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Topic Brief

Available in: العربية, Español, 中文, Français

 
 
Indonesia summary 

Risk Behavior and HIV Prevalence in Tanah Papua. 
A new survey shows AIDS cases have risen from 2 to 15 times the national average in different parts of Papua in Indonesia.

Executive Summary (pdf) | Full Report (1.7mb pdf)
 
Other Publications
Planning & Managing for HIV/AIDS Results (pdf)
  
 

Preventing HIV/AIDS in Vietnam
The Government of Vietnam is making every effort to prevent the transmission and prevalence of HIV/AIDS.

 
Other HIV Projects in the EAP Region
Getting Results
Combating HIV in the Transport Sector: Success on the Road in China (pdf)
 

Epidemic stagesProjections

 OVERVIEW
 

Home to nearly 2 billion people, an estimated 2.3 million adults and children live with HIV/AIDS in East Asia and Pacific (EAP) countries. That number is increasing, deeply affecting countless individuals as well as the region's health systems, economies, and social fabric. HIV/AIDS is a major development challenge and a top priority for the World Bank.

The epidemiological profile of HIV/AIDS throughout this diverse region is complex. The pace and severity of the disease have been dramatically different from country to country.  In Cambodia, Myanmar, and Thailand, HIV/AIDS prevalence has spread quickly, and already exceeds 1 percent among the general population. While these countries were hit early, others such as Vietnam and several provinces in China are only now starting to experience growing epidemics—particularly in regional “hot spots”—and need to mount swift, effective responses.

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STAGE OF THE HIV/AIDS EPIDEMIC IN THE EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC REGION

   

Although the epidemiological profile differs between countries, injecting drug use and sex work are major drivers of HIV/AIDS transmission.  In EAP countries, the epidemic generally begins at a low level among commercial sex workers regularly having unprotected sex with clients, injecting drug users sharing needles and syringes, or men having unprotected sex with men.

As HIV/AIDS spreads among these groups, it becomes more heavily concentrated in these populations. In some cases the disease then spreads among these (often overlapping) populations and then into the general population.

In China, HIV/AIDS has now spread to all of China’s 31 provinces, autonomous regions and municipalities.  Sexual transmission of HIV from injecting drug users to their partners features prominently in China's epidemic.

When HIV/AIDS has come close to saturation in high-risk populations and infection rates grow to greater than 1 percent among the general population, the epidemic is considered to be "generalized."

The trajectory of growth depends on the size of the at-risk populations and how much they overlap, but there is significant potential for growth. In this region, the data suggest that countries are categorized as:

  • Low level:
    Mongolia, Lao PDR, Philippines, Timor-Leste, and the Pacific Island member states.
     
  • Concentrated:
    Papua New Guinea, China, Indonesia, Vietnam, and Malaysia.
     
  • Generalized:
    Thailand, Cambodia, and Myanmar.
    There are some indications however that Papua New Guinea is moving towards a generalized epidemic.

 

 

 
Thailand Aids report
 

The Thailand report on the economics of effective AIDS treatment found that government antiretroviral treatment costs would increase dramatically in the coming years, yet meeting such costs would be affordable and yield substantial health benefits.  

Read more

 
 
HIV in EAP
 Regional HIV/AIDS Strategy   
 Executive Summary in Local Languages: 
 

 Chinese
 Thai
 Vietnamese
 Bahasa Indonesian

 
   
 Related Links
 Fact Sheet:HIV/AIDS in East Asia and Pacific
  World Bank HIV/AIDS Issue Brief 
  

Stage of HIV / AIDS Epidemic in East Asia & Pacific

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   UNAIDS HIV/AIDS PROJECTIONS FOR EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC
 

The epidemic has ample room to grow in the region. As East Asia and Pacific is the most populous region in the world, even a small increase in HIV/AIDS prevalence will translate into a large number of people living with HIV/AIDS. UNAIDS predicts there will be more than 11 million new cases of HIV/AIDS in the region by 2010.

UNAIDS HIV Projections for East Asia and Pacific

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 KEY ISSUES
 

The challenge of HIV/AIDS in East Asia and Pacific countries is two-fold: (1) preventing new cases of HIV and (2) caring for those who are infected.  In 2005, almost a million people in the region needed antiretroviral treatment, the second-highest number in the world.

In response to the pandemic, all EAP countries have established national HIV/AIDS programs. However, national responses are neither uniform in intensity nor in degrees of success. There is a wide variation between and within countries in the level of political commitment, adequacy of funding for HIV/AIDS, and availability of effective prevention programs and treatment.

While some countries are considered to be success stories, others are still lagging behind in the fight against HIV/AIDS. Thailandand Cambodiaare examples of countries that show how strong government commitment, early and adequate responses with increased funding, and targeted interventions can curtail the growth of the epidemic.

In Thailand, the number of annual new HIV infections has fallen from 140,000 a decade ago down to 15,000 in 2005. Both Thailand and Cambodia demonstrate the primacy (in an epidemic fueled by commercial sex) of involving a few key sectors—the ministry of health, brothel owners, the police (ministry of interior), and provincial administrations.

These countries are examples of success but in them, as in other countries, there is still a lot more that must be accomplished. Several countries such as Timor-Leste and the Philippines have very low rates of HIV infection despite high-risk behavior, and so still have a rare opportunity to prevent a future epidemic.

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 WORLD BANK PROGRAM
 

Since the early 1990s, the World Bank has been actively involved in the fight against HIV/AIDS in East Asia and Pacific through lending, policy dialogue, and research and analysis.

The World Bank in East Asia and Pacific countries has:

Working together with governments, civil society, and other development partners, the World Bank can play a critical role in addressing HIV/AIDS in the East Asia and Pacific region to prevent the region from becoming the future epicenter of the HIV/AIDS epidemic.

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November 2007



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