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Other Surveillance Reports / Situational Analysis
Cambodia Annual_Report_2011-1

This report describes the achievement of program implementation on HIV/AIDS and STI prevention, care, support and treatment during the year 2011. The report is intended to aggregate data and information collected from all OI/ART, VCCT, Family Health Clinics, HBC, and PMTCT sites from the whole country to be represented as the National Comprehensive Report for the health sector response to HIV/AIDS and STI in Cambodia. The following sections reported the main three program areas implemented for this year that are including: A) General Report related to Programme management and implementation; B) Results from health service deliveries; C) Financial Report for descript the financial disbursements against the yearly budget plan; D) Procurement of OI/ARV Drugs, E) Challenges etc. 

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PR ResultsReport

GENEVA, 20 November 2012—A new World AIDS Day report: Results, by the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS), shows that unprecedented acceleration in the AIDS response is producing results for people. The report shows that a more than 50% reduction in the rate of new HIV infections has been achieved across 25 low- and middle-income countries––more than half in Africa, the region most affected by HIV.

 

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2012 epi_core

Global summary of the AIDS epidemic  2011 

Number of people living with HIV , People newly infected with HIV in 2011, AIDS deaths in 2011 

 

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2012 FS_regional_asia_pacific

Mixed progress in reducing new HIV infections and AIDS-related deaths 

  • Nearly 5 million people were living with HIV in South, South-East and East Asia combined in 2011. 

- In South and South-East Asia, an estimated 4 million [3.1 million–4.6 million] people were living with HIV in 2011, compared to 3.7 million [3.2 million–5.1 million] in 2001. 

- In East Asia, an estimated 830 000 [590 000–1.2 million] people were living with HIV in 2011, compared to 390 000 [280 000–530 000] in 2001. 

 

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FactSheet Global_2012

New HIV infections 

  •  Worldwide, 2.5 million [2.2 million–2.8 million] people became newly infected with HIV in 2011. 
  •  25 countries have seen a 50% or greater drop in new HIV infections since 2001. 

- There has been a 42% reduction in new HIV infections in the Caribbean (the second most affected region in the world after sub-Saharan Africa). 

  • Half of all reductions in new HIV infections in the last two years have been among newborn children––showing that elimination of new infections in children is possible. 

- In 2011, new infections in children were 43% lower than in 2003, and 24% lower than 2009. 

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WorldAIDSday results

There were more than 700 000 fewer new HIV infections globally in 2011 than in 2001. Africa has cut AIDS-related deaths by one third in the past six years. And as services have been scaled up, uptake has followed. In fact, what had taken a decade before is now being achieved in 24 months. In the past two years there has been a 60% increase in the number of people accessing lifesaving treatment—8 million people are on antiretroviral therapy.

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Malaysian AIDS_Council_AnnualReport_2011

Twenty-five years into the epidemic in Malaysia, HIV & AIDS continue to affect the lives of more than 79,000 Malaysians living with the virus. Women and girls are particularly more vulnerable to HIV infection and we note the alarming annual increase of new HIV cases amongst them. In Malaysia, in 2011, women and girls constituted 21% of newly reported cases compared to merely 5% a decade ago.

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UNAIDS Global_Report_2012

The global community has embarked on an historic quest to lay the foundation for the eventual end of the AIDS epidemic. This effort is more than merely visionary. It is entirely feasible. Unprecedented gains have been achieved in reducing the number of both adults and children newly infected with HIV, in lowering the numbers of people dying from AIDS-related causes and in implementing enabling policy frameworks that accelerate progress.

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Myanmar HIV_Estimates_2010-2015

In 2010, Myanmar engaged in the regional project on modes of transmission of HIV. This project aimed at improving the understanding of the HIV epidemics by estimating the incidence of selected subpopulations. Initially, the work was carried out by an adhoc group comprising of staff from the Ministry of Health and United Nations agencies. Following the formation of the Strategic Information and M&E (SI/M&E) Working Group of the TSG, the responsibility for this work was given to the Working Group.

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