Thursday, September 19, 2019
HIV and Aids in Sub Saharan Africa :: HIV in Africa
HIV and Aids in Sub Saharan Africa       Introduction       Sub Saharan Africa has a very serious HIV / AIDS epidemic with     millions of its people living with the disease. It has now become a     human tragedy in many areas of the world, but most affected is sub     Saharan Africa. It is no coincidence that the countries suffering most     with HIV / AIDS are also the poorest. HIV / AIDS is now considered to     be the single most important impediment to social progress to many     countries in Africa .This report will analyse the current situation     using up to date sources from articles, books and the World Wide Web.       UN Millennium development goals       At the start of the new millennium, all 191 UN member states pledged     to meet all the UN Millennium goals by the year 2015. These goals     covered such issues as, poverty, hunger, education, aid, gender     equality, child mortality, pre natal care, environmental     sustainability and HIV / Aids. All UN states have agreed to, "Halt and     begin to reverse the spread of HIV/AIDS."     (http://www.un.org/millenniumgoals/). At Present, the HIV prevalence     rates are still rising in sub Saharan Africa. The rate is seven ties     higher in developing countries than it is in developed countries.       Many different schemes are trying to reverse this trend. These schemes     include,Ã ¢?Ã ¦. Oxfam, who work to help ease developing world suffering     believe that the only scheme that will help reduce HIV / AIDS in     developing countries is to cancel world debt.       "Unsustainable debt represents a huge barrier to progress in the fight     against HIV / AIDS. Repayments to creditors by some of the poorest     countries in the world are diverting the resources needed to respond     to current suffering."       (http://www.oxfam.org.uk/what_we_do/issues/debt_aid/bp25_debt_hivaids.htm)       Oxfam and other similar organisations believe that countries with high     prevalence rates could help them selves to solve the aids epidemic if     they did not have to meet large debt repayments to the developed     world.       Concurring the epidemic       Unfortunately this disease is not easily concurred. The disease is     still today considered to be taboo, making it difficult to talk to    					    
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