AIDS experts: 'Mobile men with money' risky By Luo Man (China Daily) Updated: 2005-08-02 06:15
SHANGHAI: It is feared well-off and upwardly mobile business people in
China's largest cities may be contracting and spreading HIV/AIDS - and many do
not even know they are infected.
|
Health workers in Hefei, Anhui Province, distribute HIV/AIDS
prevention pamphlets to beauty salons and massage parlours where
prostitutes are available. Experts say although a large portion of China's
infections are the result of tainted blood donations or
transfusions, and later intravenous drug use, most new cases are now the
result of unprotected sex. [newsphoto] | Figures
are sketchy but "mobile men with money," as experts have dubbed the group, are a
growing concern as the country battles to halt the epidemic.
"There is an emerging division in the business. There's starting to be people
who work on mobile men with money," said Tim Manchester, director of Futures
Group, a private organization that focuses on preventing the spread of HIV/AIDS.
What HIV/AIDS professionals are wondering - as are doctors at
government-funded organizations such as the centre of disease control and
hospitals in Shanghai - is whether mobile men with money will prove to be a
gateway for the disease into large cities.
"That's everybody's concern, that it's a bridge population," said Manchester.
"We are not seeing that yet because the testing is not there yet."
A possible scenario is that of a businessman who does not use condoms and
even pays extra for a prostitute who ignores the risk to earn more money but is
infected, whether she knows it or not. He becomes infected and then passes the
infection to his wife who goes on with her life completely unaware of the
disease she is carrying.
|
| | The Guanling cattle market | | | | | Fruits from Taiwan -- duty free | | | | | China, US hold first strategic dialogue | | |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Today's
Top News |
|
|
|
Top China
News |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|