Pubdate: Wed, 19 Aug 2009 Source: Prince Albert Daily Herald (CN SN) Copyright: 2009 Prince Albert Daily Herald Contact: http://www.paherald.sk.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1918 Author: Angela Hill HIV: A GROWING CONCERN IN SASKATCHEWAN Saskatchewan's HIV rates are causing concern throughout the medical community, bringing forward comparisons with developing nations. "Over the past five years you have seen the rates stabilize in sub-Saharan Africa ... it has done the killing and now it has stabilized. That was the bubble bursting," said Dr. Khami Chokani, medical health officer of the Prince Albert Parkland Health Region, who's worked in countries across southern Africa. "If you think decimating the African population was bad ... HIV in this province will kill 15 to 30 per cent (of the aboriginal population). Not all at one time, but over a five-to10-year period." In Saskatchewan, there were 174 cases of HIV in 2008, a three-fold increase from 2004, according to data released by the Ministry of Health. Aboriginal people are the largest group affected, and intravenous drug users sharing needles is the main way HIV is transmitted in this province. Young aboriginal women are of increasing concern. "In the publichealth sector, this is having a considerable effect, as these increases are appearing primarily in the young females, pregnant women and newborn babies," Chokani said. Dr. Moira McKinnon, Saskatchewan's chief medical health officer, said the current situation is becoming "urgent" and that it is "escalating." " There are babies being born with HIV and that's completely avoidable. We know that young girls are getting infected and they are getting sick very quickly, and all of this is avoidable, if we get onto it," she said. Stephen Lewis, a professor in global health at McMaster University, can't understand how babies are born with HIV in North America. "Some of the double standards are terribly worrisome ... There is no excuse whatsoever in Canada for having a double standard ( between) major hospitals or pediatric centres in the south and what happens in aboriginal communities in the North," he said during a phone interview with the Herald from his office in Toronto. "It's just inexcusable, it's indefensible, it's unconscionable, that aboriginal babies should be born HIV positive, when it's not necessary. " During Lewis's tenure as the UN Secretary-General's Special Envoy for HIV/AIDS in Africa, he saw that treatment for an HIV-positive woman who is carrying a child or continuing care for a baby could reduce mother-to-child transmission by almost 99 per cent. Health officials here are also concerned about accessibility to health care. There are many people in the First Nations community who distrust the health system, said Kelly Patrick, interim director of health for Metis Nation-Saskatchewan. "They don't feel compelled to go to the reserve clinic because that's a community clinic and once they walk into the reserve clinic and you ask to be tested ... the cat is out of the bag," she said. Provincial, federal and aboriginal jurisdictional boundaries make it difficult for people with HIV to access the care they need, according to health officials. "What's missing is, a lot of the connections between authorities, information flow, the understanding of what's driving this epidemic and resources to deal with it, because the caseload is becoming unmanageable," said McKinnon, who heads the provincial HIV strategy. Stigma and discrimination associated with HIV needs to be addressed to reverse misinformation and increase understanding of the virus, said Lewis. "The stigma that is associated with AIDS is entrenched in many of the aboriginal communities, making it very difficult for them to deal with the issue," he said. "Things are pretty grim in a number of communities, whether it is the downtown Vancouver's eastside or whether it's northern Saskatchewan communities." - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- HIV and aids HIV is short for human immunodeficiency virus, a virus that causes AIDS. AIDS stands for acquired immunodeficiency syndrome and is caused by HIV. Someone with HIV needs to have two infections, such as tuberculosis, related to their lowered immune system before they are considered to have AIDS. 17 per 100,000 people are HIV positive in Saskatchewan 10 per 100,000 people is the national average HIV transmission can increase exponentially if it isn't addressed quickly Source: Provincial health data - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart