AIDS and Antiretroviral Drugs in South Africa: Public Health, Politics, and Individual Suffering: A Review of Brian Tilley's It's My Life [Book Review]

Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 31 (1):144-148 (2003)
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Abstract

The word “epidemic” seems inadequate to describe the spread of the HIV virus in sub-Saharan Africa. The latest estimates suggest that 28.5 million people in this region are infected, including 5 million in South Africa alone. The HIV and AIDS pandemic, with infection rates of over 20 percent in seven African countries, rivals the worst of history's disease outbreaks, including the bubonic plague of medieval times. The devastating effects of the disease on the continent are compounded by extreme poverty in the region and the lack of medical infrastructure essential for delivering the full range of available treatments for HIV infection, AIDS, and the opportunistic infections associated with the disease. Of the 40 million people infected with HIV worldwide, only 730,000 receive combination antiretroviral therapies. In the entire African continent, only 30,000 infected people currently receive such forms of treatment.

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