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FACTS AND FIGURES
from the World Health Organization
The United Nations Convention on the Rights of
the Child defines a child as every human being below the age of 18 years.
- In 1996 alone, 400,000 children under the age of 15 became infected with
HIV, bringing the total number of children in this age group living with the
virus to 830,000 at the end of 1996.
- By the end of 1997, a million children under the age of 15 are expected to
be living with HIV, over 90% of them in developing countries.
- Since the beginning of the epidemic, according to UNAIDS and WHO
estimates, well over 2 million HIV-infected children under the age of 15
have been born to HIV-infected mothers, and hundreds of thousands of
children have acquired HIV from blood transfusions or through sex.
- Because HIV infection often progresses quickly to AIDS in children, most
of the close to 3 million children under 15 who have been infected since the
start of the epidemic have developed AIDS, and most of these have died.
- Of the 1.5 million people who died of AIDS in 1996, 350,000 were children
under the age of 15.
- The US Bureau of the Census estimates that by the year 2010, if the spread
of HIV is not contained, AIDS may increase infant mortality by as much as
75% and mortality in children under 5 by more than 100% in those regions
most affected by the disease.
- UNAIDS estimates that, by mid-1996, 9 million children under 15 had lost
their mothers to AIDS. More than 90% of these children live in sub-Saharan
African countries.
- Most children orphaned by AIDS are concentrated in those countries most
affected by the epidemic. For example, data provided by the US Bureau of
the Census and the World Bank indicate that there are 1.2 million Ugandan
children under the age of 18 who have lost at least one parent to AIDS. This
figure is increasing by an estimated 50,000 children each year.
- According to UNICEF, children orphaned by AIDS are the largest and
fastest growing group of children in "difficult circumstances" in Zimbabwe.
It is estimated that by the end of 1996, approximately 8% of children under
15 years of age in the country had lost their mothers to AIDS.
- The vulnerability of girls to HIV infection is exacerbated by denial or
neglect of their human rights-- including gender discrimination-- resulting
in particular in low access to socio-economic opportunities.
- In many developing countries, some 50% of the population is under the age
of 18 years. Directing prevention efforts to children is crucial in minimizing
the further spread of the epidemic.
- Commercial sexual exploitation and domestic sexual abuse of children are
contributing risk factors for HIV infection among children.
- Figures reported to the 1996 World Congress Against Commercial Sexual
Exploitation of Children indicated that worldwide more than 1 million
children enter the sex trade every year.
- An unknown number of children worldwide are at risk of sexual abuse by
relatives, other members of the child's community or strangers.
- Estimates suggest that there are as many as 100 million children and
adolescents in the world who are working or living on the street, often in
violent and dangerous situations.
- The physical and mental abuse of children may increase the likelihood of
their engaging in risk-taking sexual behavior and thus increase their
vulnerability to HIV
Excerpted from the UNAIDS web site: Children Living in a World with AIDS
HIV/AIDS Ministries Network Focus Papers are a publication of the Health and Welfare Ministries , General Board of Global Ministries, The United Methodist Church, Room 330, 475 Riverside Drive, New York, NY 10115. Phone: 212-870-3909. FAX: 212-749-2641. E-MAIL: aidsmin@gbgm-umc.org.
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