Israel
- HIV/AIDS in the Middle East and Israel
While
the AIDS epidemic is still rapidly spreading in most parts of the world
at a global world rate of 8,500 new HIV infections per day, Israel and
the Middle East are enjoying currently a low incidence and prevalence of
HIV/AIDS. There are several factors that are related to the lower spread
of the disease in this part of the world: circumcision, conservative
views and underreporting.
Various studies have
demonstrated the correlation between lower incidence of sexually
transmitted diseases and circumcision in males. Most males in our region
are circumcised due to religious beliefs in both Islam and Judaism. In
addition, the influences of both tradition and religious are still very
strong in the Middle East, and social taboos, especially relating to
sexuality and drug abuse, are dominant, along with great respect for the
value of family. The current epidemiological status of HIV/AIDS in this
region is based on self-reporting of the Ministries of Health of the
various countries. We know that in more than a few cases these reports
are not providing complete information on the spread of HIV, mostly due
to the lack of appropriate infrastructure.
With the advent of peace
in the Middle East new risks are to be considered, mainly due to the
opening of borders, influx of tourism, populations in transition and the
increase in the standard of living, which may bring with it the
so-called Western behavioral patterns.
In responding to the
challenge of AIDS prevention in the Middle East, on a regional level,
action was taken by the initiative of the Jerusalem AIDS Project, an
Israeli NGO, working nationally and internationally in the fight against
HIV/AIDS. Under this initiative, three training workshops for Israeli,
Palestinian and Jordanian health professionals were conducted in
Jerusalem. The 4-day workshops (July '95, November '95 and December
'96)hosted about 50 participants per workshop and were conducted with
the support of MASHAV, the Governments of the UK, Canada and also WHO,
UNDP, UNESCO and the Palestinian Authority. As a result of this
initiative, an ongoing network of concerned health professionals,
devoted to AIDS prevention, is currently functioning. Our hope is to see
this cooperation in the health field growing in the Middle East.
In Israel itself, a new
teenagers' group was recently established with the professional guidance
and support of the Jerusalem AIDS Project. The aim of HALEV (the heart)
group is to establish a peer AIDS education project, the first of its
kind in Jerusalem, in which high school students take AIDS messages into
the community at large and to youth in particular.
These initiatives will
hopefully help reduce the current stage of world infection with 28
million infected, 7 million ill with AIDS and a growing number of
children and youngsters (especially adolescent girls) being infected
worldwide, at least in this part of the world that has currently 192,000
infected. The rates for Israel are: 501 ill with AIDS and an estimated
3-5,000 infected.
Source: SHALOM MAGAZINE, 1997 Issue
No. 2, Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs |
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