BEIJING, Nov. 25 (Xinhua) -- More than half of
Beijing's prostitutes still reject the use of condoms despite the growing
incidence of sexually-transmitted HIV and AIDS, says a report issued on Tuesday.
Sexual transmission, for the first time, has replaced
intravenous drug using (IDU) as the most common transmission route in the
Chinese capital, accounting for 54.6 percent of HIV infections, said Fang
Laiying, the municipal Public Health Bureau director.
Only 46.5 percent of the city's 90,000 sex workers
used condoms, said Fang, citing a medium-term assessment report on AIDS
prevention and control.
The HIV infection rate among sex workers was unknown
as Beijing had no testing program for them as yet.
Fang said free condoms were already provided at
22,000 Beijing venues, including hotels and vacation resorts. Almost 3,000
automatic condom-vending machines had been installed in entertainment venues.
Fang promised the machines would be installed by the
end of the year at construction sites with more than 500 workers. Some sites
already had machines, but he could not give the number.
Beijing had reported 5,635 HIV positive and AIDS
cases by Nov. 1, since the first case was reported in 1985. Of those 21 percent
were Beijing residents, 75.1 percent were from other regions, and 3.9 percent
were foreigners.
In September, the Ministry of Health announced that
sexual transmission had overtaken intravenous drug use as the main cause of the
spread of HIV/AIDS across China. A ministry report blamed the relatively low
rate of condom use.
At the end of 2007, China had approximately 700,000
people living with HIV, including an estimated 85,000 who had developed AIDS,
according to an UNAIDS report issued in September.