HIV/AIDS Has Reached 'Epidemic' Stage in Papua
Pacific Press Release - IHRC-NZ
29 Oct
2009
HIV/AIDS prevalence in Papua has already reached
the "generalized epidemic" stage, according to the health
program coordinator for World Vision Indonesia.
"HIV
and AIDS in Papua are no longer exclusive to high-risk
groups, but also common among the general public," Dr.
Ronald Gunawan said in the provincial capital Jayapura on
Tuesday.
He said that among the indigenous population,
the prevalence rate had reached 2.8 percent, much higher
than the rate of 1.5 percent among immigrants.
Gunawan
said the highest rate, 3.2 percent, was found in coastal and
remote areas where health services were scarce.
"There
are still many obstacles to reducing the spread of HIV/AIDS,
particularly among indigenous people who live in remote
areas," he said.
Information on the HIV threat and how
it spreads, he said, has not yet reached many people because
of geographical obstacles and language barriers. He said
poverty, education and the quality of health care also
played roles in the spread of the disease.
Gunawan
said the spread of HIV/AIDS could be checked if the public
was made more aware and given adequate information. He said
it was important for the government to improve the quality
of education, particularly in remote areas of the
province.
He said the government also had to recruit
doctors and health workers and post them around Papua to
improve the quality and delivery of health
services.
Gunawan said his organization was actively
building a network with regional governments, the National
AIDS Commission, other public social agencies and the media
to fight the spread of the
disease.
ENDS