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HIV/AIDS

 


Poverty is a huge force in the persistence of the AIDS epidemic. When people are hungry and must fend for themselves and their families, their behaviors will change, the hungry poor young girls will start yearning for as little as frw500, her body simply for survival. In the process of ‘sleeping’ with this one and the other then infections will find a way. If a girl needs food and shelter, she will risk infection by having unprotected sex with multiple partners to get what she needs. And then disaster ensues!

Since HIV was first documented in 1981, more than 20 million poor parents and children—have died of AIDS. According to the United Nations Joint Program on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS), at the end of 2004, an estimated 39.4 million people around the world were living with HIV.

It's clear that the virus knows no boundaries or limitations: HIV has spread across the globe, devastating many people who were already grappling with inequality and poverty. About 95% of people with HIV/AIDS live in poor countries, where development progress is being reversed by the impact of the disease. Sub-Saharan Africa remains the most affected region and is home to about 65 percent of the total number of people living with HIV worldwide. Second only to South Africa, India has an HIV-positive population of about 5.1 million.

Mercilessly, HIV/AIDS has a disproportionate impact on the most vulnerable:  women and children.  Women, as a proportion of all adults living with HIV/AIDS, increased from 43 percent in 1998 to 48 percent in 2003, and the proportion continues to rise. Around the world, an estimated 7,000 women are infected with HIV everyday—the majority are young, school-age girls living in impoverished conditions.

The AIDS pandemic has robbed more than 14 million children worldwide of their families, their childhood, and all too often, hope for the future. According to UNAIDS, that's the equivalent of every child under five in America living without a mom or dad to care for them.

The impact of the epidemic is both all-encompassing and complex: HIV/AIDS doesn't just attack individuals, it rips apart families, uproots children and devastates communities.  Teachers get sick and can't teach their students; mothers and fathers can't go to work and earn money to put food on the table; children must stay home to serve as caregivers for their family; stigma and discrimination isolate people at-risk of infection and those who are HIV-positive.

Without the availability of a cure or viable vaccine, the HIV/AIDS pandemic will have claimed a total of 65 million lives by 2020. Through the Millennium Development Goals, the international community pledged to roll back the climbing rates of HIV by 2015; however, current estimates show that the rate is increasing in every part of the globe, including the United States. Despite advances in treatment, most people with HIV/AIDS can't afford medicine or healthcare, speeding the impact of the disease.

The international community must act without delay to halt the spread of the virus and in doing so, save lives, families, communities and entire countries from needless devastation.


Source:
http://www.netaid.org/global_poverty/hiv-aids/

Doors To Diplomacy Site

 

Consequences of Child Poverty

  Sexual exploitation

The worst consequence of child poverty is undoubtedly sexual exploitation leaving big traumas in children's life.

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  Death

Child poverty takes out so many children lives. We must prevent something to stop this!
 

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