The number of adolescents dying from AIDS has tripled over the
last 15 years, most of them having acquired the disease when they were
infants, according to figures released Friday by UNICEF.
AIDS
is the number one cause of death among adolescents aged 10 to 19 in
Africa and the second leading cause of death among adolescents globally,
the United Nations children's agency said in its latest statistical
update.
"Among HIV-affected
populations, adolescents are the only group for which the mortality
figures are not decreasing," the report says.
"Most
adolescents who die of AIDS-related illnesses acquired HIV when they
were infants, 10 to 15 years ago, when fewer pregnant women and mothers
living with HIV received antiretroviral medicines to prevent HIV
transmission from mother to child."
Many of them survived into their teenage years without knowing their HIV status.
However,
among teenagers aged 15-19, 26 new infections occur every hour, and
about half of the two million living with HIV in this group are in just
six countries: South Africa, Nigeria, Kenya, India, Mozambique and
Tanzania.
"In sub-Saharan Africa,
the region with the highest prevalence, girls are vastly more affected,
accounting for seven in 10 new infections among 15-19 year olds," the
statement said.
ACCESS TO TREATMENT
"It
is critical that young people who are HIV-positive have access to
treatment, care and support," Craig McClure, head of UNICEF's global
HIV/AIDS programmes, told a conference in Johannesburg where the report
was launched.
Only one in three of the 2.6 million children under the age of 15 living with HIV are on treatment.
Since
2000, nearly 1.3 million new infections among children have been
averted, largely due to advances in the prevention of mother-to-child
transmission of HIV.
By 2014,
three in five pregnant women living with HIV received antiretroviral
treatment to prevent transmission of the virus to their babies.
"This
has translated into a 60 percent reduction in AIDS-related deaths among
children under four years of age since 2000," Unicef said in a
statement.
"These efforts to
eliminate mother-to-child transmission will help to change the course of
the epidemic for the next generation of adolescents."
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