Infection on the rise
THE NUMBER of people in Bombay who are infected with the AIDS-causing human immunodeficiency virus- 1 (HIV-1) are increasing at an alarming rate, says a recent study (The National Medical Journal Of India, Vol 6, No 1).
H A Kamat and D D Banker of Bombay's Sir Hurkisondas Nurrotumdas Hospital, who conducted the study, surveyed blood samples from 599 victims of sexually transmitted diseases between 1987 and 1989. They found the number of HIV-1 carriers had grown fourfold from 1.3 per cent in 1987 to 5.3 per cent in 1988 and by the end of 1989, about 7 per cent of the patients in the sample group was infected with HIV-1.
Related Content
- Costs of health care associated infections from inadequate water and sanitation in health care facilities in Eastern and Southern Africa
- Bracing for superbugs: strengthening environmental action in the one health response to antimicrobial resistance
- Dangerous inequalities
- In danger: global AIDS update 2022
- World economic situation and prospects 2022
- Space applications for management of air pollution in Asia and the Pacific