In Brazil, drug giveaway blunts AIDS
By Associated Press
Published July 6, 2004
RIO DE JANEIRO - A decade ago, health experts predicted an AIDS explosion in Latin America, striking hardest at Brazil, with its teeming population and sexual permissiveness.
But the explosion never came, and experts say Brazil's handling of the problem may keep it from ever happening.
"If you look over the map of HIV/AIDS in Latin America it looks like the African map from 15 years ago," said Paulo Lyra, a consultant on Latin America for the Pan American Health Organization.
"But what's different with Latin America is that it is by far the developing region with the most access to antiretroviral treatment."
Antiretroviral drugs reduce HIV in the bloodstream, making HIV infection a chronic disease rather than a terminal one.
In Latin America and the Caribbean, about 400,000 people are believed to need AIDS drugs and about 55 percent are getting them. In Africa, an estimated 4.4-million people need drugs but only 2 percent are getting them.
The biggest success story is Brazil, thanks to a program of crisis management that has been praised by AIDS experts.
With a population of nearly 180-million, Brazil has by far the largest number of patients. By manufacturing cheap generic versions of the otherwise expensive AIDS drug cocktail and offering them free to all who need them, the country has put itself at the forefront of Latin America's war on AIDS.
Brazil's drug industry faced a threat when the country entered the World Trade Organization, which mandates compliance with trademark rules. But it was able to negotiate deep discounts with pharmaceutical makers simply by threatening to break the rules if treatments became too costly.
Brazil was a global pioneer in the manufacture of cheap generic AIDS drugs and still manufactures those patented before it signed its intellectual property law. It distributes these to patients who have not yet developed resistance and need more advanced drugs.
Brazil spends about 1.5 percent of its health budget, or $175-million a year, on anti-AIDS drugs.
The giveaway cut the death rate in half in just four years, saving an estimated 100,000 lives. Since then, the death toll has crept back up, but only gradually.
In 2002, 11,047 Brazilians died from the disease, only slightly more than the 11,024 who died in 1997.
In 1990, the World Bank estimated Brazil would have 1.2-million people infected with HIV by 2000. Today, authorities estimate the total is about half that many.
The Brazilian government funds five pilot programs in Latin America, providing free anti-AIDS drugs and expertise.
Most of these programs only treat about 100 patients. Brazil treats nearly everyone.
[Last modified July 5, 2004, 23:42:07]
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