Reuters / Samrang Pring |
Mass HIV/AIDS outbreak spreads panic in Cambodia village
Yahoo Nes | 17 December 2014
More than 80 people, including elderly, women and children, have
tested positive for HIV/AIDS infection in a small village in Cambodia,
authorities confirmed. The infection may have been caused by medics
re-using needles during treatment.
“It’s very rare
indeed to have such a high number of people affected in the same
place, that’s why it’s really worth investigating what
happened,” UNAIDS country director Marie-Odile Emond
said.
She added that none of the most commonly HIV transmission paths -
mother-to-child, sexual intercourse and drug use - seemed to
cause the infection.
A total 82 people in a village in Battambang province,
northwestern Cambodia, have been infected with the virus.
"Of 556 people tested, 72 of them came back positive for
HIV/AIDS," Teng Kunthy, Secretary General of the National
AIDS Authority, told AFP. Fourteen children are among the
infected, he added.
"This is a higher rate than usual... It may be caused by the
use of the same tools such as needles. This is our preliminary
conclusion... we are working to collect more evidence," he
said.
A further 10 people tested positive for the virus, local HIV/AIDS
program director, Hei Sik, told AFP, adding that the villagers
suspected the infection “may have been caused by injections
from private local medics.”
"This is a surprisingly high rate, the highest that I have
ever seen. Some of them are women aged in their 70s and
80s," Hei Sik added.
At least 30 village residents told the National AIDS Authority
(NAA) they had received injections for different maladies, from
typhoid to fevers, from an unlicensed local doctor.
“I suspect we got this from the injection that a doctor in
this commune did to the villagers who often went to get services
from him,” Seoum Chhorn, deputy chief of Roka commune, where
the infection was centered, told the Phnom Penh Post. Chhorn, his
wife and two grandchildren tested positive for the virus.
He identified the doctor as Yem Chren, who left the commune a
week ago with his wife. Health officials have been trying to
contact Chren since Sunday, but unsuccessfully.
“I want to appeal to the Ministry of Health and the
government to intervene and help us immediately and take action
against the doctor who treated and cheated the villagers when he
is unskilled,” added Chhorn.
Now the infected villagers are receiving antiretroviral therapy
(ART) drugs from NAA to have the disease under control.
The first HIV case was reported in Cambodia back in 1991. Since
then more than 76,000 people are currently living with the virus
in the country, according to UNAIDS estimates from 2012.
Authorities are trying hard to stop the spread of the virus.
Prime Minister Hun Sen promised to stop new HIV infections by
2020. Cambodia also allocated at least $ 3.7 million of national
funding to HIV treatment from 2015 to 2017.
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ReplyDeletear hanoi created POL POT it cost khmer life more than 3 million
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now illegal vietname doctor injected the HIV VIRUS to khmer people more than 300 hundred people
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TIME TO TAKE ACTION