HIV prevalence in city has dipped: AIDS body
Mumbai:
The HIV/AIDS infection has seen a drastic decline among the
general population of Mumbai, and new infections too have come
down significantly. However, Mumbai’s dream to be counted as one
of the cities with lesser prevalence of HIV still remains a
distant one.
The city’s AIDS control body, Mumbai District Aids Control
Society (MDACS), has collated figures for the last four years
and concluded that the prevalence of the virus has come down
from 10.65% in 2007 to 7.69% in 2010 (till May) among the
general population. For pregnant women too, the decline has been
from 0.91% to 0.58% during the same period.
Authorities attribute the decline to increased awareness
among youth. “It is the combined effect of awareness and our
targeted interventions. Our biggest victory has been to prevent
new infections,’’ said project director of MDACS, Dr S S
Kudalkar. The MDACS studied the data from 74 Integrated
Counselling and Testing Centres in the city. He added the
percentage of HIV-positive pregnant women in the city used to be
about 1.4 till four years ago, which has now come down to 0.5.
“Also, infection due to blood transfusions is down from 0.8% to
about 0.4% in the same period,’’ he said.
The MDACS now hopes that the sentinel surveillance by the
National AIDS Control Organisation, which begins in October,
will give a thumbs up to Mumbai’s war against HIV.
MDACS has realised that taking Mumbai from category A to
category B for HIV prevalence remains a daunting task. Category
A is defined as any district where the number of pregnant women
testing positive at ante-natal clinics in high risk areas is
over 1% in the last three years. For Mumbai to be counted as
category B, the number of pregnant women testing positive at
these centres should be less than 1%. “Also, the city should
have lesser number of hotspots like brothels,’’ said a civic
official.
“It will be at least a decade for Mumbai to make it category
B,’’ said the official.
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