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Subject:
From:
"Madiba K. Saidy" <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
The Gambia and related-issues mailing list <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Fri, 9 Feb 2001 14:59:35 -0800
Content-Type:
TEXT/PLAIN
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TEXT/PLAIN (43 lines)
Study of couples in Africa details risk of AIDS infection 
By Daniel Q. Haney, Associated Press, 2/9/2001 

CHICAGO - A study of heterosexual couples in Africa concludes that the
chance of catching the AIDS virus from a single sexual encounter with an infected person is one in 588. 

This risk is calculated for people who do not use condoms and who have sex regularly with one infected partner. 

Earlier estimates from North America and Europe vary but have generally placed the risk at about one in 1,000 for heterosexuals. 

In this study, researchers followed 174 sexually monogamous couples in Rakai, Uganda, in which one partner had HIV and the other did not. They were given condoms but usually did not use them. 

Typically the couples had sex nine or 10 times a month, and over time, 38 people became infected. 

Earlier data from the same research team showed that the risk of people transmitting HIV is slight if the amount of virus in their bloodstream is low. Those findings have bolstered the belief that the wide use of AIDS drug combinations, which dramatically reduce virus levels, will slow the spread of the disease. 

The latest figures were presented by Dr. Ronald H. Gray of Johns Hopkins University at the Eighth Annual Retrovirus Conference in Chicago, which concluded yesterday. 

Among the findings: 

Infected teenagers are three times more likely than people older than 40 to spread HIV to others during each sexual encounter. This difference cannot be explained by the fact that young people are more sexually active. 

The risk that an HIV-infected woman will transmit the virus to an uninfected man is one in 454. For an infected man to an uninfected woman, it is one in 769. This difference is not large enough to be statistically meaningful, and many have assumed that HIV spreads more readily from men to women than vice versa. 

The risk of spread depends greatly on how much virus people carry. In those whose level of virus is less than 1,700 copies per milliliter of blood, the risk is one in 10,000. When levels are more than 38,500, the risk is one in 294. 

The risk of transmission appears to be the same for different subtypes of virus. Some have speculated that AIDS is much more prevalent in Africa because a different variety of the virus dominates there. 

None of the circumcised men in the study caught HIV. Some specialists have raised the possibility of promoting circumcision as a way to control the epidemic. 

Whether the transmission risk is the same among couples outside Africa is unclear, especially since virus levels may be higher in Africa, where so few infected people get treated. However, Dr. Helene Gayle, AIDS chief at the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said the latest data at least offer a general estimate of this risk. 

This story ran on page 9 of the Boston Globe on 2/9/2001. 
© Copyright 2001 Globe Newspaper Company. 

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