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AIDS infested India - deadly threat to Bangladesh

HIV Is Spreading Via India's Highways

Associated Press - November 29, 2005
Margie Mason, AP Medical Writer

DELHI, India - Zalisz Ahmed paid $1 and lost his virginity on the side of the road to one of India's countless young truck-stop prostitutes. He's had unprotected sex with many others since and says he's never heard of AIDS.
Ahmed, 20, is one of an estimated 5 million to 8 million truck drivers who supply the country with everything from apples to air conditioners along long-haul routes that have become deadly HIV highways.

The crowded ribbons crisscross the nation of more than 1 billion people and facilitate one of India's high-risk AIDS groups: men far from home who are always on the move.

Just as in Africa two decades ago, truckers and the sex they buy have helped fuel India's spread of a disease that revolves mainly around sex and injecting drugs. With an estimated 5.1 million people living with AIDS and the virus that causes it, India currently ranks just after South Africa in logging the world's highest number of infections. However, the number of Indian cases per capita remains relatively low, with an estimated 0.4 percent to 1.3 percent of adults infected so far.

Local truck stops, called dhabas, litter India's highways. They provide warm food and bodies for truckers with no questions asked. The prostitutes are poor and uneducated - forced to sell themselves for pennies inside trucks, parking lots or even outside in the bushes. Negotiating condom use simply isn't an option for most who work alone instead of in more organized brothels.

Out of the 20-25 truckers tested each month at Babu Jagjivan Ram Memorial Hospital, near the Sanjay Gandhi truck depot in New Delhi, about one-fourth come back positive.

"They tell us they have many sex partners at red-light areas and then they have sex with their wives," said Nirmal Khatri, a counselor at the hospital whose job it is to inform patients of their HIV status. "We can't press them. It is their own decision. It is a problem - it is a big problem."

The cycle is often vicious. Out of the handful of positive truckers who come back for follow-up visits, some report still having unprotected sex with prostitutes or sleeping with their unsuspecting wives who sometimes then become pregnant and pass the disease on to their babies.

Outreach workers have for years visited dhabas and depots. Safe sex messages are plastered across billboards and are handed out in brochures at these roadside venues_ they're even painted on the sides of cars that pass big rigs to remind drivers of the risks.

But the message isn't always loud - or clear - enough.

The government, trucking industry, unions and the drivers themselves must take responsibility to keep history from repeating itself in India, said S. Sundararaman, an AIDS consultant. He's devoted the past 15 years to working with truckers and has spent many long nights talking safe sex at dhabas that never close.

"In Africa, it was exactly the same because wherever the roads did not take people, the epidemic did not reach there," he said. "The epidemic is invading."

Sundararaman said Indian truckers can have anywhere from 40 to 400 sex partners a year, depending on how much time and money they have on their hands. India's growing economy is also pushing more traffic - and disease - into new areas, he said.

"The truckers actually have a very, very important and crucial role to play in containment," he said. "We have characterized them as a bridge population because they are bridging the population across geography."

No numbers are available for how many truckers may be infected, but in the northeastern state of Assam, a survey found one-quarter tested were HIV-positive, said Denis Broun, country coordinator for UNAIDS in India.

He added that fewer than 20 percent of truckers nationwide are getting prevention messages and condoms, and none of the nation's driving schools includes AIDS education in their curriculum.

But the men are being tempted everywhere by sex. Some dhabas use it as their top money maker, and long waits for paperwork between states also fuel boredom relieved by countless women who approach the trucks in parking lots, restaurants or anywhere else drivers congregate.

"The highways are very slow so people, when they start on long hauls, start on trips which are over a month," Broun said. "What we have found in some cases, the food was free (at the dhabas), provided they have sex."

Veteran trucker Satnam Singh, 55, has seen firsthand how the virus can ravage healthy drivers. He watched a father and son from his village die grueling deaths a few years back. They wasted away to skeletons without money for treatment. Their trucking company simply replaced them. For every trucker who falls ill, there's a pool of thousands waiting in line for the job.

"I've seen everything and I know it's worse than leprosy," Singh said in a loud, husky voice that's as rough as his face, worn from years on the road. "This is a family killer."

Singh, who used to fool around with prostitutes 25 years ago, says he frequently warns other truckers like young Ahmed that they're playing Russian roulette today by having unprotected sex at the dhabas.

But Ahmed, whose dark eyes shine beneath ruffled tufts of black hair, says he will continue running apples and bananas on the 15-day drive between the state of Bihar and New Delhi. Someday he will marry the woman he loves back in his home village in the state of Uttar Pradesh, but he has no plans to get tested for HIV and says he has nothing to worry about - at least for now.


AEGiS-AP: HIV Is Spreading Via India's Highways
 
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Army battles HIV in the Northeast

Deborshi Chaki
CNN-IBN
Posted Sunday , March 05, 2006 at 20:23

Guwahati, Assam, India: Soldiers serving in the troubled Northeastern states not only face the threat of the bullets of terrorists but are also vulnerable to the HIV virus.

To counter the threat of HIV, the Indian army is now planning to make the HIV tests mandatory for all personnel serving in the Northeast.

Vice Admiral and Director General of the Armed Forces Medical Services (AFMS), VK Singh, said, "If I don't do this recruitment screening test then HIV positive people may come into our forces. That's why we want to insulate our forces from the induction of HIV positive people."

"We have brought down the percentage of HIV positive people to 0.28 per cent but our aim is to bring it to zero per cent," Singh says.

Tests of courage in conflict zones is something that most men in uniform always look forward to but the test for screeing the HIV positive soldiers is likely to catch most of them off guard.

The proposal to screen the personnel has already been cleared by the Chief of Staffs Committee and is based on reports that the Northeastern states are vulnerable to HIV.

It also appears that the army is keen to learn from the experience of Assam Rifles, which has 133 confirmed HIV cases in its ranks.

The Director General of Assam rifles, Lt General Bhopinder Singh, says that this is because his force id stationed permanently in the Northeast

"When you compare the jawan of Assam Rifles with a jawan of the Army, BSF or CRPF you must remember that our jawans saty here where the battalion of other forces go back to some other place after some time. That is he is in high risk category as he is going to serve througout his career in the Northeast," Bhopinder Singh says.

"HIV is more wide spread in the Northeast than other parts of the country which is a well know fact," he adds.

In an unprecedented move, the Assam Rifles has also made it mandatory for its personnel to carry condoms while on duty but ironically the problem lies in the nature of the job that the jawans undertake.

The Executive Director of UNAIDS Dr Peter Piot says, "HIV does not need a visa or passport and particularly in the Northeast as it is surrounded by a country like Myanmar which is very heavily affected by AIDS, much more than any nplace in India. It is also a major source of heroin for the drug trade."

The army's proposal for mandatory HIV tests for service personnel in the northeast in itself is a silent admission of the fact that cross border infiltration and drug trafficking contnues and the soldeirs are equally vulnerable to the problem like anyone else.

(With inputs from Anjali Gupta)

http://www.ibnlive.com/article.php?id=6315&section_id=3
 
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I think the threat is the other way round. The sex trade in cities like Delhi and Mumbai is increasingly being increased by the influx of Illegal Bangladeshi prostitutes. The Ghettos housing the illegal Bangladeshis is are flourishing as red light areas in major Indian cities. These prostitutes are high risk prone to HIV-AIDS spread.

You want to say that there are HIV positive BD origin prostitutes in your cities. But, even if it is true then it is also true that they were infected by the Indians and they did not carry it from BD. BD population and the govt are aware of this kind of disease and are taking due steps to control its spreading. But, what your SUPER-RICH country has been doing all along? Your calleousness only proves you live in a social runk much lower than BD.
 
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India is propagating AIDS at a growth rate of 2.4% annually! which means annually 2.4% increase in aids patients which is hilarious specially to its neighbors like Bangladesh and Nepal!
 
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Its not only Bangladesh, Pakistan, Nepal and Srilanka are facing threats from Indian AIDS infestation, its also middle eastern countries are at risk as well; where large number of indian drivers and workers are stationed.

Arab countries are not properly aware what threats they are under from indian workers.
 
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Its not only Bangladesh, Pakistan, Nepal and Srilanka are facing threats from Indian AIDS infestation, its also middle eastern countries are at risk as well; where large number of indian drivers and workers are stationed.

Arab countries are not properly aware what threats they are under from indian workers.
they are aware brother, as they are doing strict measures to stop import of AIDS from India..... you can check these on their high commission's press releases.
 
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Indian aids infestation? This despite that fact that India has one of the lowest aid rates in the world? Are you joking or being a troll as usual?

The article you posted on the so called 5.3 million aids patients has been refuted and debunked a million times. Try harder next time.
 
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they are aware brother, as they are doing strict measures to stop import of AIDS from India..... you can check these on their high commission's press releases.

This is a plan of RAW to inflict serious damage to BD through spreading AIDS.... lol...
The summary I found here is people will find million reasons to hate India. Next Idune will post a thread that India is polluting air which impact health in BD.
 
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iDune....

Seriously, are you trying to bring out an important health issue that troubles the world for discussion or trying to malign India's name so you and some others here can take a cheap shot at it???

Be honest so we know how to respond accordingly.....

Because frankly this is a serious topic......and should not be made a mockery of!!!

i agree with you i dont know why some people start propoganda in these type of serious topic i think they need mantal tretment we are brother's becaus this is the human desaster
 
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Discovery to air show on Indian truckers and Aids

(30 November 2007 6:00 pm)


NEW DELHI: There are 14 million of them and at least three hundred thousand have full blown Aids. The cause: hard life, away from home for years, no sense of belonging, impossible deadlines… Discovery Channel's hard look into the issue of truckers of India is one compassionate show coming. highway in my veins

Slated for 1 December, the World Aids Day, Highway in my Veins is not targeted against the truckers. Though the fact remains that much as they carry life-saving drugs and economy boosting cargo, they also carry and spread death in the form of HIV.

The show is a careful attempt to analyse why the situation is like this in India, explains Discovery Communications India associate director marketing and communications Rajiv Bakshi. It tries to spread as much awareness as possible about Aids and is Discovery's contribution to stopping the plague in India, he adds.

Statistics offered in the show, of which Bakshi spoke exclusively to indiantelevision.com, is numbing: most of the drivers interviewed by social psychologists who speak in the show say they have multiple partners, from 40 to 150 per driver.




But why this promiscuity? Or is this promiscuity, when a person's entire life does not conform to any acceptable social pattern?

There are 4.8 million trucks in the country and 14 million drivers, which means only one in roughly three drivers are employed at any given time, making life hard financially. So when the chance comes they go for it, and often they do not return for a year or more earning as much as possible.

Fourteen million drivers deliver 67 million tonnes of cargo every day, which is more than 70 per cent of the total cargo delivered in the country daily.

Dr Akash Gulalia of department of social studies, University of Delhi says that while the size of the trucks have remained the same, the load per truck has increased.



Truckers like Durga, himself an Aids patient, say they take opium just to stay alive so that the cargo can be delivered on time.

Says Durga: "Sleep is his biggest enemy on the road and it is one that lurks at every turn. They take opium and go on driving. Drivers can't help but consume opium to meet near impossible deadlines. They take opium and go on driving."

On top of all that, they are abused by almost everyone they come across: the Road Transport Officials, the people at the cargo haul point, owners of the fleet, police and everyone else, which becomes a huge stress.

Put together, these factors become some of the main factor behind accidents, and the rate of fatal accidents on the Indian roads is one of the highest in the world. A whopping ten per cent of road accident fatalities worldwide, over ten times that in Holland and the UK.

But these same factors also are responsible for the tendency to enjoy sexual life from whoever offers it, the waiting women by the road side.

Thus the highways are the breeding grounds of the AIDS epidemic.

Truck drivers rarely visit hospitals and instead seek the help of quacks and home remedies to cure sexually transmitted diseases.

A population services international survey of long distance truck drivers found that almost a fifth of them never used condoms.

Another 70 per cent preferred not to use these, and few drivers knew that HIV and AIDS do not have a cure, or that there is a difference between HIV and AIDS.

Gulalia says also: "Most of the cases in this country among the truck drivers go unreported because there's a lot of stigmas attached and the second thing is that the awareness among truck drivers, which has increased recently has to contribute in this because the awareness level is low, so people don't actually come up and show."

"Truck drivers face a lot of problems on the highways. I would say that their whole life is frustrating and say once you are into this profession it's, it's, it's a very, very frustrating profession because the kind of roads you are driving on, the kind of cabin you are sitting in, the kind of driving conditions you have."

"Studies have been conducted, you know, and looked into the sexual patterns in India and what we saw initially was that around 80 percent of the truck drivers reported that they are having multiple sex partners and that each trucker drivers had 40 to 150 partners in each year."

HIV positive trucker Surinder has been drving for the past 12 years, and he doesn't know whether it was the first unprotected sexual encounter or the last when he contracted HIV.

Today Surinder's wife is also HIV positive. They have two children who have not been tested for HIV yet. Surinder and his wife dread the results and prefer not to know.

Surinder says, "Sometimes drivers don't come back home for a year. They don't have any sense of belonging. Most of the time they live on the truck, on the roads…you get these girls on the highways… one gets tempted…one gives in."

"I don't want my son to become a truck driver. I don't want them to go through all the hardships that I have had to put up with."

Adds Durga: "I will not even advise my enemy to become a truck driver. There are just too many problems… we suffer too much."


Indiantelevision.com > News Headlines > Discovery to air show on Indian truckers and Aids
 
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India Seen as Ground Zero In Spread of AIDS to Asia

Mohammed Israel has been a truck driver for 2 1/2 years, ferrying loads across India and visiting four to five prostitutes a week to satisfy his voracious appetite for sex -- created, he says, by the hot, spicy food served in roadside restaurants. He has never used a condom, and he has never heard of AIDS.

Truckers like Israel are an important catalyst for the rapid spread of AIDS, carrying the HIV virus that causes the deadly disease along India's highways from urban red-light districts to small-town flophouses to their family homes in remote rural villages. A battery of recent surveys of truckers in and around Calcutta found that more than 5 percent of the drivers had the HIV virus, more ...


India Seen as Ground Zero In Spread of AIDS to Asia | Article from The Washington Post | HighBeam Research
 
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HIV Infection Among Transport Workers Operating Through Siliguri-Guwahati National Highway, India

Baishali Bal, MA
National Institute of Cholera & Enteric Diseases, Kolkata, India

Syed Iftikar Ahmed, DTM&H

AIDS Prevention Society (APS), Guwahati, Asam, India

Rita Mukherjee, MBBS

National Institute of Cholera & Enteric Diseases, Kolkata, India

Sekhar Chakraborty, PhD

National Institute of Cholera & Enteric Diseases, Kolkata, India

Swapan Kumar Niyogi, MD

National Institute of Cholera & Enteric Diseases, Kolkata, India

Arunangshu Talukder, MD

West Bengal State AIDS Prevention & Control Society (WBSAPCS), Kolkata, India

Nilanjan Chakraborty, PhD

Indian Council of Medical Research Virus Unit, Kolkata, India

Kamalesh Sarkar, MD

National Institute of Cholera & Enteric Diseases, Kolkata, India, kamal412496@yahoo.com


A community-based cross-sectional study was conducted in July 2004 to understand the problem of HIV and other sexually transmitted infections among long-distance transport workers operating through the Siliguri-Guwahati national highway. The study included 301 transport workers who were contacted at different transport workers’ stops on the Siliguri-Guwahati national highway. Informed consent was obtained. Participants were interviewed for their socio-demographic characteristics, risk behavior, and risk perceptions. Blood testing for HIV, hepatitis B virus, and syphilis (at least 1:8 dilution) showed seroprevalence rates of 2.3%, 3.7%, and 6.3%, respectively. About 67% said they visited sex workers. The reported condom use rate was 58%. About 27% sustained a sexually transmitted infection within the last year. The existing HIV prevalence among transport workers appears to be low, but in view of their risk behavior and high rate of sexually transmitted infection, HIV rates may increase unless a suitable behavioral intervention is urgently initiated toward them.

HIV Infection Among Transport Workers Operating Through Siliguri-Guwahati National Highway, India -- Bal et al. 6 (1): 56 -- Journal of the International Association of Physicians in AIDS Care (JIAPAC)
 
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HIV/AIDS Discrimination in India

Posted: Mar 31st, 2009

India is one of the 2nd largest populated countries in the world, with over one billion inhabitants. Of this number, it's estimated that more or less 7 million Indians are currently living with HIV. HIV emerged later in India than it did in many other countries. Infection rates soared throughout the 1990s, and today the epidemic affects all sectors of Indian society, not just the groups – such as sex workers and truck drivers – with which it was originally associated. The vast size of India makes it difficult to examine the effects of HIV on the country as a whole. The majority of states within India have a higher population than most African countries, so a more detailed picture of the crisis can be gained by looking at each state individually.

In a country where poverty, illiteracy and poor health are rife, the spread of HIV presents a daunting challenge. The Indian epidemic continues to be concentrated in populations with high risk behavior characterized by unprotected paid sex, anal sex, and injecting drug use with contaminated injecting equipment. Several high risk groups have high HIV prevalence, and sexual networks are wide and actively working. According to India’s National AIDS Control Organization (NACO), the bulk of HIV infections in India occur during unprotected heterosexual intercourse. Consequently, and as the epidemic has matured, women account for a growing proportion of people living with HIV (38 percent in 2005), especially in rural areas. The low rate of multiple partner concurrent sexual relationships among the wider community seem to have, so far, protected the larger body of people with 99 percent of the adult Indian population being HIV negative. However, although overall prevalence remains low, even relatively minor increases in HIV infection rates in a country of more than one billion people could translate into large numbers of people becoming infected.

The ‘Rainbow Nari O Shishu Kallyan Foundation’ identified four major approaches in a groundbreaking study on spread out HIV in Asia. This study undertook by comparing of social-economic norm, family pattern, economic dependency, cause of mounting sex industries, gender discrimination status & global analysis fact. There are four factors that appear to play a crucial role in HIV transmission in Asian Countries: Injection/ intravenous drug use (By sharing needle), female sex work (Due to lack of safe sex knowledge), gender discrimination (which indirectly force females commercial or non-commercial sex), Same sex/ homosexually/ Hizra (Due to lack of HIV/AIDS information, because they act invisible in this society). Poverty & illiteracy fueled it proportionally.

At the beginning of the 1990s, as infection rates continued to rise, responses were strengthened. In 1992 the government set up NACO (the National AIDS Control Organisation), to oversee the formulation of policies, prevention work and control programmes relating to HIV and AIDS. In the same year, the government launched a Strategic Plan for HIV prevention. This plan established the administrative and technical basis for programme management and also set up State AIDS bodies in 25 states and 7 union territories. It was able to make a number of important improvements in HIV prevention such as improving blood safety. The HIV/AIDS programme specialist Mr. Mohammad Khairul Alam said, “several social norms and immature behavior fueled of this disease to scatter rapidly. There are several social components link to develop this harmful situation. Poverty-behind to force it, Gender discrimination plays a vital role; Frustration & risk behavior help to sink humanity resulting infection. The link between poverty & gender discrimination are help to decline socio economic prosperity. This link creates several anti social poisonous issues also. Such as trafficking to prostitute, sell sex for earn or living, break down family norm to create frustration and driven drug point. We notice easily that Illiteracy is the main watchword of all circumstance. So it is not easy to remove it from the society, several programs & strategy are needed to gain sustainable position”.

At the beginning of 1986, despite over 20,000 reported AIDS cases worldwide, India had no reported cases of HIV or AIDS. There was recognition, though, that this would not be the case for long, and concerns were raised about how India would cope once HIV and AIDS cases started to emerge. Recent data suggests there are signs of a decline in HIV prevalence among sex workers in areas where focused interventions have been implemented, particularly in the southern states although overall prevalence levels among this group continues to be high. Data also indicate that there is a slow decrease in HIV prevalence among the general population in southern states. Although more analysis is required, this probably means that the number of people becoming newly infected with HIV is decreasing. This decrease is more perceptible in states such as Tamil Nadu where the intensity of HIV prevention efforts has been high.

People living with HIV in India come from incredibly diverse backgrounds, cultures and lifestyles. The vast majority of infections occur through heterosexual sex, and most of those who become infected would not fall into the category of ‘high-risk groups’ - although members of such groups, including sex workers, men who have sex with men, truck drivers and migrant workers, do face a proportionately higher risk of infection. See our page on affected groups in India for more information.

HIV/AIDS Discrimination in India
 
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First learn how HIV spreads and also learn to make title of the post.
Your title does not make any sense.
 
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HIV/AIDS Discrimination in India

Posted: Mar 31st, 2009

India is one of the 2nd largest populated countries in the world, with over one billion inhabitants. Of this number, it's estimated that more or less 7 million Indians are currently living with HIV. HIV emerged later in India than it did in many other countries. Infection rates soared throughout the 1990s, and today the epidemic affects all sectors of Indian society, not just the groups – such as sex workers and truck drivers – with which it was originally associated. The vast size of India makes it difficult to examine the effects of HIV on the country as a whole. The majority of states within India have a higher population than most African countries, so a more detailed picture of the crisis can be gained by looking at each state individually.

In a country where poverty, illiteracy and poor health are rife, the spread of HIV presents a daunting challenge. The Indian epidemic continues to be concentrated in populations with high risk behavior characterized by unprotected paid sex, anal sex, and injecting drug use with contaminated injecting equipment. Several high risk groups have high HIV prevalence, and sexual networks are wide and actively working. According to India’s National AIDS Control Organization (NACO), the bulk of HIV infections in India occur during unprotected heterosexual intercourse. Consequently, and as the epidemic has matured, women account for a growing proportion of people living with HIV (38 percent in 2005), especially in rural areas. The low rate of multiple partner concurrent sexual relationships among the wider community seem to have, so far, protected the larger body of people with 99 percent of the adult Indian population being HIV negative. However, although overall prevalence remains low, even relatively minor increases in HIV infection rates in a country of more than one billion people could translate into large numbers of people becoming infected.

The ‘Rainbow Nari O Shishu Kallyan Foundation’ identified four major approaches in a groundbreaking study on spread out HIV in Asia. This study undertook by comparing of social-economic norm, family pattern, economic dependency, cause of mounting sex industries, gender discrimination status & global analysis fact. There are four factors that appear to play a crucial role in HIV transmission in Asian Countries: Injection/ intravenous drug use (By sharing needle), female sex work (Due to lack of safe sex knowledge), gender discrimination (which indirectly force females commercial or non-commercial sex), Same sex/ homosexually/ Hizra (Due to lack of HIV/AIDS information, because they act invisible in this society). Poverty & illiteracy fueled it proportionally.

At the beginning of the 1990s, as infection rates continued to rise, responses were strengthened. In 1992 the government set up NACO (the National AIDS Control Organisation), to oversee the formulation of policies, prevention work and control programmes relating to HIV and AIDS. In the same year, the government launched a Strategic Plan for HIV prevention. This plan established the administrative and technical basis for programme management and also set up State AIDS bodies in 25 states and 7 union territories. It was able to make a number of important improvements in HIV prevention such as improving blood safety. The HIV/AIDS programme specialist Mr. Mohammad Khairul Alam said, “several social norms and immature behavior fueled of this disease to scatter rapidly. There are several social components link to develop this harmful situation. Poverty-behind to force it, Gender discrimination plays a vital role; Frustration & risk behavior help to sink humanity resulting infection. The link between poverty & gender discrimination are help to decline socio economic prosperity. This link creates several anti social poisonous issues also. Such as trafficking to prostitute, sell sex for earn or living, break down family norm to create frustration and driven drug point. We notice easily that Illiteracy is the main watchword of all circumstance. So it is not easy to remove it from the society, several programs & strategy are needed to gain sustainable position”.

At the beginning of 1986, despite over 20,000 reported AIDS cases worldwide, India had no reported cases of HIV or AIDS. There was recognition, though, that this would not be the case for long, and concerns were raised about how India would cope once HIV and AIDS cases started to emerge. Recent data suggests there are signs of a decline in HIV prevalence among sex workers in areas where focused interventions have been implemented, particularly in the southern states although overall prevalence levels among this group continues to be high. Data also indicate that there is a slow decrease in HIV prevalence among the general population in southern states. Although more analysis is required, this probably means that the number of people becoming newly infected with HIV is decreasing. This decrease is more perceptible in states such as Tamil Nadu where the intensity of HIV prevention efforts has been high.

People living with HIV in India come from incredibly diverse backgrounds, cultures and lifestyles. The vast majority of infections occur through heterosexual sex, and most of those who become infected would not fall into the category of ‘high-risk groups’ - although members of such groups, including sex workers, men who have sex with men, truck drivers and migrant workers, do face a proportionately higher risk of infection. See our page on affected groups in India for more information.

HIV/AIDS Discrimination in India

Next what?? Indian Muslims and lower castes face discrimination because of AIDs?? :what:
 
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