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| AIDS IN SOUTH AFRICA | |
| December 2, 1998 |
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World AIDS Day called attention to increased cases of the deadly disease in Africa. Fred de Sam Lazaro reports about the about the situation in South Africa. |
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| AIDS epidemic. | ||||||||||||||
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FRED DE SAM LAZARO: More than three million South Africans are positive for HIV, the virus that leads to AIDS. That's about one of every seven citizens, and the number is headed up perhaps to one in four. It's not the highest rate on the continent but rising at a rate not seen elsewhere. RUEBEN SHER: We're facing a biological Holocaust. There's no two ways about it. FRED DE SAM LAZARO: Virologist Rueben Sher says even though South Africa has the continent's most modern health care system, its HIV problem went largely ignored in a nation preoccupied with political and socioeconomic concerns as it moved from white minority rule to democracy
FRED DE SAM LAZARO: Apartheid may have kept HIV at bay, but it also left a legacy of mistrust. That's a huge handicap for a public health system in which most health care providers are white and most patients black. Mark Ottenweller is an American physician with the charity Hope Worldwide.
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| Past mistakes. | ||||||||||||||
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FRED DE SAM LAZARO: That misinformation has allowed HIV to flourish. For example, AIDS is still widely viewed as a disease of gay white males. In fact, the vast majority of cases are heterosexual black South Africans, more than half of them female, many seemingly naïve about their risk.
FRED DE SAM LAZARO: Like most young HIV-infected women, Lorraine Nyabane only learned she was HIV positive after becoming pregnant and seeking prenatal care. For most, this discovery is only the start of their pain, according to Nurse Practitioner Jacob Moetlo.
FRED DE SAM LAZARO: The women in Moetlo's clinic are part of a study in which they are given the drug AZT during pregnancy and also infant formula to substitute for breastfeeding. That lowers the risk of HIV transmission to the babies, but it increases the risk of social sanction for their mothers. FRED DE SAM LAZARO: Moetlo says women risk being thrown out in the street if they reveal their HIV status. Most are still able to conceal it, since they haven't progressed to full-blown AIDS. However, on a broader scale, public health workers say this appearance of normalcy has worked against them.
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| Treating the sick. | ||||||||||||||
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FRED DE SAM LAZARO: For the growing number of HIV cases beginning to show signs of disease, there are few places of refuge. The Ark Ministries is one -- located in a converted railroad hostel in the coastal city of Durban.
FRED DE SAM LAZARO: The Ark has served those down on their luck for some years. Now, AIDS is the primary reason they come, especially younger tenants, many of them casualties of years of civil strife. Winnie Sibiya says she became HIV-infected as a result of being raped. She'd wandered into an area of her village that a rival group had declared off-limits.
FRED DE SAM LAZARO: Sibiya has spent a year at the Ark. Her health has now stabilized, although she's been unable to find work. Still, she is among the more fortunate, according to Pastor Shirley Pretorius, the Ark's director.
FRED DE SAM LAZARO: No one's yet tallied the economic toll HIV AIDS
will take on South Africa, but the mining industry, long the mainstay
of the economy, offers a sobering barometer. One of every three miners
already is HIV-positive. And the mining companies say for every job
that opens up in the next few years, |
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| A country in denial. | ||||||||||||||
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FRED DE SAM LAZARO: But Rose Smart, who heads the government's HIV/AIDS program, says the epidemic is the result of a complex set of factors.
GAIL SCHULTZ: We're already getting to the stage where the hospitals say there is nothing we can do for this baby, take her home, she is dying. FRED DE SAM LAZARO: Part of the strategy at this facility is to enlist teenagers from local schools to care for the infants.
MARK OTTENWELLER: It's going to take a generation to mobilize people for education, for health, for jobs, for lots of the redistribution things in South Africa. And, unfortunately, with the AIDS epidemic, we don't have that generation to wait
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