HIV/AIDS in New Zealand
There is a relatively low prevalence of HIV/AIDS in New Zealand. The rate of newly diagnosed HIV infections was stable at around 100 annually through the late 1980s and the 1990s, but rose sharply from 2000 to 2005. It has since stabilised at roughly 180 new cases annually. Male-to-male sexual contact has been the largest contributor to new HIV cases in New Zealand since record began in 1985. Heterosexual contact is the second largest contributor to new cases, but unlike male-to-male contact, they are mostly acquired outside New Zealand.[1]
The first recorded death in New Zealand due to AIDS was in New Plymouth in 1983.[2]
In 1985 Eve van Grafhorst was ostracised in Australia since she had contracted HIV/AIDS caused by a transfusion of infected blood. The family moved to New Zealand where she died at the age of 11. By the time of her death her plight had significantly raised the level of AIDS awareness in New Zealand.
World AIDS Day is observed in New Zealand.
Organisations
The Ministry of Health is the government department which deals with health issues, including HIV/AIDS.
The New Zealand AIDS Foundation is a registered charitable trust which focuses on prevention of AIDS in the most at risk group, namely men who have sex with men.
See also
- LGBT New Zealand
- AIDS pandemic
- GayNZ.com, an online LGBT community forum
References
- ↑ "UNGASS Country Progress Report New Zealand: Reporting Period: January 2010 – December 2011". March 2012. p. 10. Retrieved 22 July 2012.
- ↑ UNAIDS factsheet
External links
- HIV and AIDS Information, Ministry of Health
- New Zealand AIDS Foundation
- Queer Resources Aotearoa New Zealand - a history of HIV/AIDS in New Zealand
- Streaming audio interviews on HIV/AIDS in New Zealand
- The New Zealand AIDS Memorial Quilt