Brazil Sure Widespread Distribution of Condoms Is the Answer to AIDS

The director of the Brazilian Ministry of Health’s National Sexually Transmitted Diseases and AIDS (STD/AIDS) Program, Pedro Chequer, said on Sunday, February 12, that the use of condoms in Brazil over the years has produced evidence of positive results and can be commemorated for the changes in behavior it has induced.

According to Chequer, the most important statistic is the use of condoms beginning with one’s first sexual relationship. The percentage, which was 9% in 1986, rose to 48% in 1998 and 66% in 2005. Research indicates that over 70% of men use condoms the first time they have sexual intercourse.

Chequer affirmed that the objective of the Ministry’s "Get Dressed; Always Use a Condom" campaign, directed toward the use of condoms during Carnaval, is to increase these numbers even more.

"The ideal situation would be for more than 90% of the population to use condoms the first time they have sexual intercourse. And in casual encounters, although the figures are encouraging, we still need to make this practice more common," he explained.

The Ministry’s goal is for the use of condoms to become a normal practice for men and women, so that people will go about buying condoms in pharmacies and supermarkets the same way they buy matches or candles, for example, for daily use, Chequer added.

From 1980 through June, 2005, the number of AIDS cases reported in Brazil stood at 371,827. 170 thousand of these cases are receiving treatment.

Chequer pointed out that in the younger population, between the ages of 13 and 29, where research shows that condom use is greater, the Ministry has observed a significant decline in the incidence of new cases of AIDS.

In the older population, on the other hand, between the ages of 40 and 49, where condom use is less frequent, an increase in the number of cases has been registered, "clearly demonstrating that the practical solution for controlling the epidemic is the use of condoms to prevent sexual transmission."

According to Chequer, this proves that "condoms represent a safe, effective, and operationally viable alternative." National statistics released by the Ministry reveal that the number of HIV carriers has remained stable at around 600 thousand.

The government’s goal is to expand its capacity to diagnose cases of the disease, since it now takes up to a month to receive test results. According to Chequer, it is not only a matter of reducing the number of cases detected but of reducing the infection in an effective manner.

Agência Brasil

Tags:

You May Also Like

12 Million Brazilians Live in Shantytowns. 94% Say They Are Happy

A survey conducted in 63 slums, or favelas, in 35 cities throughout Brazil, shows ...

Brazilian sailor and adventurer Amyr Klink

Brazil’s Number One Sailor and His Search for the Ideal Travelling Machine

Sailor Amyr Klink, the son of a Lebanese father and a Swedish mother, is ...

Brazil Prays IMF to Pardon Brazil’s and All Poor Nations’ Debts

Brazil’s President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva once again defended pardoning poor countries’ debts ...

Poor in Brazil Can’t Count on the Courts, Says UN

The special rapporteur from the UN Comission on Human Rights, Leandro Despouy, has released ...

Panama National Airline Orders from Brazilian Embraer

Panamanian Copa Airlines has converted two Brazilian Embraer 190 options into firm orders, adding ...

The Slums Kept Brazil’s Economy Going When World Was Falling Apart

OK, it was not really a rocket blastoff like The Economist showed on its ...

Brazil Gets Biggest Piece of Foreign Investment in LA: US$ 18 Bi

Foreign direct investment (FDI) in Latin America and the Caribbean grew 44% in 2004, ...

Brazilian Volkswagen and Embraer Star at Algiers International Fair

The 39th edition of Algiers International Fair, scheduled to begin today, June 1st, in ...

Brazil’s Petrobras Told to Invest to Reduce Dependence on Bolivian Gas

The Brazilian government’s central policy group has ordered Petrobras, the country’s state-run oil giant, ...

Brazil and South America Set Price Ceilings on Swine Flu Vaccine

In order to prevent First World labs from exploiting fear of the A/H1N1 flu ...

WordPress database error: [Table './brazzil3_live/wp_wfHits' is marked as crashed and last (automatic?) repair failed]
SHOW FULL COLUMNS FROM `wp_wfHits`