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DANIEL HALPERIN-
United States
Agency for International Development’s H.I.V.
prevention adviser in southern Africa in 2005 and
2006...President Bush’s proposal to nearly double
American foreign assistance to fight AIDS strike me,
an H.I.V.-AIDS specialist for 15 years, as
missing the mark...
The fact is, spending $50
billion or more on foreign health assistance
does make sense, but only if it is
not limited to
H.I.V.-AIDS programs.
Last year, for instance, as
the United States spent almost $3 billion on
AIDS programs in Africa... nearly 100-to-1
imbalance is disastrously inequitable —
especially considering that in Africa H.I.V.
tends to be most prevalent in the relatively
wealthiest and most developed countries...
The Global Fund’s director,
Michel Kazatchkine, has acknowledged, “We are
not a global fund that funds local health...the
second-wealthiest country per capita in
sub-Saharan Africa, is ...one of a dozen Pepfar
“focus” countries...receive about $300 million
to fight AIDS — in addition to the hundreds of
millions already granted by drug companies,
private foundations and other donors. While in
that sparsely populated country last
month, I learned that much of its AIDS money
remains unspent, as even its
state-of-the-art H.I.V. clinics cannot absorb
such a large influx of cash.
Op-Ed Contributor
Putting a Plague in
Perspective
By DANIEL HALPERIN
Published: January 1, 2008
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ALTHOUGH the United Nations recently lowered its
global H.I.V. estimates, as many as 33 million people worldwide are
still living with the AIDS virus. This pandemic requires continued
attention; preventing further deaths and orphans remains imperative.
But the well-meaning promises of some presidential candidates to
outdo even President Bush’s proposal to nearly double American
foreign assistance to fight AIDS strike me, an H.I.V.-AIDS
specialist for 15 years, as missing the mark.
Some have criticized Mr. Bush for requesting “only” $30 billion for
the next five years for AIDS and related problems, with the leading
Democratic candidates having pledged to commit at least $50 billion
if they are elected. Yet even the current $15 billion in spending
represents an unprecedented amount of money aimed mainly at a single
disease.
Meanwhile, many other public health needs in developing countries
are being ignored. The fact is, spending $50 billion or more on
foreign health assistance does make sense, but only if it is not
limited to H.I.V.-AIDS programs.
Last year, for instance, as the United States spent almost $3
billion on AIDS programs in Africa, it invested only about $30
million in traditional safe-water projects. This nearly 100-to-1
imbalance is disastrously inequitable — especially considering that
in Africa H.I.V. tends to be most prevalent in the relatively
wealthiest and most developed countries. Most African nations have
stable adult H.I.V. rates of 3 percent or less.
Many millions of African children and adults die of malnutrition,
pneumonia, motor vehicle accidents and other largely preventable, if
not headline-grabbing, conditions. One-fifth of all global deaths
from diarrhea occur in just three African countries — Congo,
Ethiopia and Nigeria — that have relatively low H.I.V. prevalence.
Yet this condition, which is not particularly difficult to cure or
prevent, gets scant attention from the donors that invest nearly $1
billion annually on AIDS programs in those countries.
I was struck by this discrepancy between Western donors’ priorities
and the real needs of Africans last month, during my most recent
trip to Africa. In Senegal, H.I.V. rates remain under 1 percent in
adults, partly due to that country’s early adoption of enlightened
policies toward prostitution and other risky practices, in addition
to universal male circumcision, which limits the heterosexual spread
of H.I.V. Rates of tuberculosis, now another favored disease of
international donors, are also relatively low in Senegal, and I
learned that even malaria, the donors’ third major concern, is not
quite as rampant as was assumed, with new testing finding that many
fevers aren’t actually caused by the disease.
Meanwhile, the stench of sewage permeates the crowded outskirts of
Dakar, Senegal’s capital. There, as in many other parts of West
Africa and the developing world, inadequate access to safe water
results in devastating diarrheal diseases. Shortages of food and
basic health services like vaccinations, prenatal care and family
planning contribute to large family size and high child and maternal
mortality. Major donors like the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS
Relief, known as Pepfar, and the Global Fund to Fight AIDS,
Tuberculosis and Malaria have not directly addressed such basic
health issues. The Global Fund’s director, Michel Kazatchkine, has
acknowledged, “We are not a global fund that funds local health.”
Botswana, which has the world’s most lucrative diamond industry and
is the second-wealthiest country per capita in sub-Saharan Africa,
is nowhere near as burdened as Senegal with basic public health
problems. But as one of a dozen Pepfar “focus” countries in Africa,
this year it will receive about $300 million to fight AIDS — in
addition to the hundreds of millions already granted by drug
companies, private foundations and other donors. While in that
sparsely populated country last month, I learned that much of its
AIDS money remains unspent, as even its state-of-the-art H.I.V.
clinics cannot absorb such a large influx of cash.
(Page 2 of 2)
As the United States Agency for International Development’s H.I.V.
prevention adviser in southern Africa in 2005 and 2006, I visited
villages in poor countries like Lesotho, where clinics could not
afford to stock basic medicines but often maintained an inventory of
expensive AIDS drugs and sophisticated monitoring equipment for
their H.I.V. patients. H.I.V.-infected children are offered
exemplary treatment, while children suffering from much
simpler-to-treat diseases are left untreated, sometimes to die.
In Africa, there’s another crisis exacerbated by the rigid focus on
AIDS: the best health practitioners have abandoned lower-paying
positions in family planning, immunization and other basic health
areas in order to work for donor-financed H.I.V. programs.
The AIDS experience has demonstrated that poor countries can make
complex treatments accessible to many people. Regimens that are much
simpler to administer than anti-retroviral drugs — like antibiotics
for respiratory illnesses, oral rehydration for diarrhea,
immunizations and contraception — could also be made widely
available. But as there isn’t a “global fund” for safe water, child
survival and family planning, countries like Senegal — and even
poorer ones — cannot directly tackle their real problems without
pegging them to the big three diseases.
To their credit, some AIDS advocates are calling for a broader
approach to international health programs. Among the presidential
candidates, Senator Barack Obama, for example, proposes to go beyond
spending for AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria, highlighting the need
to also strengthen basic health systems. And recently, Mr. Bush’s
plan, along with the Global Fund, has become somewhat more flexible
in supporting other health issues linked to H.I.V. — though this
will be of little use to people, especially outside the “focus”
countries, who are dying of common illnesses like diarrhea.
But it is also important, especially for the United States, the
world’s largest donor, to re-examine the epidemiological and moral
foundations of its global health priorities. With 10 million
children and a half million mothers in developing countries dying
annually of largely preventable conditions, should we mutiply AIDS
spending while giving only a pittance for initiatives like
safe-water projects?
If one were to ask the people of virtually any African village
(outside some 10 countries devastated by AIDS) what their greatest
concerns are, the answer would undoubtedly be the less sensational
but more ubiquitous ravages of hunger, dirty water and environmental
devastation. The real-world needs of Africans struggling to survive
should not continue to be subsumed by the favorite causes du jour of
well-meaning yet often uninformed Western donors.
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