Health

Gay transmission of AIDS gaining pace

(China Daily/Agencies)
Updated: 2009-12-02 09:28

China warned in a notice for yesterday's World AIDS Day that homosexual transmission of the disease was gaining pace and called for health authorities nationwide to step up prevention work.

The statement by the health ministry came a day after President Hu Jintao called on the nation not to discriminate against those with HIV.

"Sexual contact continues to be the main channel of transmission with the speed of homosexual transmission clearly increasing," the health ministry said. "This is a new situation that we need to pay attention to."

China has not been hit as hard by HIV/AIDS as many other nations. The disease first gained hold among illegal drug users and sex workers, and through unsanitary blood transfusions. But in recent years, transmission avenues have expanded out from those traditionally high-risk groups, the ministry said.

"The AIDS epidemic has already spread from high-risk groups to ordinary people, dangerous elements of AIDS transmission are present everywhere," it said.

"AIDS is affecting more and more people and the transmission is becoming more diverse."

By the end of October, China had 319,877 registered cases of HIV/AIDS, including 48,000 new cases this year, while nearly 50,000 people have died in China to AIDS, the ministry said.

The ministry has estimated that up to 740,000 people in China live with HIV, many of whom experience high levels of stigma and discrimination, a situation Hu addressed at an AIDS awareness activity in Beijing on Monday.