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BEIJING, June 7 (Xinhua) -- The economic losses
brought by AIDS to China in the coming five years are estimated to exceed 300
billion yuan (42.25 billion U.S. dollars), said a renowned AIDS expert here on
Wednesday.
At a conference of the Chinese Academy of Sciences
(CAS), Zeng Yi, chief scientist with the STD (sexually-transmitted diseases) and
AIDS Prevention Center under the Ministry of Health, said the losses of human
resources caused by AIDS in China are estimated to reach 285.57 billion yuan
from 2006 to 2010.
Citing the calculation of economist Li Jingwen,
another CAS member, Zeng said the disease will also cause a loss of 16.45
billion yuan to the productivity and GDP in the agricultural sector.
China's Ministry of Health estimated that there are
about 650,000 HIV/AIDS cases in China, including 75,000 AIDS patients. The
number of Chinese newly infected with HIV/AIDS was around 70,000 in 2005, and
25,000 Chinese died of AIDS last year.
Among China's HIV/AIDS cases, 49.8 percent were
transmitted by unsafe sex, 48.6 percent by drug injection, and 1.6 percent from
mothers to babies, Zeng said.
He said among China's drug addicts, 288,000 were
found infected with HIV or AIDS. The situation is serious in Yunnan, Xinjiang,
Guangxi, Guangdong, Guizhou, Sichuan and Hunan, where the number of HIV/AIDS
infected people exceeded 10,000 in each province or autonomous region.
The figure of the seven provinces and autonomous
regions made up 89.5 percent of the national total in the group of drug addicts,
said Zeng, adding that the rate of HIV/AIDS infection among the drug addicts in
China increased from 1.95 percent in 1996 to 6.48 percent in 2004.
HIV/AIDS infection through blood transfusion was
serious in provinces including Henan, Hubei, Anhui, Hebei and Shanxi. But the
situation has relatively been put under control since 1996, as the government
stepped up efforts to control selling of blood in recent years, said the
scientist.
In addition, about 127,000 HIV/AIDS infected people
were found among the prostitutes and prostitute's clients, Zeng said.
Statistics also show that the number of women
infected with HIV/AIDS in China is climbing. The male to female ratio has
altered dramatically from 5:1 in the 1990s to the current 2:1, even 1:1 in some
areas, according to the scientist.
The 100 million floating population in China, with
most of them being young and middle-aged people, increases the difficulty of
preventing the transmission of the virus, said Zeng.
To cope with the serious situation, the scientist
urged to step up research on AIDS vaccine and push forward the clinical test of
the vaccine in the coming five years.
China aims to complete the third phase clinical test
of AIDS vaccine by 2010, which will conclusively prove the effect of the
vaccine, according to the scientist.
However, Zeng said lack of investment is one of the
major problems in China's research and development of AIDS vaccine at present.
He estimated that the research on AIDS vaccine will
cost one billion yuan (125 million U.S. dollars) in the coming five years.
He suggested establishing a national fund on AIDS
vaccine development, and attracting investment from local governments and
enterprises, as well as private donation and international cooperation. Enditem