(WNN/VOA) CAMBODIA: Cambodian health officials will travel to Washington in July to share their experiences and ideas at the 19th
International AIDS Conference. Health officials now say they are
worried a decrease in aid funding to fight the disease could hurt their
efforts to stop it.
“After checking the annual rate of HIV patients, we could see a big
decrease in the HIV rate,” Mean Chivun, director of the Center Against
HIV, Skin Disease, and Venereal Disease at the Ministry of Health, told
VOA Khmer. “In 1998 there were 100 new HIV patients a day. From 2010 to
2012, that daily rate is approximately 2.”
It took more than decade for HIV/AIDS to reach Cambodia after the
lethal viral illness saw its first documented case in the United States
in1981.
But in the 21 years since, Cambodia has made strides in reducing the prevalence of the disease—far below 1 percent.
By 2010, 63,000 of the 14 million people living in Cambodia, or about
0.5 percent of the population, were sick with HIV/AIDS, according to
government figures.
However, recent budget cuts due to the global economic crisis have
required a reevaluation of funding, redirecting the flow of money
towards countries that have yet to see substantive improvement.
That means some funding to Cambodia has been cut.
Cambodia’s HIV/AIDS rate improvement relies on about $50 million per
year for treatment, supplies, and preventative measures; 90 percent of
this comes from external donations, largely from the US Agency for
International Development and the Global Fund for AIDS, Tuberculosis,
and Malaria.
Both of these aid agencies have faced particular fiscal hardship in recent years.
The Global Fund, for example, eliminated its eleventh round of
funding altogether this past spring and will provide no new grants until
2014.
The shockwaves of these changes have hardest hit the 170 non-profit
groups in Cambodia to whom the Cambodian government channels external
funding. Of these groups, the Khmer HIV/AIDS NGO Alliance, or Khana,
receives the majority of the funds, more than 50 percent.
Khana’s director, Um Sopheap, acknowledges the pitfalls of these budget cuts, but remains optimistic.
“The sponsoring countries cut off aid to Cambodia because Cambodia
already succeeded in HIV prevention,” he told VOA Khmer. “The Global
Fund and the US government also have their own [economic] problems, so
the funding was decreased. [But] the HIV rate [in Cambodia] will be
lower in the next several years.”
This is because the US recently pledged to provide further aid from October 2012 until September 2017, he said.
The Cambodian government shares this optimism. In a recent national
plan, health officials outlined a plan to cut the annual rate of new HIV
infections to zero by 2020, citing recent trends as the basis for their
prediction.
The Health Ministry’s Mean Chivun attributes the decrease to a
changing mindset among sexually active Cambodians, claiming that on
whole, infected individuals are now actively committed to not spreading
HIV to their partners.
However, several groups are still at risk: men who have sex with men,
homosexuals, nightclub workers, especially beer promotion girls, and
drug users.
A female patient, who requested anonymity, said that most Cambodian
women are “shy to discuss the problems [of HIV and AIDS]” with their
husbands. Because of this, she said, she contracted HIV in 2002 from her
husband.
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WNN/VOA
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