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October 31, 2000-10
Copyright © 2001 Earth Policy Institute
HIV Epidemic Restructuring Africas
Population
A missing generation ... a population of orphans ...
a shortage of women
Lester R. Brown
The HIV epidemic raging across Africa is a tragedy
of epic proportions, one that is altering the region's demographic
future. It is reducing life expectancy, raising mortality, lowering
fertility, creating an excess of men over women, and leaving millions
of orphans in its wake.
This year began with 24 million Africans infected
with the virus. In the absence of a medical miracle, nearly all
will die before 2010. Each day, 6,000 Africans die from AIDS. Each
day, an additional 11,000 are infected.
The epidemic has proceeded much faster in some
countries than in others. In Botswana, 36 percent of the adult population
is HIV-positive. In Zimbabwe and Swaziland, the infection rate is
25 percent. Lesotho is at 24 percent. In Namibia, South Africa,
and Zambia, the figure is 20 percent. In none of these countries
has the spread of the virus been checked.
Life expectancy, a sentinel indicator of economic
progress, is falling precipitously. In Zimbabwe, without AIDS, life
expectancy in 2010 would be 70 years, but with AIDS, it is expected
to fall below 35 years. Botswanas life expectancy is projected
to fall from 66 years to 33 years by 2010. For South Africa, it
will fall from 68 years to 48 years. And for Zambia, from 60 to
30 years. These life expectancies are more akin to those of the
Middle Ages than of the modern age.
The demography of this epidemic is not well understood
simply because, in contrast to most infectious diseases, which take
their heaviest toll among the elderly and the very young, this virus
takes its greatest toll among young adults. The effect on mortality
is most easily understood. In the absence of a low-cost cure, infection
leads to death. The time from infection until death for adults in
Africa is estimated at 7 to 10 years.
This means that Botswana can expect to lose the
36 percent of its adult population that is HIV-positive within this
decade, plus the additional numbers who will be infected within
the next year or two. The HIV toll, plus normal deaths among adults,
means that close to half of the adults in Botswana today will be
dead by 2010. Other countries with high infection rates, such as
South Africa, Swaziland, and Zimbabwe, will likely lose nearly a
third of their adults by 2010.
Adults are not the only ones dying from AIDS. In
Africa, infants of mothers who are HIV-positive have a 30 to 60
percent chance of being born with the virus. Their life expectancy
is typically less than 2 years. Many more infants acquire the virus
through breastfeeding. Few of them will reach school age.
Thus far, attention has focused on the effect of
rising mortality on future population trends, but the virus also
reduces fertility. Research is limited, but early evidence indicates
that from the time of infection onward, fertility among infected
women slowly declines. By the time symptoms of AIDS appear, women
are 70 percent less likely to be pregnant than those who are not
infected.
Females are infected at an earlier age than males
because they have sexual relations with older men who are more likely
to be HIV-positive. Female infection rates are also higher than
those of males. Among 15- to 19-year-olds, five times as many females
are infected as males. Because they are infected so early in life,
many women will die before completing their reproductive years,
further reducing births.
A demographically detailed study in Kisumu, Kenya,
found that 8 percent of 15-year-old girls are HIV-positive. For
16-year-olds, the figure is 18 percent; and by age 19, it is 33
percent. Among the 19-year-olds, the average age of infection was
roughly 17 years. With a life expectancy of perhaps nine years after
infection, the average woman in this group will die at age 26, long
before her child-bearing years are over.
Much work remains to be done in analyzing the effects
of the HIV epidemic on fertility, but we do know that with other
social traumas, such as famine, the effect of fertility decline
on population size can equal the effect of rising mortality. For
example, in the 195961 famine in China, some 30 million Chinese
starved to death, but the actual reduction in Chinas population
as a result of the famine was closer to 60 million.
The reasons are well understood. In a famished population,
the level of sexual activity declines, many women stop ovulating,
and even the women who do conceive often abort spontaneously. In
a prolonged famine, the fall in births can contribute as much to
the population decline as the rise in mortality. How much the HIV
epidemic will eventually reduce fertility no one knows.
One thing is known: The wholesale death of young
adults in Africa is creating millions of orphans. By 2010, Africa
is expected to have 40 million orphans. Although Africas extended
family system is highly resilient and capable of caring for children
left alone when parents die, it will be staggered by this challenge.
There is a real possibility that millions of orphans will become
street children, trying to survive by whatever means they can.
Africa is also facing a gender imbalance, a unique
shortage of women. After wars, countries often face a severe shortage
of males, as Russia did after World War II. This epidemic, however,
is claiming more females than males in Africa, promising a future
where men will outnumber women 11 to 9. This will leave many males
either destined to bachelorhood or forced to migrate to countries
outside the region in search of a wife.
The demographic effects of the HIV epidemic on
Africa will be visible for generations to come. Until recently,
the official projections at the United Nations indicated continuing
population growth in all countries in Africa. Now this may be changing
as the United Nations acknowledges that populations could decline
in some countries. If the new U.N. biennial update of world population
numbers and projections, due out before the end of this year, includes
the full effect of the epidemic on fertility as well as on mortality,
it will likely show future population declines for many African
countries, including Botswana, Zimbabwe, South Africa, and Zambia.
There are many unknowns in the effects of the HIV
epidemic on the demographic equation. Will health care systems,
overwhelmed by AIDS victims, be able to meet the need for basic
health care? How will the loss of so many adults in rural communities
affect food security? What will be the effect on fertility of women
surrounded by death? What will be the social effects of the missing
generation of young adults unable to rear their children or to care
for their parents?
Even though the HIV epidemic may claim more lives
in Africa than World War II claimed worldwide, the epidemic is simply
not being given the priority it deserves either within the countries
most affected or within the international community. The challenge
is to reduce the number of new infections as rapidly as possible.
Nothing should deter societies from this goal.
One of the earliest countries hit by the epidemic,
Uganda, has become a model for other countries as the infected share
of its adult population has dropped from 14 percent in the early
1990s to 8 percent in 2000, a dramatic achievement. In Zambia, which
has mobilized the health, education, agricultural, and industrial
sectors, plus church groups, in the effort to curb the spread of
the virus, the infected share of young females in some cities has
dropped by nearly half since 1993. Zambia may soon turn the HIV
tide. If all African countries can do what Uganda has done and what
Zambia appears to be doing namely, reduce the number of new
infections below that of AIDS deaths they may set the stage
for ending this history-altering epidemic.
See
data and graphs (92k, approx. 22 sec at 33.6 speed)
Copyright
© 2000 Earth Policy Institute
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FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
From Earth Policy Institute
Lester R. Brown, Africa is DyingIt Needs
Help, Earth
Policy Alert 5 July 2000.
From Worldwatch Institute
Mary Caron, The Politics of Life and Death World
Watch, May/June 1999.
Brian Halweil, HIV/AIDS Pandemic Hits Africa Hardest,
in Lester R. Brown et al., Vital Signs: The Environmental Trends
that are Shaping Our Future 2000 (New York: W.W. Norton &
Co., 2000).
From Other Sources
Desmond Cohen, Socio-Economic Causes and Consequences
of the HIV Epidemic in Southern Africa: A Case Study of Namibia,
UNDP HIV and Development Programme Issues Paper No. 31, 1998.
http://www.undp.org/hiv/
publications/issues
/english/issue31e.htm
Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS), Report on
the Global HIV/AIDS Epidemic, June 2000.
http://www.who.int/hiv/
epiupdates/en/index.html
Monitoring the AIDS Pandemic (MAP) Network, The Status and
Trends of the HIV/AIDS Epidemics in the World, Provisional
Report, 5-7 July 2000.
Elizabeth Pisani, Data and Decision-making: Demographys
Contribution to Understanding AIDS in Africa, International
Union for the Scientific Study of Population, Policy and
Research Paper No. 14.
http://www.iussp.org/
Publications_on_site/
PRP/prp14.php
UNICEF, The Progress of Nations 2000 (New York: 2000).
http://www.unicef.org/pon00

LINKS
For an excellent treatment of the HIV epidemic in
South Africa, see attached pdf HIV/AIDS: A Threat to the African
Renaissance? by Robert Shell, Kristina Quattak, Martin Schonteich,
and Greg Mills (published in 2000 by the Konrad Adenauer Foundation
through their Occasional Paper series). Permission granted to post
this publication as a pdf from the Konrad Adenauer Foundation.
http://www.lib.uct.ac.za/asl/
info/hivaids/renaissance.pdf
Population Information Network (POPIN) and the Association for Population/Family
Planning Libraries and Information Centers International (APLIC-I),
Selected Electronic Resources on HIV/AIDS, 24 October 2000.
http://www.aplici.org/
publications/PDF/focuson4.pdf
UNAIDS Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS
http://www.unaids.org
UNDP: HIV and Development Programme
http://www.undp.org/hiv/
World Health Organization Initiative on HIV and AIDS
http://www.who.int/hiv/en/
World Bank on HIV and AIDS
http://www.worldbank.org/aids



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