The Spread of HIV in Africa:
An Epidemic of Epic Proportions
February 24, 2006 — By Earth Policy Institute
WASHINGTON, D.C. — "There is no precedent for the number of lives affected by
the HIV epidemic. To find anything similar to such a potentially devastating
loss of life, we have to go back to the smallpox decimation of Native American
communities in the sixteenth century or to the bubonic plague that took roughly
a fourth of Europe's population during the fourteenth century. HIV should be
seen for what it is - an epidemic of epic proportions that, if not checked soon,
could take more lives during this century than were claimed by all the wars of
the last century," says Lester Brown, President of Earth Policy Institute (see
http://www.earth-policy.org/Books/Seg/PB2ch06_ss3a.htm).
Since the human immunodeficiency virus was identified in 1981, this infection
has spread worldwide. By 1990, an estimated 10 million people were infected with
the virus. By the end of 2004, the number who had been infected climbed to 78
million. Of this total, 38 million have died; 39 million are living with the
virus. Twenty-five million HIV-positive people today live in sub-Saharan Africa,
but only 500,000 or so are being treated with anti-retroviral drugs. Seven
million live in South and Southeast Asia, with over 5 million of them in India
alone.
Infection rates are climbing. In the absence of effective treatment, the parts
of sub-Saharan Africa with the highest infection rates face a staggering loss of
life. Adding the heavy mortality from the epidemic to the normal mortality of
older adults means that countries like Botswana and Zimbabwe will lose half of
their adult populations within a decade.
The HIV epidemic is not an isolated phenomenon. It is affecting every facet of
life and every sector of the economy. Food production per person, already
lagging in most countries in sub-Saharan Africa, is now falling fast as the
number of field workers shrinks. As food production falls, hunger intensifies
among the dependent groups of children and the elderly. The downward spiral in
family welfare typically begins when the first adult falls victim to the illness
- a development that is doubly disruptive because for each person who is sick
and unable to work, another adult must care for that person.
The massive loss of young adults to AIDS is already beginning to cut into
economic activity. Rising worker health insurance costs in industry are
shrinking or even eliminating company profit margins, forcing some firms into
the red. In addition, companies are facing increased sick leave, decreased
productivity, and the burden of recruiting and training replacements when
employees die.
Education is also affected. The ranks of teachers are being decimated by the
virus. In 2001, for instance, Zambia lost 815 primary school teachers to AIDS,
the equivalent of 45 percent of new teachers trained that year. With students,
when one or both parents die, more children are forced to stay home simply
because there is not enough money to buy books and to pay school fees.
Universities are also feeling the effects. At the University of Durbin in South
Africa, for example, 25 percent of the student body is HIV-positive.
The effects on health care are equally devastating. In many hospitals in eastern
and southern Africa, a majority of the beds are now occupied by AIDS victims,
leaving less space for those with other illnesses. Already overworked doctors
and nurses are often stretched to the breaking point. With health care systems
now unable to provide even basic care, the toll of traditional disease is also
rising. Life expectancy is dropping not only because of AIDS, but also because
of the deterioration in health care.
The epidemic is leaving millions of orphans in its wake. Sub-Saharan Africa is
expected to have 18.4 million "AIDS orphans" by 2010 - children who have lost at
least one parent to the disease. There is no precedent for millions of street
children in Africa. The extended family, once capable of absorbing orphaned
children, is now itself being decimated by the loss of adults, leaving children,
often small ones, to take care of themselves. For some girls, the only option is
what has come to be known as "survival sex." Michael Grunwald of the Washington
Post writes from Swaziland, "In the countryside, teenage Swazi girls are selling
sex - and spreading HIV - for $5 an encounter, exactly what it costs to hire
oxen for a day of plowing."
The HIV epidemic in Africa is now a development problem, a matter of whether a
society can continue to function as needed to support its people. It is a food
security problem. It is a national security problem. It is an educational system
problem, and it is a foreign investment problem. Stephen Lewis, the U.N. Special
Envoy for HIV/AIDS in Africa, says that the epidemic can be curbed and the
infection trends can be reversed, but it will take help from the international
community. The failure to fully fund the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis
and Malaria, he says, is "mass murder" by complacency.
Writing in the New York Times, Alex de Waal, an adviser to the U.N. Economic
Commission for Africa and to UNICEF, sums up the effects of the epidemic well:
"Just as HIV destroys the body's immune system, the epidemic of HIV and AIDS has
disabled the body politic. As a result of HIV, the worst hit African countries
have undergone a social breakdown that is now reaching a new level: African
societies' capacity to resist famine is fast eroding. Hunger and disease have
begun reinforcing each other. As daunting as the prospect is, we will have to
fight them together, or we will succeed against neither."
"Curbing the HIV Epidemic" will be covered in a forthcoming Earth Policy
Institute release.
Excerpted from Chapter 6, "Early Signs of Decline," in Lester R. Brown, Plan
B 2.0: Rescuing a Planet Under Stress and a Civilization in Trouble (New York:
W.W. Norton & Company, 2006), available on-line at
www.earthpolicy.org/Books/PB2/index.htm.
Contact Info:
Janet Larsen
Director of Research, Earth Policy Institute
Tel: (202) 496-9290 x 14
E-mail:
jlarsen@earthpolicy.org
Website :
Earth Policy Institute