Pubdate: Sun, 30 Dec 2001
Source: New York Times (NY)
Section: Health
Copyright: 2001 The New York Times Company
Contact:  http://www.nytimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/298
Author: Elisabeth Rosenthal

WITH IGNORANCE AS THE FUEL, AIDS SPEEDS ACROSS CHINA

KUNMING, China -- Li Bai's body is on the front line of the battle to 
prevent an explosion of AIDS in China. For the last seven years, the 
baby-faced 23-year-old with platform sneakers and blond-streaked hair has 
been using drugs -- a dangerous hobby in a city where an estimated 40 
percent of intravenous drug users are now infected with H.I.V., the virus 
that causes AIDS.

She has long known about AIDS, at least in a general sense. But, she 
confesses, she has sometimes shared needles when shooting up. She has also 
sold sex on the street, she admits, and condoms have not always been a 
priority. Such behaviors put her at extraordinary risk of acquiring H.I.V. 
and of spreading it.

"I'd heard of AIDS and was scared of it, but when I needed drugs or needed 
money, I did what I had to do," said Ms. Li, sitting in the lounge in the 
drug treatment clinic here where she was recently admitted.

AIDS in China is spreading at a breakneck pace -- reported cases are up 67 
percent this year over last -- in large part because its citizens are so 
poorly informed about the disease.

With only scattershot education programs, even those at very high risk of 
getting AIDS often do not know how to protect themselves; many have never 
even heard of H.I.V. In a country where patients generally receive no 
counseling after testing positive for H.I.V., known carriers often have 
only a vague idea of how it is transmitted, and they inadvertently infect 
others.

As a result, a disease that was for many years confined to certain groups, 
particularly drug users, has started to move quickly into the general 
population, generally through sex. To make matters worse, the barriers that 
tend to slow sexual transmission from high-risk to low- risk groups in the 
West are extremely porous here.

In China, a huge number of poor young women work part time selling sex in a 
large and amorphous sex industry. As for gay men, intense social stigma and 
the pressure to carry on family lines pushes the vast majority to marry and 
father children, so they have sexual relations with wives as well as male 
lovers.

"China is on the verge of a catastrophe that could result in unimaginable 
human suffering, economic loss and social devastation," said a recent 
internal United Nations report that was not publicly released, which 
criticized China for its "weak response" to AIDS.

It concluded that only immediate and aggressive action could stem the 
spread: "An H.I.V./AIDS disaster of unimaginable proportions now lies in 
wait to rattle the country and it can be feared that in just a couple of 
years, China might count more H.I.V. infections than any other country."

China now estimates it has 600,000 people with H.I.V., although 
surveillance is extremely poor in some severely affected areas and many 
experts believe that number is drastically low.

Although the Chinese government has admitted this year to having a serious 
AIDS problem and recently initiated a series of educational programs, many 
are still in the planning stage and others are small local programs 
financed by foreign organizations. Although officials here in Yunnan 
Province have welcomed such efforts, many provinces have not, so 
information has not permeated the poor rural regions where many Chinese 
with AIDS live.

In the largest national survey to date, conducted a year ago by China's 
State Family Planning Commission, 20 percent of Chinese in 12 counties 
representing a cross section of the country had never heard of the disease. 
Only 50 percent knew that it could be transmitted by sex.

More alarming, the most profound ignorance was found in Shangcai County in 
Henan Province, where some villages have adult H.I.V. infection rates 
approaching 50 percent -- the result of selling blood to collectors that 
use unsanitary practices.

Forty percent of the county's residents said they did not know how AIDS 
could be prevented, suggesting that they could be unknowingly passing it to 
others.

Wang Zhiguo, a former blood seller from Henan Province, said in an 
interview that he had not even heard of AIDS until this spring, long after 
he began to suffer from AIDS-related headaches and fevers. Even today, he 
is unsure whether H.I.V. can be transmitted through sex. And from mother to 
infant? "I'm not clear about that either," Mr. Wang said.

Dr. Zhao Baige of the Family Planning Commission, who has pressed for more 
aggressive education, said: "In our studies, less than 50 percent of people 
knew that condoms could prevent the transmission of H.I.V. That shows we 
have a serious prevention problem."

As the government has worked hard to rein in unhygienic practices in the 
blood industry, the sex industry has become for many experts an even more 
worrisome conduit.

The relaxation of economic and social controls over the last two decades 
has been accompanied by a resurgence in prostitution, which had been 
virtually eliminated by Mao. Today, paid sex is a common activity 
associated with business trips, official junkets and sometimes tour 
packages. Even small towns have businesses that function as brothels -- 
nominally beauty salons, massage parlors or karaoke bars.

And sex work, referred to politely by officials as "entertainment work," is 
often a low-wage part-time job that poorly educated rural women cycle in 
and out of when they need cash. Many have never heard of AIDS, and the mix 
of ignorance, mobility and sex is an efficient way for the disease to spread.

In a low white building that used to be a shoe factory, in a small town 
deep in rural Sichuan Province, five bleary-eyed young women emerged in 
midafternoon from the dormitory of the karaoke bar where they have found 
temporary employment. They cuddled together on a plush couch, next to a 
dance hall with thick velvet curtains, surrounded by bedrooms.

"It's hard to explain how any of us got here," said a delicate woman named 
Tan, wrapped in a pink quilted bathrobe decorated with little red elves. 
"But these days the economy is not good, and without a diploma it's hard to 
find work, and I haven't found a husband yet." She, like others, spoke on 
the condition that the town not be named.

A decade ago, Ms. Tan -- originally from a big city in western China -- 
would have been assigned a job by the government. But with reforms, that 
practice has ended, and so she fends for herself.

The women tend to spend just a few weeks or months working here, before 
moving on to other places or careers. Their clients are local officials and 
businessmen, as well as the long-haul truckers who pass through. Their boss 
is a police officer's wife.

"I've come here to work several times before and stayed for a couple of 
weeks each time," said a woman named Zhang, a peddler in another town. 
"Sometimes it's because my finances are bad," she said. "Sometimes it's 
because I'm unhappy and I want to get away."

All the women said they had come to this relatively remote location because 
they did not want their families to find out about their work. Most said 
they had heard of AIDS, which they called "a frightening disease," since 
their boss had allowed a foreign health group to hold lectures about H.I.V. 
But the new arrivals were uncertain about exactly how to prevent it, 
believing that a douche would solve the problem.

Such girls can be found virtually all over China, from the smallest towns 
to the biggest cities, where thinly obscured sex businesses occupy many 
blocks. In Kunming, a long strip of Xibao Street is lined with 
"hairdressing salons" where employees dress in short, tight skirts and 
leopard-print tops, where plush couches outnumber barber's chairs.

"In saunas, massage parlors, karaoke bars, dance halls -- some of the 
hospitality girls also do sex work," said Wei Shanbo of the Wuhan city 
health bureau at a recent seminar on AIDS. "They're in hairdressing salons, 
too -- but they're special salons -- there's no pair of scissors to be found."

Recent studies by Chinese researchers have found rising levels of H.I.V. 
among sex workers -- up to 10 percent in some cities -- as well as low 
levels of awareness about H.I.V. and condom use. In one survey of 63 sex 
workers in Shanghai from beauty parlors, bars and saunas, only 18 had heard 
of AIDS and only 2 knew how it was transmitted.

Chinese doctors tend to view sex workers as the "bridge" that allows AIDS 
to spread, and an increasing number of programs seek to educate this 
population.

But then there are the men.

"The government always wants to say AIDS and sexually transmitted diseases 
are from prostitutes," said Pan Cuiming, a professor of sociology at 
People's University in Beijing. "But most of these girls are just poor 
children -- they are victims -- they didn't have diseases when they 
started." He noted that some were paid as little as $1.20 for sex and 
lacked the power to insist on condoms.

Professor Pan and others say that education needs to focus more on the men 
who bring the virus back to their spouses. Research by Professor Pan and 
others suggests that the men tend to be businessmen, a group that previous 
AIDS prevention efforts have not focused on.

One young man named Sun recalled his life over the last two years working 
in advertising in the southern Chinese boomtown of Shenzhen, saying: "I was 
making a lot of money and going to clubs and having sex with a lot of 
people. I know a number were prostitutes. I sometimes used condoms, 
sometimes did not."

As a result of such exploits, there is a well documented, skyrocketing rate 
of sexually transmitted diseases like gonorrhea in China. That disease, for 
example, quickly produces symptoms, and people tend to seek immediate 
treatment. But because AIDS lies dormant for years, those who have 
contracted H.I.V. are mostly yet to be counted.

The extent of the trend among China's gay population is a huge unknown, 
although some specialists in Beijing say that about a third of their 
patients with H.I.V. were infected during homosexual relationships.

The Chinese government is addressing the trend, although the process has 
been moving slowly.

"We realize that now is the final chance for China to control H.I.V./ AIDS 
at low expense," said Dr. Zhao of the Family Planning Commission.

Charged with carrying out the one-child policy, the commission has in 
recent years expanded its focus to women's health and is making plans to 
provide AIDS education at all of its clinics starting next year. Dr. Zhao 
said nearly all of China's provinces had agreed to take part in the 
program, although there had been some resistance at the local level and 
only about one-third had financing.

Indeed, previous efforts to provide H.I.V. education and raise awareness 
have all too often been defeated by concerns about saving face and social 
conservatism. Although the "entertainment workers" at the 
shoe-factory-turned-karaoke-bar are now learning proper condom use, 
prostitutes in detention are more often lectured about renouncing an 
immoral career than taught techniques for protected sex. Likewise, the 
Jieshibang Company, a condom manufacturer, has had its safe-sex billboards 
removed by local authorities in 5 of 20 cities.

"There is low acceptance of condom use, and people think that if it's 
related to sex it's a bad product," said Wang Xuehai, a company executive, 
adding, "our biggest barrier has been China's traditional ideas."