AIDS / HIV: September 2007 Archives

China still is treating AIDS cases poorly

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By Maureen Fan - The Washington Post | The Philadelphia Enquirer
September 30, 2007

MIANCHI, China - Twice a week, just after school lets out in this small county in Henan province, a 13-year-old girl with a short bob and wide smile holds her parents' hands and walks two blocks down the street into the harsh fluorescent light of an emergency medical station.

There, she pulls back the waistband of her pants while a nurse dabs disinfectant, prepares a syringe and gives the girl's right buttock a quick jab.

"It doesn't hurt," the girl said after a recent visit. "I'm used to it."

The girl, whose parents asked that her name not be used, has HIV, which they say she contracted through an unnecessary blood transfusion in 1995. Despite early symptoms suggesting she had the virus, doctors at the hospital that treated her said her problems were minor and unrelated to the transfusion. They gave her anti-inflammatory drugs and blister cream.

Not until March, when the family turned to another hospital in neighboring Shaanxi province, did doctors test the girl and determine she had HIV.

"At the time, I almost collapsed. I just didn't want to live," said the girl's mother, who asked to be identified only by her surname, Li.

The girl's case is hardly unique in China, where despite official pledges at the national level to care for people with the virus that causes AIDS, local hospital and government officials frequently express reluctance to do so.

Some fear having to compensate people who contracted the virus through blood transfusions, a common method of HIV transmission in China. Others fear that the publicity of AIDS cases will hamper local investment.

Communist Party leaders long treated AIDS as taboo. In recent years, however, China has won praise from the West for campaigns to raise awareness. In 2003, the government promised free HIV testing and counseling for all who wanted it, and free antiretroviral treatment for the poor. That year, Premier Wen Jiabao made headlines after being shown on state TV shaking hands with AIDS patients.

And yet hospitals like the one here in Mianchi County not only fail to offer to test for HIV, they deliberately misdiagnose and cover up the problem, according to experts.

There were 18,543 new cases of HIV reported in the first six months of this year, nearly as many as for all of last year, according to the official Xinhua news agency. China's estimate of 650,000 AIDS cases, among a population of 1.3 billion people, is extremely low, domestic and international AIDS groups say.

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This page is a archive of entries in the AIDS / HIV category from September 2007.

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Beijing 2008
Silenced - China's Great Wall of Censorship. This book takes the reader on a fascinating and disturbing trip behind China’s Great Wall of Censorship. It also tells the story of Voice of Tibet, the radio station China couldn’t silence.

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Readers' Comments

  • goodguy: 中国目前还是个发展中国家,快速的经济发展导致了很多问题,比如环境污染,血汗工厂,贫富差距,但请问哪个发展中国家没有这些问题呢,如果拿个放大镜无限夸大这些问题是没有意义的.那些满口仁义... [more]
  • Ahmed Mustafa: Africans are to blame for accepting this dirty chinese in thier continet. They only export ... [more]
  • 匿名: 我也不知道说什么,反正我们真的什么也不知道,但是我们觉得有很多的真的是太残忍了。比如计划生育的政策,很多的农民因为这样子的多生了一个孩子而全家被杀死或者全村人都去坐牢了。我们也不知道... [more]
  • bjfans: you foreginers. CHINA will get stronger be careful do not infuriate chinese!... [more]
  • han: This just shows that how China cannot exist within a vacuum. Everything is inter-related. Y... [more]