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Ten UN Agencies Urge New Focus on Women and HIV in Latin America and the Caribbean

Washington, D.C., November 30—Women represent the fastest growing segment of the population living with HIV in Latin America and the Caribbean, and new efforts are urgently needed to halt the spread of the epidemic in the female population, representatives of ten United Nations agencies said today.

Every day 150 women are infected with HIV in Latin America and the Caribbean, according to the latest data from the World Health Organization (WHO) and the United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS). Between late 2002 and 2004, the number of women with HIV increased from 520,000 to 610,000 in Latin America and in the Caribbean, from 190,000 to 210,000.

The proportion of women among all adults with HIV has increased steadily in the region and now stands at 49 percent in the Caribbean and 36 percent in Latin America (see table below for country-specific rates). Worldwide, women represent nearly half of the 37.2 million adults (aged 15-49) living with HIV.

In a joint statement issued today, leaders from U.N. agencies called on policy and decision-makers in Latin America and the Caribbean to promote new cooperative efforts to address the causes that make women and girls particularly vulnerable to HIV. The U.N. leaders included the directors for Latin America and the Caribbean of UNAIDS, the International Labor Organization (ILO), the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO/WHO), the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), the World Bank and the World Food Programme (WFP).

Young women are 1.6 times more likely to have HIV than young men. Women and girls also know less than men about how HIV is transmitted, often because this information is denied to them.

Even when women and girls do know how to protect against the infection, they are unable to use that information because of “machismo”, widespread gender discrimination and violence. According to the U.N. experts, sexual coercion and abuse is a major factor contributing to the increasingly female face of the epidemic in the region.

In addition, in Latin America and the Caribbean, many women bear the responsibility for HIV/AIDS care in the community level. These caregivers – from young girls to grandmothers – have little control over needed resources and lack access to social structures that could provide support.

Women as a percentage of adults living with HIV in Latin American and Caribbean countries
(end of 2003)

Adults (15-49) Women (15-49)
Country Estimate Estimate Percentage
Argentina 120,000 24,000 20%
Bahamas 5,200 2,500 48%
Barbados 2,500 800 32%
Belize 3,500 1,300 37%
Bolivia 4,800 1,300 27%
Brazil 650,000 240,000 37%
Chile 26,000 8,700 33%
Colombia 180,000 62,000 34%
Costa Rica 12,000 4,000 33%
Cuba 3,300 1,100 33%
Dominican Republic 85,000 23,000 27%
Ecuador 20,000 6,800 34%
El Salvador 28,000 9,600 34%
Guatemala 74,000 31,000 42%
Guyana 11,000 6,100 55%
Haiti 260,000 150,000 58%
Honduras 59,000 33,000 56%
Jamaica 21,000 10,000 48%
Mexico 160,000 53,000 33%
Nicaragua 6,200 2,100 34%
Panama 15,000 6,200 41%
Paraguay 15,000 3,900 26%
Peru 80,000 27,000 34%
Suriname 5,000 1,700 34%
Trinidad and Tobago 28,000 14,000 50%
Uruguay 5,800 1,900 33%
Venezuela 100,000 32,000 32%
Source: 2004 Report on the Global AIDS Epidemic, UNAIDS




For media inquiries, contact: Daniel Epstein, PAHO, Public Information, 202-974-3459.