The Managing Director, National Agency for Control of AIDS (NACA), Prof. John Idoko, has said that 3.4 million Nigerians are living with HIV of which 58.0 per cent are women.
Prof. Idoko who was represented at the end of a two-day Biomedical HIV Prevention Forum on Tuesday in Abuja, by Dr Morenike Ukpong, Coordinator, New HIV Vaccine and Microbicide Advocacy Society, said there was a need for bio-medical prevention technologies because the decline in new infections was much slower in adults than in children.
'An estimate of 388, 864 people became newly-infected by HIV in 2011, and that 217,148 people died from AIDS-related causes in 2011. Donor funding accounted for 75 per cent of the expenditure in 2011. There is prediction that new cases may rise in Nigeria from rapid population growth because of the recent increase in Mozambique and Tanzania.
'To keep pace with current spending, $30 billion is required by 2031. Where is that money going to come from?' he said.
Idoko further stated that nationwide prevalence stabilised around four per cent but 12 + one state carried higher burden and Nigeria was behind target in several important indicators.
Bright Ekweremadu, the Country Director, Society for Family Health, an NGO, said that establishing priority populations to be targeted and identifying appropriate intervention strategies were among the primary mandate for HIV prevention funding.
According to him, intervention to promote accelerated antirethroviral therapy (ART) remained one of the most important scientific advances in HIV program intervention.
Prof. Idoko who was represented at the end of a two-day Biomedical HIV Prevention Forum on Tuesday in Abuja, by Dr Morenike Ukpong, Coordinator, New HIV Vaccine and Microbicide Advocacy Society, said there was a need for bio-medical prevention technologies because the decline in new infections was much slower in adults than in children.
'An estimate of 388, 864 people became newly-infected by HIV in 2011, and that 217,148 people died from AIDS-related causes in 2011. Donor funding accounted for 75 per cent of the expenditure in 2011. There is prediction that new cases may rise in Nigeria from rapid population growth because of the recent increase in Mozambique and Tanzania.
'To keep pace with current spending, $30 billion is required by 2031. Where is that money going to come from?' he said.
Idoko further stated that nationwide prevalence stabilised around four per cent but 12 + one state carried higher burden and Nigeria was behind target in several important indicators.
Bright Ekweremadu, the Country Director, Society for Family Health, an NGO, said that establishing priority populations to be targeted and identifying appropriate intervention strategies were among the primary mandate for HIV prevention funding.
According to him, intervention to promote accelerated antirethroviral therapy (ART) remained one of the most important scientific advances in HIV program intervention.
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