Singapore intensifies battle against AIDS
By Fayen Wong
November 27, 2004
Singapore - Singapore, facing a rise in AIDS cases, is considering making it
compulsory for pregnant women to be screened for HIV/AIDS, an official said on
Saturday.
"If all mothers had been tested for HIV, and treatment started for HIV positive
mothers, the risk of the baby having AIDS would be reduced from 25 percent to 2
percent," said Balaji Sadasivan, senior minister of state for health, at the
fourth Singapore AIDS Conference.
Although Singapore has one of the lowest levels of HIV infection in Asia, the
number of new infections hit a record high with 257 cases reported in the first
10 months of this year, more than the 242 new cases reported for all of 2003.
Sadasivan said his ministry would focus on educating the public on HIV/AIDS
prevention.
The campaign will focus on four areas: encouraging monogamy, the importance of
condom use in casual sex, frequent testing for HIV for individuals with
multiple sex partners and highlighting that it is a criminal offence to spread
AIDS deliberately.
While most of the new HIV cases involved heterosexual men, the Health Ministry
said HIV infection among gays has seen a surge over the last year, with 77
cases diagnosed in the first 10 months of this year against 54 for all of last
year.
A gay group said a law banning gay sex in Singapore harmed efforts to educate
gays about the dangers of unsafe sex.
"Since gay sex is illegal, how then can any agency or organization in Singapore
promote safe sex among men ... without being complicit in abetting illegal
activity?" Stuart Koe, chief executive officer of Asian gay group Fridae said
in a statement on the group's Web site fridae.com.
The United Nations warned earlier this month that Asia-Pacific risks an AIDS
crisis similar in scale to Africa's unless governments across the region step
up efforts to control the relentless spread of the killer disease.
Singapore has recorded a total of 2,332 HIV infections to date, of whom 874
have died, 564 have full-blown AIDS and 894 show no symptoms.
Comment on this story,
click here.
Copyright 1999-2004, Reuters. All rights reserved. No content may be
reproduced in whole or part without written permission. Please contact us
via the link below for re-print and syndication policies.
|
|
 |