New HIV/AIDS Infections in Australia Surge*
By MERAIAH FOLEY
The Associated Press
October 13, 2006; 7:30 PM
SYDNEY, Australia -- New HIV cases in Australia surged more than 40
percent from 2000 to 2005, according to study results released Thursday,
prompting fears that drug treatment advances are making people lax about
practicing safe sex.
The annual survey report, issued by the National Center in HIV
Epidemiology and Clinical Research, found that new HIV infections
reported in Australia rose from 656 in 2000 to 930 in 2005 _ a 41
percent leap. HIV is the virus that causes AIDS.
Gay men accounted for about 70 percent of the new cases. Heterosexuals
made up 19 percent, while intravenous drug users and unknown
transmission paths accounted for the rest.
According to the report, new infections hit an all-time high of about
1,700 in 1984, then declined steadily through the late 1990s. But in
2000, the trend apparently reversed.
It's not just HIV that is on the rise in Australia.
Around 41,300 new cases of the sexually transmitted disease chlamydia
were reported in 2005, a fourfold increase over 1995.
New gonorrhea cases have almost doubled in the past decade, the study said.
"It's very possible that people are just not prioritizing safe sex as
they maybe used to in the very serious HIV/AIDS era" of the late 1980s
and early 90s, said the center's deputy director, John Kaldor.
"It might be here that improvements in HIV treatments have lessened the
motivation for people to protect themselves sexually," Kaldor said.
Australia has about 15,000 people living with HIV, and around 70 percent
are being treated with life-prolonging anti-retroviral drugs, the study
found.
Don Baxter, executive director of the Australia Federation of AIDS
Organizations, said widespread use of the drugs _ which have been found
to slow the progression of HIV to AIDS _ could be a factor behind the
recent rise, especially among gay men.
"The place of HIV in gay men's lives has receded enormously from where
it was, because they and their friends have stopped dying," he said "So
the level of attention to it is much reduced."
He said so-called "treatment optimism" could make some people more
likely to take risks, or "at least rationalize having unprotected sex."
Australia had 22,361 reported cases of HIV as of the end of 2005. A
further 9,872 people have been diagnosed with full-blown AIDS, and
around 6,700 have died from AIDS, the report said.
The National Center in HIV Epidemiology and Clinical Research, an
independent medical research institution, collaborates with the
government on setting strategy to combat the spread of AIDS.