September 2002

Annual Surveillance Report 2002
(HIV/AIDS,viral hepatitis and sexually transmissible infections in Australia)

From: National Centre in HIV Epidemiology and Clinical research

Summary

After adjusting for reporting delay,there were 8,810 AIDS cases and 6,174 deaths following AIDS, in Australia,cumulative to 31 December 2001.The number of HIV diagnoses,adjusted for multiple reporting,was 18,854 at the end of 2001.An estimated 12,730 people were living with HIV/AIDS in Australia in 2001.

The annual number of AIDS diagnoses in Australia peaked at 954 cases in 1994 and has dropped to 178 cases in 2001.The decline in AIDS incidence from 1994 was due to a sharp drop in HIV incidence occurring in the mid 1980's and to the effectiveness of combination antiretroviral therapy in delaying progression to AIDS among people whose HIV infection was diagnosed before AIDS diagnosis.The number of AIDS cases reported in people whose HIV infection was diagnosed within the preceding three months has remained stable.

The annual number of cases of newly diagnosed HIV infection has remained relatively stable in 1997 - 2001 at around 700 cases.The number of diagnoses of newly acquired HIV infection has also remained stable at around 150-200 diagnoses per year,providing a lower bound to the number of new HIV infections that have actually occurred in Australia over this time.An estimated 450 new HIV infections occur in Australia each year.

Transmission of HIV infection in Australia continues to be mainly through sexual contact between men.A history of male homosexual contact was reported in more than 85% of cases of newly acquired HIV infection diagnosed in 1997 - 2001.HIV prevalence remains below 1% among injecting drug users,prison entrants,and among men and women with a history of homosexual contact,both in Australia and overseas,including women with a history of sex work.

In 1992 - 2001,167 HIV diagnoses and 69 AIDS diagnoses were notified among indigenous people.The population rate of HIV and AIDS diagnosis among Indigenous people was similar to that among non-Indigenous people.However, a higher proportion of HIV diagnoses in Indigenous people were among women,and AIDS incidence has declined more slowly in Indigenous people.

AIDS incidence and estimated HIV prevalence in Australia at the end of 2001 were 0.9 and 66 per 100,000 population,respectively.AIDS incidence in Australia in 2001 was similar to that recorded in the United Kingdom in 2001 and was substantially lower than in France (2.1),Spain(4.8) and the United States (14.3).Within the Asia-Pacific region,estimated HIV prevalence in Cambodia,Myanmar and Thailand were substantially higher than that in Australia in 2001.

Survival following AIDS in Australia has increased from 19.5 months for diagnoses in 1994 to 46.9 months for cases diagnosed in 1997.

An estimated 50% of all people living with HIV infection in Australia in 2001 were treated with antiretroviral therapy.

Viral Hepatitis

For the first time in 5 years,the annual number of diagnoses of hepatitis C infection declined in 2001, to 16,734 cases.The number of diagnoses of newly acquired hepatitis C infection continued to increase from 154 in 1997 to 587 in 2001,probably because of improved monitoring.

An estimated 157,000 people were living with hepatitis C infection in Australia in 2001,including 124,000 with chronic hepatitis C infection and stage 0/1 liver disease,27,000 with stage 2/3 liver disease and 6,500 living with hepatitis C related cirrhosis.A further 53,000 had hepatitis C antibodies but were not chronically infected.

Other Global HIV/AIDS News

Tanzania

The United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) says urgent assistance is needed to help millions of children in Tanzania left destitute by AIDS. Thousands have been orphaned by the epidemic and many others have been infected with HIV. Children form more than half of Tanzania's population!

Australia

And, back home,a parliamentary committee on substance abuse has reportedly heard a fresh HIV/AIDS education campaign is desperately needed in Australia.

The Illicit Drug Users League has warned that HIV rates in Australia will rise as new users who haven't been subject to preventative advertising campaigns,emerge.

Executive Director Annie Madden is reported as saying that if things don't change rapidly in a number of countries in Asia very soon, that epidemic will eclipse the African HIV epidemic which is just mind boggling to even contemplate.

 

 

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