HIV / AIDS symposium: The global impact of HIV Flashcards
1
Q
Who is most at risk of HIV?
A
- Sex workers and their clients
- Transgender people
- Prisoners
- Men who have sex with men
- Heterosexual women
- Injecting drug users
- Heterosexual men
- Truck drivers
- Migrant workers
2
Q
Who do 50% of all new infections occur in worldwide?
A
in 15-24 year olds
3
Q
What is the difference in HIV transmission efficiency of female to male and male to female?
A
Male to female HIV transmission is 2-3x as efficient as female to male transmission
4
Q
What are the 5 commitments and targets for 2015?
A
- Reduce sexual transmission of HIV by 50%
- Reduce transmission of HIV among people who inject drugs by 50%
- Eliminate new HIV infections among children and substantially reduce AIDS-related maternal deaths
- Reach 15 million people living with HIV with lifesaving antiretroviral treatment
- Reduce TB deaths in people living with HIV by 50%
5
Q
What are the 3 routes of transmission for paediatric HIV-1 infection?
A
- In utero: transplacental, mostly during the third trimester
- Intra partum: exposure to maternal blood and genital secretions during delivery
- Breast milk: ingestion of large amounts of contaminated milk
6
Q
How is mother-to-child transmission preventable?
A
- Mother: First line antiretroviral therapy
- Breastfeeding infants: daily Nevirapine or AZT from birth until 4 to 6 weeks after cessation of breastfeeding
7
Q
What are 4 ways to prevent HIV-1 transmission?
A
- Consistent condom use (80 – 90% effective)
- Male circumcision (60% reduction in infection – no benefit to female partners)
- Removing the foreskin reduces the ability of HIV to penetrate due to keratinization of the inner aspect of the remaining foreskin
- The inner part of the foreskin contains many Langherhans cells (tissue DCs expressing CD4) which are prime targets for HIV - Harm reduction as an evidence-based approach to HIV prevention e.g. needle and syringe programmes
- How to reduce mother to child transmission
- Antiretroviral treatment – awareness, adherence, clinical services