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About 1.7m persons accessed HIV/AIDS treatment in South East, says NACA

The National Agency for the Control of AIDS (NACA) has revealed that no fewer than 1.7 million persons accessed HIV/AIDs treatment in the South East region in 2021

The National Agency for the Control of AIDS (NACA) has revealed that no fewer than 1.7 million persons accessed HIV/AIDs treatment in the South East region in 2021.

HIV positive. Photo Shutterstock


South East Zonal Coordinator of NACA, Dr. Miriam Ezekwe, disclosed this, yesterday, at a stakeholders’ coordination meeting in Awka, the Anambra State capital.

She said: “At the end of December 2021, it was found that no fewer than 1.7 million persons sought and accessed HIV/AIDS treatment in the region.

“In 2015, a similar survey showed that some 670,000 patients sought and accessed the treatments. This current data shows a 37.4 per cent increase in six years.”

Ezekwe stated that such epidemic control was achieved in the region following effective policy implementation, resources allocation and actions taken by stakeholders.

She explained that non-pharmaceutical measures such as peer education, contraceptive and lubricant usage among others, also helped to control the rate of infection, adding: “The result of this is that people infected with the virus are able to seek and access treatment instead of suffering in silence.”

Also speaking, Dr. Adaoha Anosike, UNAIDS Resident Programme Officer in Anambra, expressed worry that the state had the highest HIV/AIDS prevalence rate in the region.

She described the meeting as timely and strategic, adding that it would produce seminal and useful ideas for the campaign against the disease.

“It is important to take the sensitisation about the disease to every nook and cranny of the state,” she said.

Anosike thanked stakeholders for attending the meeting and contributing their ideas towards tackling the scourge

It would be recalled that the 2018 HIV/AIDS indicator and impact survey showed that the South East had 1.9 per cent prevalence rate, as it listed Anambra as the highest in the region with 2.4 per cent, followed by Abia with a
2.1 per cent prevalence rate.

It further showed that Enugu had 2.0 per cent, Imo (1.8 per cent) and Ebonyi (0.8 per cent) HIV/AIDS prevalence rate.

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