Since the 1980s most experts have assumed that heterosexual sex transmitted 90% of HIV in Africa. In the March International Journal of STD and AIDS, an international team of HIV specialists presents groundbreaking evidence to challenge this consensus, with "profound implications" for public health in Africa.
In a series of articles, Dr David Gisselquist, Mr John Potterat and colleagues argue that the spread of HIV infections in Africa is closely linked to medical care. In their unique study of existing data from across the subcontinent they estimate that only about a third of HIV infections are sexually transmitted. Their evidence suggests that "health care exposures caused more HIV than sexual transmission", with contaminated medical injections being the biggest risk.
Sexual behaviour
Did medical care spread HIV?
"People often see what they wish to see"
The authors suggest several reasons why evidence has been ignored until now, including the Wests preconceptions about African sexuality, the fear that people might lose trust in healthcare, and simple disbelief that medical practices could be so unsafe.
They conclude: "a growing body of evidence points to unsafe injections and other medical exposures to contaminated blood" as an explanation for the majority of the spread of the epidemic. "This finding has major ramifications for current and future HIV control programmes in Africa".
Rosamund Snow | Source: alphagalileo
Further information: www.rsm.ac.uk/press
More articles from
Health and Medicine:
Colonial Urbanization in Africa at Dawn of 20th Century Marked Outbreak of HIV
02.10.2008 | University of Arizona
Brain Signal Persists Even in Dreamless Sleep
02.10.2008 | Washington University in St. Louis
Cells that Avoid Suicide May Become Cancerous
02.10.2008 | Life Sciences
02.10.2008 | Life Sciences
New species thanks to different ways of seeing
02.10.2008 | Life Sciences