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Sindh continues to report dozens of HIV cases every week

Scores of individuals, including adults and children, are testing positive for HIV on a weekly basis in Sindh’s four Talukas, where the spread of HIV in the general population has been detected since 2019, according to federal and provincial officials on Monday.

“HIV infections are often reported from the four infamous Talukas of Larkana, Jacobabad, Qambar Shahdadkot, and Shikarpur districts, which are physically connected. “The major cause for newly infected patients is inadequate Infection Prevention and Control (IPC),” an official from the National Health Services, Regulations and Coordination (NHS, R&C) told The News.

According to federal health officials, roughly 21 new HIV infections were reported from these four districts in the final week of February 2023, adding to a similar number of HIV-positive cases among both adults and children that have been reported from this area on a regular basis for the previous four years.

“In these four districts of Sindh, HIV is now spreading into the general population… where over 60% of HIV cases are being reported from the general population while the remaining 40% are being reported from key populations including injectable drug users, transgender men, men having sex with men, and female sex workers,” the official added.Pakistan reported the world’s largest HIV outbreak among children in 2019 when hundreds of children were found infected with HIV in Ratodero Taluka of Larkana and since then, around 2,800 children have so far tested positive for HIV in Ratodero and adjoining areas.

Confirming the detection of new HIV cases in the four talukas of Sindh on regular basis, an official of the Communicable Disease Control (CDC) Sindh said the presence of thousands of quacks and poor Infection Prevention and Control (IPC) were the two main reasons behind the spread of HIV in the area.

“The 2019 HIV outbreak is now an ongoing epidemic in the four Talukas which are attached to each other. We are doing massive screening and testing in the area and due to that, every day several people including adults and children are testing positive for HIV. This outbreak in 2019 was in general population due to poor IPC and use of infected needles and syringes, which is still the main cause of HIV spread in the area”, Dr Ershad Kazmi, Additional Director (CDC) (HIV/AIDS) Sindh said.

According to him, following the 2019 Ratodero outbreak, Sindh Health Department and the Sindh Healthcare Commission closed down establishments of thousands of quacks but as time passed and the dust settled, these fake medical practitioners resurfaced and started spreading infectious disease in the community.

“Similarly, IPC guidelines are not being followed by the general practitioners, private hospitals and even the small healthcare facilities except some of the leading tertiary-care health facilities in these districts”, Dr Kazmi said adding that poor IPC practices were the main cause of continuous HIV spread in the area.

He maintained that he had recently drawn the attention of the Director General (DG) of Health Sindh towards the lack of IPC in healthcare settings across Sindh, which was resulting in the spread of HIV and viral hepatitis and urged him to immediately establish an IPC cell in the province to prevent the spread of HIV and other blood-borne diseases in the province.

“Sindh Healthcare Commission was supposed to eliminate quackery but unfortunately, it has miserably failed to fulfill its responsibilities including implementation of IPC guidelines and recommendations. In these circumstances, it has become inevitable to establish an IPC cell headed by a BPS-19 official in the CDC Directorate to map the IPC compliant and non-compliant facilities and take action against those who are violating the national IPC guidelines”, Dr Kazmi added.

HIV (human immunodeficiency virus) is a virus that attacks the body’s immune system. If HIV is not treated, it can lead to AIDS (acquired immunodeficiency syndrome). There is currently no effective cure. Once people get HIV, they have it for life.

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