cool-horizons.com
Search:    Index Page :> About Us :> Privacy Policy :> ToS :> Place Your Link :> Add Your Article   
Free 3 way links
 
 

Family & Home

 

Government & Politics

 

Automotive

 

Property & Estate

 

Science & Research

 

Software & Networking

 

Creative Arts

 

Medicine & Treatment

 

Fitness & Health

 

Self Enhancement

 

Travel & Accommodation

 

Jobs & Employment

 

Academics & Learning

 

Food & Recipe

 

Sports & Adventure

 

Recreation

 

Children & Teens

 

Business & Commerce

 

News & Media

 

People & Society

 

Online Shopping

 

Fashion & Relationships

 

Online & Board Games

 

Investment & Finance


 

  Index Page › Medicine & Treatment › AIDS & HIV
   
 

The Face of the HIV /AIDS Epidemic

   
Author: Damian Bennett
 

HIV and AIDS are the biggest health threats mankind has ever faced.

That is according to the World Health Organisation, which describes the global HIV epidemic as "the fastest growing threat to human development today."

You wouldn't think so if you're one of the lucky ones living in a wealthy developed nation. The developed world has been lulled into a false sense of security over HIV and AIDS.After all, it's the gay plague isn't it? And the occasional snippet of news coverage tells us it's a bit of a problem in Africa. Nothing too much for middle class, heterosexual whites to worry about.

The stark truth is that there's a lot to worry about. And everyone needs to start worrying - not just gays and Africans.

Global complacency over the HIV crisis is allowing whole nations to be decimated. And it's this very same complacency which is allowing the killer virus to snare a whole new generation of youngsters in developed countries such as the UK and USA - youngsters who never saw those infamous and unforgettable tombstone adverts of the 1980s.

Facts about HIV/AIDS

Joe Public in the developed world thinks we've cracked the AIDS problem. New drug treatments enable people infected with HIV to live relatively normal and productive lives and these treatments have reduced the number of AIDS cases quite dramatically. So what is there to worry about? Here's just a few things:

1. HIV infection is now rising dramatically among young heterosexuals in many northern European countries and in the USA

2. According to UNICEF six people aged between 15 and 24 become infected every minute of every day

3. The ease of global travel in recent years means the huge epidemics sweeping Third World nations inevitably affect developed countries. No single area of the global community is safe as long of millions of people continue to become infected with HIV

4. In sub-Saharan Africa more than 25 million people are now infected with HIV and the numbers are rising each year

5. Extreme poverty, civil war and domestic violence expose millions of women and children around the world to HIV infection on a daily basis

6. Babies in Africa are routinely raped by HIV infected men who believe this will rid them of the virus

So what are we supposed to do faced with the sheer enormity of this global catastrophe? Most of us do nothing. Television footage of the Tsunami disaster, which claimed an estimated 250,000 lives, prompted the world's population to react as never before in response to a humanitarian disaster. In that same year the HIV epidemic killed 2.5 million people in the sub-Saharan countries and left 12 million children orphaned. This is a disaster on a scale the world has never seen before - a disaster which, unlike the Tsunami, is preventable. But the developed world, by and large, is turning a blind eye and a deaf ear to it.

Some might argue that the scale of the crisis and the cost of tackling it are just too unmanageable to contemplate.

WHO estimates that around $1.5 billion a year is needed to implement HIV prevention programmes in the African countries worst hit by the virus. An impossible amount, you might think. Until you consider that some of the western oil corporations which continue to exploit Africa's natural reserves make more than 10 times that amount in a single year.

And the USA alone spends a staggering $22 billion a year treating people suffering from heart disease because of their obesity.

It's certainly food for thought.

 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Two Types Of Diabetes & How They Differ
 
Mold and Illness
 
Prostate Cancer; Sun and Vitamin D
 
Removing a Stuck Contact Lens - The Easy Way
 
Symptoms and Treatment of Mesothelioma Cancer
 
Tips to Improve Your Asthma
 
The Benefits of Understanding Your Mesothelioma Illness
 
The Incredible, Mystical, Formidable Herpes Virus
 
Ways to Boost Your Immune System
 
The Importance of Choosing a Board Certified Breast Surgeon
 
 
 
 
 

So you want to do your Family History?

Genealogy is like a big Jigsaw Puzzle! If you don't put the pieces together correctly, you'll never ... - Nick Grbin
 

Aids

It's a pity to see how social sensibilities of people have become numb in this dog eat dog world. Th ... - Deepak Jain
 

10 Powerful Tips To Stop Smoking

Article with a wide array of tips from many fields all aimed at easing that process of becoming a no ... - Adam Eason
 
 

7 IBS Treatment Tips

Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) affects millions of people in the United States alone, for these peop ... - Peter Wallander
 

Guide to Using Phone Psychics

Whether you live in the rugged countryside of Alaska, the sparse dessert of Arizona, or the bustling ... - Ross Bainbridge
 
 
Index Page :> Privacy Policy :> ToS
© 2006-2008 www.coolhorizons.com All Rights Reserved Worldwide.