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						 More 
						than 18 million on HIV treatment, a million more than 
						2015: UNAIDS 
			
   
            
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		[November 21, 2016] 
		By Kate Kelland 
			
		LONDON, Nov 21 - More than 18 million 
		people now have access to life-saving AIDS treatment, 1.2 million more 
		than at the end of last year, the United Nations said on Monday. 
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			 In a report on the AIDS pandemic, which has infected 78 million 
			people and killed 35 million since it began in the 1980s, UNAIDS 
			said the consistently strong scale-up of treatment has seen annual 
			AIDS-related deaths drop by 45 percent to 1.1 million in 2015 from a 
			peak of about 2 million in 2005. 
			 
			But, as more HIV-positive people live longer, the challenges of 
			caring for them as they get older, of preventing the virus spreading 
			and of reducing new infections are tough, UNAIDS said, even though 
			drugs can reduce virus levels in a patient's blood to near zero and 
			significantly reduce the risk of passing it on. 
			 
			"The progress we have made is remarkable, particularly around 
			treatment, but it is also incredibly fragile," UNAIDS' executive 
			director Michel Sidibe said as the report was published. 
			
			  
			With detailed data showing some of the many complexities of the HIV 
			epidemic, the report found that people are particularly vulnerable 
			to HIV at certain points in their lives. 
			 
			It called for "life-cycle" approach to offer help and prevention 
			measures for everyone at every stage of life. 
			 
			As people with HIV grow older, they are at risk of developing 
			long-term side-effects from HIV treatment, developing drug 
			resistance and requiring treatment for other illnesses such as 
			tuberculosis and hepatitis C. 
			 
			The report also cited data from South Africa showing that young 
			women who become infected with HIV often catch the virus from older 
			men. It said prevention is vital to ending the epidemic in young 
			women and the cycle of HIV infection needs to be broken. 
			
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			"Young women are facing a triple threat," said Sidibe. "They are at 
			high risk of HIV infection, have low rates of HIV testing, and have 
			poor adherence to treatment." 
			 
			The report, saying the number of people with HIV getting life-saving 
			drugs was 18.2 million, also showed that the rapid progress in 
			getting AIDS drugs to those who need them is having a significant 
			life-extending impact. 
			 
			In 2015, there were 5.8 million people aged over 50 living with HIV 
			- more than ever before. 
			 
			UNAIDS said that if treatment targets are reached - the U.N. is 
			aiming to have 30 million HIV positive people on treatment by 2020 - 
			that number will soar. 
			 
			(Editing by Louise Ireland) 
			[© 2016 Thomson Reuters. All rights 
				reserved.] Copyright 2016 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, 
			broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. 
			
			
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