2015-01-16 08:35
China diagnosed 104 000 new cases of HIV/Aids in 2014, media reported Friday, highlighting growth in infections in the country despite a comparatively low overall rate.
The
figure was a 14 percent increase on the number of new cases diagnosed
in 2013, the Beijing Times cited the country's health administration as
saying.
Chinese state-run media said last month that half a
million people - less than 0.04 percent of China's total population -
were living with the disease or the virus, although hundreds of
thousands more are thought to be undiagnosed.
Discrimination
against those with the virus remains an issue at schools, hospitals,
workplaces and other establishments across China, a factor that experts
say hampers efforts to diagnose and treat it.
The
United Nations' anti-Aids body does not carry 2013 statistics for China
on its website, but said in a 2012 report that HIV/Aids prevalence
remains "low" in the country compared to global averages. It added that
39 000 cases were diagnosed in 2011.
China's National Centre for
Aids/STD Control and Prevention last year estimated that as many as 810
000 people are living with HIV/Aids in the country, including those who
have not yet been diagnosed, out of a total population of 1.36 billion.
That
is a far lower proportion than India, where UNAIDS says there are more
two million people living with HIV, in a slighter smaller total
population.
Chinese officials have said that growth rates are
particularly high among gay men and male sex workers, who are
marginalised and stigmatised by mainstream society.
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