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  • HIV Infection Rates Rise In Armenia

    HIV INFECTION RATES RISE IN ARMENIA

    Institute for War and Peace Reporting, UK
    IWPR Caucasus Reporting #712
    Dec 4 2013

    Spread of virus linked to migrant population moving back and forth
    to Russia and Ukraine.

    By Yekaterina Poghosyan - Caucasus CRS Issue 712, 4 Dec 13

    Like many of his compatriots, Hayk left the country to find work
    aboard, arriving in Russia in 2005.

    He began working on building sites and sent money home to support
    his wife and children.

    "It was hard work and I missed home. I worked all year and I was only
    able go home for New Year," Hayk (not his real name) told IWPR.

    Hayk, who is now 38, found out he was HIV-positive in 2006, after
    undergoing a test required by the Russian authorities for official
    registration as a migrant worker. His application was turned down,
    and he had to go back to Armenia. When he told his wife, she divorced
    him and took the children with her.

    Hayk believes he contracted HIV from a girlfriend in Russia.

    HIV remains rare in Armenia, but experts fear that growing infection
    rates could lead to a healthcare crisis.

    Statistics on HIV infection rates in Armenia are limited. The
    Armenian government says a total of 1,586 cases have been recorded
    since records began in 1988, and 351 have since died.

    This implies a total of around 1,200 current recorded cases. UNAIDS,
    the United Nations agency responsible for combating the virus,
    estimates that some 3,500 people are living with HIV in Armenia,
    including unrecorded cases.

    The trend over recent years appears to be upwards. The government
    reported that the 228 cases diagnosed in 2012 were a record high. From
    January through November 2013, a comparable figure of 205 new cases
    was recorded.

    "Comparing the 2012 figure with those for previous years, we can say
    with certainty that the epidemic is spreading in Armenia. At the start
    of the 2000s, there were no more than 30 recorded cases in Armenia,"
    Lena Nanushyan, UNAIDS coordinator in Armenia, told IWPR. "If you
    set these figures against those for countries like Ukraine or Russia,
    they look insignificant. But they are cause for concern, especially
    if you take into account the rise in infection."

    Janetta Petrosyan, the head of the health ministry's AIDS Prevention
    Centre, told IWPR that 70 per cent of recorded cases involved men,
    reflecting the fact that they were more likely to travel out of
    the country.

    "According to the 2012 data, 62 per cent of patients were infected
    abroad, and another 20 per cent were their partners. That means
    that migration played a role in more than 80 per cent of cases,"
    Petrosyan said.

    According to figures from Russia's Federal Migration Service, 125,000
    Armenian nationals entered the country to work in 2011. The numbers
    heading there and to Ukraine continue to rise as the Armenian economy
    remains weak.

    Experts say that this kind of population mobility can lead to more
    rapid and wide-ranging transmission than, say, the use of shared
    needles, which occurs within a narrower section of the community.

    According to UNAIDS, 90 per cent of HIV cases diagnosed in Central
    Asia and Eastern Europe occur in Russia and Ukraine, with shared use of
    needles among drug users identified as the prime source of infection.

    By contrast, data from Armenia's AIDS Prevention Centre indicate that
    the main route of transmission in the country is heterosexual sex.

    This is a major concern for women's rights organisations, which say
    that in most cases where women have contracted HIV, it has been from
    husbands returning to Armenia after spells working abroad.

    "Gender inequality is one of the main problems tied to ignorance
    about HIV," Anush Poghosyan of the Women's Resource Centre said. "In
    our society, it's considered pretty much fine for the husband to be
    unfaithful when goes off to earn money in Russia or Ukraine. After
    some time, he [may] return infected with HIV, and will ignore his
    wife's request to undergo a test, and pass it on."

    Anti-retroviral drug therapy for HIV has been available free of charge
    in Armenia since 2005. However, HIV/AIDS is widely seen as a taboo
    subject, and many carriers prefer not to tell medical professionals
    and others of their status.

    "People we work with often tell us that a dentist, for example,
    will refuse to treat someone when he finds out they are infected,"
    said Anush Arakelyan, spokeswoman for Real World, Real People, an
    organisation that helps HIV-positive people. "If you go to another
    dentist and don't tell him... you will get treated. As a result of
    such cases, people are scared to talk about this."

    Hayk is among those who keep their status secret. He did not seek
    treatment for several years, as he was worried about what people
    would think of him.

    "In Russia, you see posters warning you about AIDS every step of
    the way. HIV-positive people are accepted as more or less OK there -
    not like here," he said. "People think they'll get infected just from
    talking to you. That's why I prefer to keep quiet about my disease.

    Only my parents know."

    Yekaterina Poghosyan is a reporter for Mediamax in Armenia.

    http://iwpr.net/report-news/hiv-infection-rates-rise-armenia

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