India trims the annual increase of HIV/AIDS cases by 57 per cent since 2000. But social stigma lives on.
The way HIV/AIDS is viewed medically has changed miraculously in the last three decades. Steady developments in medicine, and timely introduction of such medicines, mean that the disease is now considered fairly manageable and not much different from, say, diabetes. The National AIDS Control Organisation’s (NACO) programme, started in 1992, has made strides in managing the disease by providing treatment, testing facilities and counselling. More than 60 per cent of all HIVpositive individuals seek treatment from government centres, bringing them into a well defined system that provides anti retroviral therapy (ART) to those affected. Although there are still about 21.17 lakh people living with the disease in India, the number of new infections annually has gone down by 57 per cent since 2000. Yet, the associated social stigma has shown no signs of abating—patients continue to be ostracised even after all the awareness campaigns. It’s telling that not a single person we spoke to for this story wanted to be named or photographed.
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