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CULTURAL BENEFITS 3-AIDS Cases Soar In Englandby Dr Michael Fitzpatrick According to public health supremo Dr Angus Nicoll, 'None of us can afford to be complacent about HIV - the safer sex message applies to everyone' (1).
The epidemic explosion among heterosexuals has never happened
For 15 years the authorities have been manipulating AIDS statistics
Looking at AIDS cases reveals even more starkly the small size of
the British epidemic among heterosexuals. In 2001, the number of
cases of AIDS in which infection was acquired by heterosexual
contact with a partner who had become infected in Europe was 13.
This marks a decline from an average of 19 cases a year through the
1990s (the peak year was 1994 with 28 cases).
One of the Much
toted benefits of Racial / Cultural diversity is that it will bring
cultural enrichment, to a people sorely in need of it as if our own
culture is some how lacking? but what are it’s real achievements? |
British News July 15, 2002
Last year 4,163 people were found to be HIV positive, of whom 1,338 were homosexuals and more than 1,500 heterosexuals from Africa. Fewer than 200 cases were attributed to heterosexual sex in Britain.
Barry Evans, HIV consultant at the Public Health Laboratory Services’s centre for communicable disease surveillance, said: “The figures show that there were more newly diagnosed cases of HIV among African immigrants than gay men for the first time." The number of African immigrants diagnosed with HIV has trebled in the past five years from around 500 to 1,533 last year. The total number of new cases was the highest since testing began in 1985.
Of the 22,000 people known to be living with HIV in Britain, more than 5,000 are from Africa, including refugees, students, nurses and others with work permits, and people visiting relatives.The Human Rights Act gives overseas visitors who are found to be HIV positive the right to stay and be treated for the rest of their lives if treatment is not available in their home country.
Callum O’Mahony, chairman of the Association of Genito-Urinary Medicine, said that the trend could spark a new outbreak among British heterosexuals. “There’s a huge potential to spread that wasn’t there before, because the number of gays is just not that high: there are far more heterosexuals."In 2001 there were 2,225 new cases among heterosexuals in Britain. Dr Evans said that of those 80 per cent were infected in Africa, 10 per cent elsewhere in the world, and 10 per cent in Britain.Kings College Hospital in South London reports that about 60 per cent of its HIV cases are African immigrants and Caroline Bradbeer, of St Thomas’s Hospital in London, said: "We’re now seeing more diagnoses among heterosexuals than gay men, and most of the heterosexuals are from Africa.”
Many HIV specialists say that they are unclear about who they are meant to be treating, and under what circumstances. Some patients visiting relatives attend clinics, where they are not legally entitled to treatment without first applying to remain in the UK on compassionate grounds.
Doctors have been appealing to the Department of Health for guidance, but say they have been told not to raise the issue because it is too sensitive.
Some countries, such as the USA, Canada and Australia are insisting on HIV tests before being granted permission to immigrate.
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2-356169,00.html
(16 Jul 2002)
The number of people who become infected with HIV while visiting the Caribbean is on the rise and is causing concern among Aids experts in London.
Consultants at Guy's and St Thomas' Trust in London saw more than 50 people last year who had some connection with the Caribbean, either having been over there themselves or having a partner who had recently come back from the islands.
The numbers are small at the moment compared with cases among African patients, which make up between 50 to 60 per cent of the caseload in the two London hospitals, but they are worrying doctors.
Latest figures from the Public Health Laboratory Service (PHLS) show that for the first time last year, there were more newly-diagnosed cases of HIV among African immigrants than gay men. There were 4,163 people found to be HIV-positive, of whom 1,338 were homosexuals and 1,500 were heterosexuals from Africa. The number of new cases is putting some of the London clinics under pressure.
Dr Caroline Bradbeer, physician at St Thomas' said: "We now look after 1,200 people with HIV and that number rises by 15 per cent a year. There are now more new diagnoses in south London than any other part of the UK.
"We are starting to see increasing numbers whose HIV has come through a connection with the Caribbean. Here we have the seeds of a new epidemic, fuelled by deprivation, the high prevalence of gonorrhoea and chlamydia, which could sweep quickly through our large local population of British-born Afro-Caribbeans."
She said that many of those infected had been out to the Caribbean for several weeks to visit a relative, and found themselves relatively well-off because of exchange rates. "They have a wonderful time, they mix with local people and some of them end up having unprotected sex."
Like other doctors in her field, she would like to see an institute devoted to treating sexual diseases set up in south London, to meet the enormous need for care. Her walk-in clinic, designed to see 9,000 people a year, now deals with 35,000 people, and King's College Hospital also faces the same pressure.
But there is also the difficulty for consultants over whom they are supposed to treat. Many of the patients are in the country visiting relatives when they go for a check-up in British clinics and are not legally entitled to treatment.
http://www.thisislondon.co.uk/dynamic/news/story.html?in_review_id=641651