BMJ 2001;323:417 ( 25 August )

News

Condom use seems to be reducing number of new HIV/AIDS cases

Rohit Sharma, Mumbai
The first 150 words of the full text of this article appear below.

Some Asian countries have made a significant dent on the HIV/AIDS epidemic through condom use, reported experts in Hanoi last week for a World Health Organization (WHO) meeting on the promotion of condom use in high risk settings in Asia.

New infections continue unabated in scattered areas, they said. In Thailand, new infections have plummeted from 143000 in 1991 to 20000 in 2000. HIV infection levels among pregnant women, which is considered a good indicator of the epidemic's spread among the general population, have dropped from 2% in the mid-1990s to 1.5% now.

The success of Thailand is attributed by experts to its "100% condom use" programme targeted at the commercial sex industry.

In Cambodia---the country worst hit by AIDS outside Africa, with 2.8% of its adult population aged 15-49 infected with HIV---new infections have dropped among sex workers aged under 20, from more than 40% in 1998 to 23% in 2000. The sale of condoms . . . [Full text of this article]


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