By Chinua Akukwe
The
international conference on HIV/AIDS in Durban, South Africa that ended recently dominated
the mainstream print and electronic media in
Western capitals. Various media organizations
provided graphic information on the devastating
consequences of this hydra-headed monster of a disease in Africa. As the more than 12,000 conference participants
debated the scope of President Mbeki of South
Africas speech or argued over the origin of the
HIV virus in the palatial settings of Durban, it
is important to make the following observations on what may have occurred during the week-long Conference.
During
the week-long Conference:
1)
Between
7,500 and 10,000 South Africans will have contracted the dreaded HIV
infection;
2) More than 10,000 Nigerians will
have become infected;
3) At least 70,000
Africans will have become infected; and,
4) At
least 42,000 families in Africa have buried someone, most often a man or woman at the prime, productive stages of their
lives.
The HIV/AIDS crisis in
Africa is the most devastating disaster to befall
the continent. Within the last two decades, the AIDS virus is responsible for ten times more deaths in Africa than all wars
combined. Sale of coffins is booming in many
African countries such as Zimbabwe and Zambia from
the high death toll of AIDS. According to UNAIDS (the UN agency responsible for HIV/AIDS), about 25 million persons
live with HIV/AIDS in Africa, and 13 million have
already died of the disease. In the next ten
years, most of the HIV positive Africans will die painful deaths without access to life saving treatment. Africa
accounts for 95% of the 13 million orphans
worldwide. More than 95% of all new infections in
children 15 years or below occur in Africa. At least 95% of all mother-to-child transmission occurs in Africa. By the year
2010, at least 40 million African children will
have no father or mother to assist them as they go
through their most critical formative years in
life. For the first time in many traditional African societies, the extended family system is no longer adequate as many orphans
have to fend for themselves.
The rates of HIV infection
in the so-called high risk African countries range
from 13% to 36% among the adult population. For example, Botswana has an infection rate of 36%, Zimbabwe, 25%, and South Africa
13 percent. Although Nigerias current rate of
infection is about 5.4% (one in 20 adults), the
large population base of 110 million people will likely ignite a major catastrophe in a few years time. According to some
estimates, by 2020, more than 75 million Nigerians
may carry the virus if the present trend
continues.
The Direct and Collateral Effects
of HIV/AIDS in Africa
The HIV infection is like a
stealth bomber that moves at supersonic speed,
with major direct and collateral effects. There are two important direct effects of the infection: The infective status which is
infinite, and, the deteriorating health status
during the AIDS stages of the disease. Once an
individual becomes HIV positive, that person is
theoretically, and for all practical purposes, capable of
transmitting the infection to another individual.
At least 90% of all infected individuals worldwide
are unaware of their high risk status because of
their robust physical appearance. These individuals may continue to propagate the disease, unwittingly. Thus, it is not surprising
that in many parts of Africa, robust or healthy
looking individuals are not seen as at risk of
transmitting the virus. The second direct damage
is the deteriorating health status that invariably incapacitates the individual during the AIDS phase of the disease, with
multiple opportunistic infections. This is the
stage that many relatives begin a whispering
campaign on the cause of the individuals illness.
The collateral effect of
HIV/AIDS is as devastating as the direct effects.
I will summarize the collateral effects as follows:
1)
Poverty is the second cousin of HIV
infection. Poor countries, poor neighborhoods or
communities are more likely to have high rates of
infection, and less likely to have the resources to combat the
disease. Once HIV/AIDS establishes a foothold in a
poor setting, that community is on a slow but
progressive economic, social, and cultural decline;
2)
Sex is a taboo subject in most African
societies, and the predominant heterosexual
transmission of HIV in Africa makes it a difficult subject matter. According to World Bank estimates, only 3% of HIV
positive individuals go into clinics because of
the stigma associated with AIDS;
3)
HIV/AIDS is closely related to sexually
transmitted diseases and Tuberculosis, two
common conditions in Africa;
4)
HIV/AIDS has devastating effect on the life
expectancy of any
nation. For example, by 2010, Namibias life expectancy rate would have been 70.1 years compared to the projected 38.9 years
because of AIDS. Many countries in Southern
African will lose at least twenty or more years of
life expectancy in the next decade because of AIDS.
5)
HIV/AIDS destroys the economic engine
room of African societies such as teachers, professors, doctors, nurses, engineers,
lawyers, community leaders, and so on. The
children of these bread winners are likely to drop
out of school, with the older children assuming
increasing parental roles for their younger siblings;
6)
Gender inequity
in Africa continues to be a major problem for HIV
prevention programs. For example, a woman who is faithful to her
husband cannot, in many African societies, refuse
sexual advances from her high risk husband,
without fear of physical harm, economic retaliation or social ostracism. Rape of teenage girls or seduction of these
girls by high risk sugar daddies continues
unabated;
7)
HIV/AIDS creates an undue burden on the health
care system of
African countries. Health authorities in Africa are now spending
their paltry budget on AIDS related clinical care.
For example, large provincial hospitals in South
Africa report 50% or more occupancy rates of their
hospital beds by AIDS patients. In addition, many African
governments in the next several months must reach
a decision on how to reconcile the use of a promising drug, nevirapine that significantly reduces maternal transmission of
HIV infection with the transmission of the
infection through continued breast feeding.
Preliminary results suggest that HIV positive nursing mothers can re-transmit the virus to their babies during
breast feeding after receiving nevirapine at
birth. This dilemma is very real as the
manufacturers of nevirapine are promising to donate large quantities
of the drug to needy African nations.
8)
HIV/AIDS may lead to the political
instability of many African countries. For example, the high rates of infection among the
Military of South Africa, Zimbabwe, and Zambia
portend danger signals for civilian governments if
the infected soldiers die in large number without
receiving life saving drugs. Furthermore, as scare resources of poor African nations become diverted to AIDS palliative
treatment, the internal conflicts in many
countries over resource sharing and power may grow
worse. The tepid, indifferent, and at times, hostile response of many African leaders to the HIV/AIDS conundrum is a recipe for
disaster. To behave as if the HIV/AIDS problem
does not exist or to waste time in puerile
ideological or moral debates, could lead to catastrophic results. Fortunately, some presidents such as Museveni of
Uganda and Obasanjo of Nigeria have publicly
stated their personal commitment to halting the
rampaging effects of the disease and have technical persons reporting directly to them;
9)
No African country can afford the $11,000 to $15,000 annual cost of life saving
antiretroviral cocktail therapy that has
dramatically changed the HIV/AIDS landscape in Western countries.
Even with the availability of these drugs, I am
not aware of any African country that has the
infrastructure to manage the logistics of
delivering the complex drug regimen to HIV/AIDS patients; and,
10) A new
generation of Africans will grow up in this century believing
that no matter what they do, they may never
live to adulthood because of rampaging effects of the
virus. The rate of infection among African youth
is the highest in the world. In some countries, female teenagers between 15 and 19 years of age have infective rates of 15% or
more.
How to Respond to the HIV/AIDS
Epidemic in Africa
The danger of the HIV/AIDS
epidemic is real in Africa. Present and future
generations of Africans are at grave risk of a multifaceted menace. As elites jostle over semantics, many Africans become
infected or die of the disease. As noted by
President Nelson Mandela in his closing speech to
the Durban Conference, it is important to square the concern of the HIV/AIDS patients with the rhetoric of experts.
The time is now ripe for a comprehensive approach
to HIV/AIDS prevention strategy in
Africa.
The HIV/AIDS strategy in
Africa should be predicated on four fundamental principles:
1)
The need for the international community to
mobilize resources to provide life saving
treatment to the 25 million Africans living with the HIV virus. There is no justification for denying millions of
Africans, access to life saving drugs. These drugs
have made it possible for HIV positive individuals in Western countries to go back to work,
assist their families and contribute to the
betterment of their society. Until the West
resolves the issue of providing the same treatment
opportunities to all HIV/AIDS patients, the rhetoric of HIV/AIDS
will remain hollow. To prosecute the Bosnia
campaign, the Western Alliance reportedly spent at
least $80 billion without any dent on their current economic prosperity;
2)
The need for African leaders to develop and
implement a credible HIV prevention
program that recognizes the following facts:
There is no known cure for HIV/AIDS; The best safe
sex message is abstinence or monogamous
relationship after relevant tests and knowledge of HIV status, and ; The urgent need to lift the conspiracy of
silence about sexual matters in many African societies. Uganda,
Tanzania, and Senegal reportedly made significant
advances on HIV prevention through a national dialogue on sex and how it can lead to HIV infection;
3).
The critical importance of revamping the health
care system in Africa. As of today, the
current health system in African cannot manage the
complex logistics of providing cheap or free drugs to HIV/AIDS individuals if they are made available. Many African countries
neglect their health systems and do not provide
incentives for their health workers. The strategy
of multisectoral sectoral approach to health
matters is not firmly rooted in Africa. As shown in a recent World
Bank report on health care in Africa, the health
infrastructure in most African countries leaves
much to be desired. The political will to fund
health services in African countries is lacking. National ministries
of health lack technical expertise or serve as
backwaters for failed politicians and operatives;
and,
4)
The ultimate responsibility for managing and
eventually conquering the HIV/AIDS menace lie with
Africans, in the continent and the diaspora.
As shown by the debacle of aid and debt relief, no amount of international assistance will change the HIV/AIDS situation in
Africa unless sustained progress is achieved in
the following areas of governance (a) Adequate
political representation where various shades of
opinion are represented at the highest decision-making apparatus of government (b) Transparent macroeconomic
policies that promote private enterprise, ensure
the implementation of unambiguous rules and
regulation, and, assure the protection of the weak
and the infirm in the society, and, (c) Engage community-based
entities and non governmental organizations in the
design and provision of grassroots health
programs.
African governments must
develop a mechanism for engaging their
professionals in the diaspora in the design, implementation,
monitoring and evaluation of HIV/AIDS programs.
This approach should be multisectoral with
sustained interactions with experts in clinical care, public health, pharmacy, economics, agriculture,
business, manufacturing, engineering, political
science, anthropology, sociology and other
professionals that can help design proactive health and non health programs that will address the direct and collateral
effects of HIV/AIDS. It is also important to
establish direct relationships with U.S. and other
Western-based organizations that are promoting the
treatment and prevention of HIV/AIDS in Africa. For example, the
Constituency for
Africa in Washington, D.C. is promoting an AIDS Marshall Plan for Africa, and organizing
town meetings on HIV/AIDS in Africa across
America.
Finally, African governments should establish
direct linkages with sympathetic legislators and
appropriators in Western countries. For example,
the U.S. Congressional Black Caucus is active on HIV/AIDS issues in Africa and will benefit from sustained consultations and
briefings by African governments.
CONCLUSION
HIV/AIDS is real in Africa.
No matter the origin of the HIV virus or the
so-called disagreement about the pathogenesis of the disease, millions
of Africans have died of this horrible disease,
and 25 million individuals are living under a certain death
sentence. The time to act is now to save lives and create a better future for Africa. The much vaunted African renaissance will
become a pipedream if African intellectuals and
leaders waste time chasing shadows while the
proverbial Rome burns. The die is cast.
Dr.
Akukwe is the former Vice Chairman of the
National Council for International Health (NCIH),
Washington, D.C. E-mail: cakukwe@att.net
Published 24/07/00