A recent report has shown that between 50,000 and 100,000 of babies born in the country yearly are carriers of HIV.
The report was released on Tuesday in Abuja, when the Minister of
Health, Prof. Onyebuchi Chukwu, hosted the National Steering Group of
the Global Plan towards the Elimination of New HIV Infections among
Children by 2015 and Keeping their Mothers Alive.
The group was constituted by President Goodluck Jonathan in April 2012
to help mobilise national leadership for global plan on eliminating
mother-to-child transmission, implementation and keeping their mothers
alive.
The NSG has since been working across states of the federation, seeking to end transmission of the scourge.
In her presentation, entitled, ‘Update on eMTCT in Nigeria,’ the
National Coordinator (HIV/AIDS Division) in the Federal Ministry of
Health, and member of the group, Dr. Evelyn Ngige, said global target
was to reduce the number of new HIV infections among children by 90 per
cent and reduce the number of AIDS-related maternal deaths by 50
percent.
According to the report, while the current population of HIV positive
persons in Nigeria stands at 3.1million, the number of births in the
country annually is six million.
Besides, while HIV prevalence remains 4.1 per cent, the population of
HIV positive pregnant women annually in the country is put at 229,480.
The report said, “Fifty-eight per cent of women attend Ante Natal Care,
at least once; 45 per cent attend, at least, four times; 35 per cent of
births occur in health facilities; 39 per cent deliveries by skilled
birth attendants, while HIV babies born annually are between 50,000 and
100, 000.”
The report also indicated three bottlenecks, which it attempted to address.
They are strengthening human resources for health; improving
efficiencies in the HIV commodities; and supply chain management and
improving early infant diagnosis.
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