Yunnan to require HIV tests before marriage
4/12/2006 9:39
Yunnan Province in southwest China will require residents to take HIV tests
before marriage and will inform prospective spouses of the results starting next
month.
The free test will target people in areas of the province where
the AIDS situation is "grave," states a new regulation on AIDS prevention and
control.
The areas listed as "grave" will be determined by local health
authorities and identified later, the regulation says.
HIV carriers and
AIDS patients will be asked to inform their spouses or sex partners of the
results, or the local disease prevention authorities will do so.
The new
regulation will take effect on January 1, 2007.
Yunnan, bordering
Vietnam, Laos and Myanmar in the south and west and near the notorious "Golden
Triangle," has China's worst HIV/AIDS figures.
HIV/AIDS cases have been
found in 128 of the province's 129 counties, the Provincial Committee of AIDS
Prevention and Control reported.
By the end of September, Yunnan recorded
47,314 people living with HIV/AIDS, about a quarter of the national
total.
From January to September, 650 pre- and post-natal Yunnan women
tested HIV positive, accounting for 0.25 percent of the total. Of the 66,000
people who registered for marriage and took the HIV test, 0.03 percent were
positive.
"The figures are horrible, far higher than the national
average," said Zhang Chang'an, director of the committee's
office.
Xinhua news
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