2 each. Diar­rhoea received less than 5% of world­wide research and treat­ment fund­ing last year.

Daniel Halperin, an HIV epi­demi­ol­ogy researcher at the Har­vard Med­ical School of Pub­lic Health, said: “There has gen­er­ally been a mis­align­ment from the donors. It is time for a rethink. Many peo­ple in the west believe all Africans are impov­er­ished and infected with HIV. Yet the real­ity is that most coun­tries have sta­ble HIV preva­lence of less than 3%. What most peo­ple really need are things such as clean water and fam­ily plan­ning. Even tuber­cu­lo­sis and malaria get far less money than HIV. In some cases these sec­tors have inad­ver­tently been hurt by the focus on HIV.”

One of Africa’s lead­ing health econ­o­mists, Alan White­side, who is direc­tor of the Health Eco­nom­ics and HIV/Aids Research Divi­sion at the Uni­ver­sity of KwaZulu Natal, said the flood of dona­tions towards the bat­tle against Aids had also cre­ated the con­di­tions for wide­spread mis­use of the funds. White­side played a promi­nent role in bring­ing the south­ern African Aids epi­demic to the world’s atten­tion in the 1990s. He has also advised the United Nations and Aids2031 – an inter­na­tional expert group set up to chart the best route to tackle Aids in advance of the 50th anniver­sary of the first report of the illness.

The lure of Aids money has led in some African coun­tries to large-scale cor­rup­tion,” he said, “and the estab­lish­ment of non-government organ­i­sa­tions as an indus­try. The achieve­ment of the United Nations Mil­len­nium Devel­op­ment Goals by 2015 depends on us get­ting our focus on Aids right.


This article is from Poverty News Blog: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/blogspot/EOch/~3/nQ5VG17yFpY/health-experts-want-less-funding-for.html




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