Press
Centre
Joint Press Release
Joint report details escalating global orphans crisis
due to AIDS
Number of Children Orphaned By AIDS Will Rise Dramatically
BARCELONA, SPAIN, 10 July 2002 - A major international
report released today finds that an already grim global
orphan crisis is set to get much worse as more and more
adults with children die from AIDS, especially in sub-Saharan
Africa. The report, Children on the Brink, calls
for action at all levels to assist children, families
and communities who are affected by the unprecedented
emergency.
The report contains the broadest and most comprehensive
statistics yet on the historical, current and projected
number of children orphaned by HIV/AIDS. It finds more
than 13.4 million children have lost one or both parents
to the epidemic in the three regions studied (Sub-Saharan
Africa, Asia, Latin America and the Caribbean), a number
that will increase to 25 million by 2010. In addition
to the millions of children orphaned by AIDS, millions
more are being adversely affected by the disease.
Children on the Brink was released at the XIV International
AIDS Conference in Barcelona, Spain, and is the third
in a series (earlier versions were published in 1997 and
2000). For the first time, the report is being published
jointly by USAID, UNAIDS and UNICEF, with estimates developed
by the U.S. Bureau of the Census. In addition to providing
statistics on orphans from 88 countries, it identifies
several trends:
Africa has the greatest proportion of children who are
orphans. In 2001, 34 million children in sub-Saharan Africa
were orphans, one-third of them due to AIDS. Because of
AIDS, the number of orphans is increasing dramatically.
By 2010, the number of orphans will reach 42 million.
Twenty million of these children - or almost 6 percent
of all children in Africa -will be orphaned due to AIDS.
Asia has the largest number of orphans. Due to
Asia's large population, the number of orphans in Asia
is much larger than in Africa. In 2001, there were 65
million orphans, with approximately 2 million of them
orphaned due to AIDS. The populations in many Asian countries
are so large, however, that even at a low prevalence,
the number of people with HIV/AIDS threatens to surpass
the numbers in some of the most severely affected African
countries. Even a relatively small increase in prevalence
could lead to even greater numbers of orphans due to AIDS.
Orphan populations are concentrated, reflecting broader
trends in HIV prevalence and population. In 2001,
12 countries in sub-Saharan Africa accounted for 70 percent
of the orphans. The three countries with the largest populations
also had the most orphans - Nigeria, Ethiopia and the
Democratic Republic of Congo. However, the impact of AIDS
will be felt even more acutely in countries with smaller
populations, but higher HIV prevalence rates. In addition,
within countries, orphan populations vary greatly based
on concentration of HIV prevalence.
Number of orphans will continue to rise. Today's
prevalence rates will largely determine the pattern of
orphaning for the next decade. In countries where HIV/AIDS
prevalence has recently escalated, the full impact on
the estimated number of orphans has yet to emerge.
The new publication also discusses the devastating impact
AIDS has had on children, families and communities, and
the need for a coordinated response to address this. "HIV/AIDS
has created an orphans crisis," said Peter Piot,
Executive Director of UNAIDS. "This unprecedented
crisis will require radically scaled-up national, regional
and community responses in the decades to come."
Children on the Brink also discusses five key
strategies to assist children affected by AIDS, and urges
that responses not overlook other children who are impacted
by the epidemic. "We must
respond to these devastating statistics by addressing
the needs and rights of both orphans and vulnerable children
whose parents are still living," said
Carol Bellamy, Executive Director of UNICEF. "Countries
that have high rates of orphaning due to AIDS also have
high levels of children seriously impacted by the epidemic,
such as those with ill parents or living in households
that have taken in orphans. They are often just as vulnerable."
At a press conference in Barcelona, programs that have
successfully helped children were also discussed, and
USAID distributed a summary of its 75 programs in 22 countries
that work with children affected by AIDS. "Communities
with a high proportion of orphans require urgent assistance,"
said Anne Peterson, USAID's assistant administrator for
global health. "Responses need to be focused and
scaled up in communities with high proportions of orphans
and children affected by HIV/AIDS. And communities with
emerging orphan issues need to prepare now for the upcoming
challenges."
USAID is the world's leader in providing funding to fight
the HIV/AIDS pandemic. Since 1986, it has provided over
$2.3 billion for prevention, care and treatment programs
in over 50 countries around the world. Information on
USAID's HIV/AIDS programs is available at www.usaid.gov.
As the main advocate for global action on HIV/AIDS, UNAIDS
leads, strengthens and supports an expanded response aimed
at preventing the transmission of HIV, providing care
and support, reducing the vulnerability of individuals
and communities to HIV/AIDS, and alleviating the impact
of the epidemic.
UNICEF is the United Nations agency responsible for the
rights and welfare of children, with offices in 161 countries
worldwide. Because HIV/AIDS disproportionately affects
the young, UNICEF has named HIV/AIDS one of its five key
priorities for the coming years. The organization is concentrating
its work in: prevention among young people, prevention
of mother-to-child transmission, and care and support
for children impacted by the pandemic.
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