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ILO calls for urgent effort to improve treatment for HIV-AIDS

Published:Friday | May 25, 2018 | 4:53 PM

UNITED NATIONS, May 25  CMC – The International Labour Organisation (ILO), has called for an “urgent effort” to improve treatment, step up testing and ensure healthier and more productive workplaces as HIV AIDS continues to take an economic and social toll on workers in the Caribbean and around the world.

Prepared in collaboration with the UN agency dedicated to tackling the virus, UNAIDS, “The impact of HIV and AIDS on the world of work: Global estimate,” examines the past and future effects of HIV epidemic, and development of antiretroviral therapy (ART), while  assessing the economic and social impact on workers and their households.

The report shows that workers’ deaths attributed to HIV and AIDS are projected to fall to 425,000 worldwide in 2020, from 1.3 million in 2005; with people in their late-30s the most affected. 

“This is the age workers are normally at the peak of their productive life,” said Guy Ryder, ILO Director-General. 

“These deaths are totally avoidable if treatment is scaled up and fast-tracked.” 

The UN says the Caribbean is second to sub-Saharan Africa for the prevalence of HIV, the virus that causes AIDS. 

In addition to the toll on lives, the report indicates that the disease costs billions of dollars in lost earnings – largely due to the hundreds of thousands of preventable HIV and AIDS-related deaths.

Although the lost earnings have declined substantially from almost $17 billion in 2005, they are still projected to amount to $7.2 billion in 2020, the report says.

It says the good news is that ART is keeping employees healthy and productive, causing the number of workers living with HIV, either fully or partially unable to work, to drop dramatically since 2005.

The total number of those estimated to be fully unable to work is expected to decline to about 40,000 in 2020 from a 2005 level of about 350,000 – an 85 per cent decline for men and a 93 per cent drop for women, the report says.

It recommends that treatment be scaled up and stressed the need to produce better integrated health data with social and economic components to capture the full impact of AIDS-related diseases.

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