lifestyle | health
| Aids in Africa Overstate
How AIDS
in Africa Was Overstated
Reliance on Data From Urban Prenatal Clinics Skewed Early Projections
By Craig
Timberg
Washington
Post Foreign Service
Thursday, April 6, 2006; A01
Correction to This Article
An April 6 article and an accompanying graphic said the HIV
rate among people in Botswana ages 15 to 49 was 34.9 percent.
More recent information shows the rate to be 25.3 percent. The
faulty statistic from the article was also used in an April
10 editorial. |
KIGALI, Rwanda -- Researchers said nearly two
decades ago that this tiny country was part of an AIDS Belt stretching
across the midsection of Africa, a place so infected with a new,
incurable disease that, in the hardest-hit places, one in three
working-age adults were already doomed to die of it.
But
AIDS deaths on the predicted scale never arrived here, government
health officials say. A new national study illustrates why: The
rate of HIV infection among Rwandans ages 15 to 49 is 3 percent,
according to the study, enough to qualify as a major health problem
but not nearly the national catastrophe once predicted.
The new data suggest the rate never reached the
30 percent estimated by some early researchers, nor the nearly 13
percent given by the United Nations in 1998.
The study and similar ones in 15 other countries
have shed new light on the disease across Africa. Relying on the
latest measurement tools, they portray an epidemic that is more
female and more urban than previously believed, one that has begun
to ebb in much of East Africa and has failed to take off as predicted
in most of West Africa.
Yet the disease is devastating southern Africa,
according to the data. It is in that region alone -- in countries
including South Africa, Botswana, Swaziland and Zimbabwe -- that
an AIDS Belt exists, the researchers say.
"What we know now more than ever is southern
Africa is the absolute epicenter," said David Wilson, a senior
AIDS analyst for the World Bank, speaking from Washington.
In the West African country of Ghana, for example,
the overall infection rate for people ages 15 to 49 is 2.2 percent.
But in Botswana, the national infection rate among the same age
group is 34.9 percent. And in the city of Francistown, 45 percent
of men and 69 percent of women ages 30 to 34 are infected with HIV,
the virus that causes AIDS.
Most of the studies were conducted by ORC Macro,
a research corporation based in Calverton, Md., and were funded
by the U.S. Agency for International Development, other international
donors and various national governments in the countries where the
studies took place.
Taken together, they raise questions about monitoring
by the U.N. AIDS agency, which for years overestimated the extent
of HIV/AIDS in East and West Africa and, by a smaller margin, in
southern Africa, according to independent researchers and U.N. officials.
"What we had before, we cannot trust it,"
said Agnes Binagwaho, a senior Rwandan health official.
Years of HIV overestimates, researchers say, flowed
from the long-held assumption that the extent of infection among
pregnant women who attended prenatal clinics provided a rough proxy
for the rate among all working-age adults in a country. Working
age was usually defined as 15 to 49. These rates also were among
the only nationwide data available for many years, especially in
Africa, where health tracking was generally rudimentary.
The new studies show, however, that these earlier
estimates were skewed in favor of young, sexually active women in
the urban areas that had prenatal clinics. Researchers now know
that the HIV rate among these women tends to be higher than among
the general population.
The new studies rely on random testing conducted
across entire countries, rather than just among pregnant women,
and they generally require two forms of blood testing to guard against
the numerous false positive results that inflated early estimates
of the disease. These studies also are far more effective at measuring
the often dramatic variations in infection rates between rural and
urban people and between men and women.
UNAIDS, the agency headed since its creation in
1995 by Peter Piot, a Belgian physician, produced its first global
snapshot of the disease in 1998. Each year since, the United Nations
has issued increasingly dire assessments: UNAIDS estimated that
36 million people around the world were infected in 2000, including
25 million in Africa. In 2002, the numbers were 42 million globally,
with 29 million in Africa.
But by 2002, disparities were already emerging.
A national study in the southern African country of Zambia, for
example, found a rate of 15.6 percent, significantly lower than
the U.N. rate of 21.5 percent. In Burundi, which borders Rwanda
in central East Africa, a national study found a rate of 5.4 percent,
not the 8.3 percent estimated by UNAIDS.
In West Africa, Sierra Leone, just then emerging
from a devastating civil war, was found to have a national prevalence
rate of less than 1 percent -- compared with an estimated U.N. rate
of 7 percent.
Such disparities, independent researchers say,
skewed years of policy judgments and decisions on where to spend
precious health-care dollars.
"From a research point of view, they've done
a pathetic job," said Paul Bennell, a British economist whose
studies of the impact of AIDS on African school systems have shown
mortality far below what UNAIDS had predicted. "They were not
predisposed, let's put it that way, to weigh the counterevidence.
They were looking to generate big bucks."
The United Nations started to revise its estimates
in light of the new studies in its 2004 report, reducing the number
of infections in Africa by 4.4 million, back to the total four years
earlier of 25 million. It also gradually decreased the overall infection
rate for working-age adults in sub-Saharan Africa, from 9 percent
in a 2002 report to 7.2 percent in its latest report, released in
November.
Peter Ghys, an epidemiologist who has worked for
UNAIDS since 1999, acknowledged in an interview from his office
in Geneva that HIV projections several years ago were too high because
they relied on data from prenatal clinics.
But Ghys said the agency made the best estimates
possible with the information available. As better data emerged,
such as the new wave of national population studies, it has made
revisions where necessary, he said.
"What has happened is we have come to realize
that indeed we have overestimated the epidemic a bit," he said.
On its Web site, UNAIDS describes itself as "the
chief advocate for worldwide action against AIDS." And many
researchers say the United Nations' reliance on rigorous science
waned after it created the separate AIDS agency in 1995 -- the first
time the world body had taken this approach to tackle a single disease.
In the place of previous estimates provided by
the World Health Organization, outside researchers say, the AIDS
agency produced reports that increasingly were subject to political
calculations, with the emphasis on raising awareness and money.
"It's pure advocacy, really," said Jim
Chin, a former U.N. official who made some of the first global HIV
prevalence estimates while working for WHO in the late 1980s and
early 1990s. "Once you get a high number, it's really hard
once the data comes in to say, 'Whoops! It's not 100,000. It's 60,000.'
"
Chin, speaking from Stockton, Calif., added, "They
keep cranking out numbers that, when I look at them, you can't defend
them."
Ghys said he never sensed pressure to inflate
HIV estimates. "I can't imagine why UNAIDS or WHO would want
to do that," he said. "If we did that, it would just affect
our credibility."
Ghys added that studies now show that the overall
percentage of Africans with HIV has stabilized, though U.N. models
still show increasing numbers of people with the virus because of
burgeoning populations.
Many other researchers, including Wilson from
the World Bank and two epidemiologists from the U.S. Agency for
International Development who wrote a study published last week
in the Lancet, a British medical journal, dispute that conclusion,
saying that the number of new cases in Africa peaked several years
ago.
Some involved in the fight against AIDS say that
tallying HIV cases is not nearly as important as finding the resources
to fight the disease. That is especially true now that antiretroviral
drugs are more affordable, making it possible to extend millions
of lives if enough money and health-care workers are available to
facilitate treatment.
"It doesn't matter how long the line is if
you never get to the end of it," said Francois Venter, a South
African doctor and head of Johannesburg General Hospital's rapidly
expanding antiretroviral drug program, speaking in an interview
in Johannesburg.
But to the researchers who drive AIDS policy,
differences in infection rates are not merely academic. They scour
the world looking for evidence of interventions that have worked,
such as the rigorous enforcement of condom use at brothels in Thailand
and aggressive public campaigns that have urged Ugandans to limit
their sexual partners to one.
Programs deemed successful are urged on other
countries and funded lavishly by international donors, often to
the exclusion of other programs.
Rwanda, a mountainous country of about 8.5 million
people jammed into a land area smaller than Maryland, has relied
on approaches similar to those used in Uganda, and may have produced
similar declines in HIV. UNAIDS estimated in 1998 that 370,000 Rwandans
were infected, equal to 12.75 percent of all working-age adults
and a substantial percentage of children as well. Every two years
since, the agency has lowered that estimate -- to 11.2 percent in
2000, 8.9 percent in 2002 and 5.1 percent in 2004.
Dirk van Hove, the top UNAIDS official in Rwanda,
said the next official estimate, due in May, would show an infection
rate of "about 3 percent," in line with the new national
study. He said the U.N. estimate tracked the declining prevalence.
Rwandan health officials say their national HIV
infection rate might once have topped 3 percent and then declined.
But it's just as likely, they say, that these apparent trends reflected
nothing more than flawed studies.
Even so, Rwanda's cities show signs of a serious
AIDS problem not yet tamed. The new study found that 8.6 percent
of urban, working-age women have HIV. Overall, officials say, 150,000
Rwandans are infected, less than half the number estimated by UNAIDS
in 1998.
Bruno Ngirabatware, a physician who has treated
AIDS patients in Kigali since the 1980s, said he has seen no evidence
of a recent decline in HIV infection rates.
"There's lots of patients there, always,"
he said.
© 2006 The Washington Post Company
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