Southwest China's Yunnan Province has registered marked progress in
HIV/AIDS prevention since it carried out six programs earlier this year to fight
the deadly disease.
The programs include the promotion of condom use at hotels and public places
of entertainment, free needle exchange, methadone maintenance therapy, HIV/AIDS
publicity and the establishment of AIDS treatment and care centers and
monitoring systems.
With an estimated investment of 520 million yuan (about 62.7 million US
dollars) in the programs, the provincial government will strive to reduce the
high infection rate significantly withinfive to 10 years.
As of September this year, the province had 17,390 HIV-positive people, and
1,118 with full-blown AIDS, according to Yunnan HealthBureau.
The bureau said intravenous drug use contributes to 68 percent of the cases,
and sexual contact to 14.7 percent.
Kunming, the province's capital city, has installed 620 condom vending
machines and has sold 100,000 condoms. Condoms are available at every hotel in
the city.
A total of 200 people came to the AIDS treatment and care center for
consultation and 55 received free medical treatment.
The provincial government also provides aid to HIV carriers and AIDS patients
and offers free school education to AIDS orphans.
According to the Health Ministry, China has 840,000 HIV-positive people and
80,000 with full-blown AIDS. The intravenous drug use through infected syringes
is believed to be the major way of infection among China's HIV carriers.
China launched 26 pilot clinics last Friday on Nov.26 to provide methadone
maintenance therapy to intravenous drug users, aiming to slow the spread of AIDS
among the drug users.
The Education Ministry said Monday that China has made AIDS prevention a
compulsory course of schools ranging from junior highschools to colleges from
this year to combat the disease.