Sunday, December 2, 2012

Manipur to revise AIDS control policy

Ibobi stresses need to check killer disease on World AIDS Day

OUR SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT

Students take part in an awareness rally on World AIDS Day in Guwahati on Saturday. Picture by UB Photos

Imphal, Dec. 1: The Manipur State AIDS Control Society, a state government agency, will introduce a revised AIDS control policy soon to meet new challenges posed by the alarming trend of HIV infection in the state.

“The draft of the revised AIDS policy is in the final stage. The policy is being revised to meet new challenges in dealing with AIDS in the state,” said chief minister Okram Ibobi Singh, who is the chairperson of the governing body of the society which was set up in 1998.

Addressing a World AIDS Day programme here today, Ibobi Singh said the policy was being revised in coordination with the health department, NGOs and civil societies to increase awareness and inculcate a positive behaviour among youths.

The chief minister said the UPA government was implementing various infrastructure and human resource development projects in Manipur, but these activities would be impaired unless the youth and children were protected from HIV and AIDS.

Manipur was the first state to introduce the AIDS control policy (in 1990).

The state has 10 community care centres, having 10 beds each for treating HIV/AIDS patients.

Till October this year, 42,116 people have tested positive, including 11,778 women and 2,773 children.

The sero-positivity rate among drug users in the state is found to be 28.6 per cent, among sex workers 10.8 per cent, pregnant women 0.5 per cent, sexually-transmitted disease patients 29 per cent and homosexuals 17.2 per cent.

Eighty-two per cent of the total HIV positive people have been found to in the age group of 25 and 49 years.

Governor Gurbachan Jagat termed the findings as “disturbing”.

He urged AIDS workers and the health department to find all the HIV-positive people who are yet to take medicine because they could be silent spreaders.

He also emphasised the need for state intervention in screening people coming from across the border at Moreh town.

“Taking advantage of a porous international border, people cross the border and smuggle in illicit chemicals with impunity. This creates a situation in which intervention cannot be localised among citizens of the state,” the governor said.



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