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Nigeria records highest HIV-infected babies globally — Health minister

Nigeria records highest HIV-infected babies globally — Health minister

 

Nigeria is said to have the highest number of babies infected with the Human Immunodeficiency Virus, HIV.

The Minister of State for Health, Senator Adeleke Mamora, disclosed this in Abuja on Thursday; at the launching of the Faith-based Action for Scaling up of Testing and Treatment for Epidemic Response project in Nigeria.

Mamora said that the Federal Government would therefore sustain HIV prevention and treatment activities nationwide.

The minister noted that the government would commit “sufficient resources to both prevention and treatment in order to stay on track to end the Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome by 2030.

The Catholic Relief Services and the Centre for Disease Control and Prevention sponsored the project.

The health minister said, “Over the years, the government has put in place several response mechanisms; towards reducing the burden of HIV and AIDS in the country, as evidenced by the reduction in the HIV prevalence from the 3.1 per cent to 1.4 in the last survey.

 

READ ALSO: Paediatrics HIV: Prevention of Mother-to-Child Transmission is key – Group

 

“We discovered that majority of children infected with the disease are living in sub-Saharan Africa; with Nigeria record of more HIV infected babies than anywhere else in the world. Its prevention and treatment activities must therefore be sustained and the momentum; increased if the country and the world at large are to stay on track to end AIDS by 2030.

“This launch of the Catholic Relief Services’ FASTER project is at the right time to bridge the identified gaps; especially in pediatric HIV diagnosis and treatment. The six priority actions of the project are as follows; streamline regulatory approval, integrate service delivery, expand diagnostic platforms; evaluate and expand on novel testing approaches, implement validated risk screening checklist and optimise paediatric Anti-Retroviral Therapy.”

 

READ ALSO: Ending HIV transmission: What is the impact of giving out free self-tests?

 

The project director in Nigeria, Dr Emeka Anoje, said they implemented the programme in the seven states of Rivers, Benue, Delta, Enugu, Imo, Nasarawa and the Federal Capital Territory, Abuja.

Anoje added that; “The project designed to accelerate progress in pediatric HIV diagnosis and treatment in countries that have high unmet need for child and adolescent antiretroviral therapy. These countries include Nigeria, Tanzania, Uganda, and Zambia”.

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Humanitarian reporter, writer and author 1stnews.com [email protected]

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