AIDS patients in Turkey rise 522 percent in 10 years

AIDS patients in Turkey rise 522 percent in 10 years

by Joseph Anthony
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The number of recorded HIV/AIDS patients in Turkey has increased 522 percent over the course of the last decade, bringing the total number of AIDS patients in the country to 11,906, according to a member of Turkeyโ€™s National Health Commission.

Muhtar ร‡okar, the head of the Developing Human Resources Association (ฤฐKGV) and a member of the Health Ministryโ€™s National Health Commission, pointed to the dangerous rise in AIDS cases in Turkey, saying the association had begun works to prevent AIDS in 1995, at a time when it was a primary issue.

โ€œEpidemic specialists in those years had estimated a boom in HIV/AIDS cases in Turkey but it is not a primary issue, although it slowly came true today,โ€ ร‡okar said.

He also said the priority given to AIDS stepped back in 2012 due to increases in tourism and technological developments.

โ€œSome 100-150 people had been diagnosed with AIDS in Turkey per year until 1995. It was not a significant number. It could be prevented with a small expense when measures were taken at that level of the epidemic. Our fears did not come true during the 1990โ€™s and it was limited to 170-190 patients per year. However, the increase in tourism potential in 2012 and a technological development such as social media, which enables prostitution to be both visible and secret, came on the agenda. In response, the state priority to AIDS retreated,โ€ ร‡olak said.  

According to ร‡olak, a national AIDS commission founded by the Health Ministry stopped convening while NGOs did not attend meetings and sexual health training at schools also came to a halt in 2012.

โ€œThe National AIDS Commission, which was founded by the Health Ministry in 1996, would plan the fight against AIDS, make evaluations and suggestions. This commission had included all ministries and a number of associations and NGOs. It would have gathered twice a year. However, in 2012 it began to not to convene and NGOs did not attend. Sexual health training was not given in schools anymore,โ€ he said.

In addition, ร‡olak also said the World Health Organization (WHO) had previously warned the ministry over the increasing number of AIDS cases in the country.

โ€œMartin Donoghoe, an HIV/AIDS and Hepatitis Program representative of the WHOโ€™s European Regional Office, warned the Health Ministry. He brought up the issue of increasing HIV/AIDS cases between 2003 and 2013. The number of AIDS cases increased to 1391 in 2013 while the same figure was 182 in 2003. That amounts to a 764 percent increase. In 2005, there were 292 HIV cases while the number had reached 1525 in the first 11 months of 2015. This means a 522 percent increase. According to figures by WHO, that percentage is 200 in the Eastern Europe region, where AIDS cases are most widespread in Europe,โ€ ร‡olak said.

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