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EPIDEMICS
Activist discusses challenge of growing old with HIV
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Nov 30, 2012


Argentina's AIDS population getting older: government
Buenos Aires (AFP) Dec 1, 2012 - Argentina's AIDS population is aging, the health ministry said, citing statistics showing one in five AIDS patients in the country is over 45, up from seven percent a decade ago.

"Increasingly more adults are turning up, 45 or 50 years old, newly infected," said Carlos Falistocco, head of the ministry's office on AIDS and sexually transmitted diseases.

Falistocco said this segment of the population has not typically been targeted by awareness campaigns on how to prevent and treat HIV, the virus that causes AIDS.

"You have to run specific campaigns for this group, so they will feel represented and identify with the disease," he said.

These are not the AIDS patients you see "on television or in health campaigns, but they are there in real life, in the statistics, and that is worrying," he said.

According to infectious disease researcher Patricia Patterson, the older generation "discarded condoms because they don't believe they are at risk."

Because of this, "half don't know they have AIDS and are diagnosed only after they are already very ill," she told the "Profile" newspaper.

In recent years, the number of new cases in Argentina has remained stable at around 5,500 each year. But it is estimated that as many as 40 percent of those infected have not been tested.

Sexual transmission remains the most common vector for new infections, with 90 percent of new cases contracted through unprotected sex.

According to ministry figures, there are 110,000 people living with AIDS in Argentina, of whom 1,400 die each year.

Old age comes faster and hits harder for those infected with HIV, a fact aging health activist Ron Swanda knows all too well.

Swanda, 66, diagnosed as HIV-positive in 1989, takes six different drugs to keep his illness in check and to treat a litany of physical complaints from cardiovascular disease to depression.

He is taking stock, as World AIDS Day approaches on December 1, of the long, circuitous and often heart-rending course of his life since his diagnosis more than two decades ago.

He knows he is lucky to be alive, having lost many loved ones to AIDS, which is caused by HIV, over the years.

"The number of people who died still breaks my heart. Many close friends here in (Washington) D.C. and in New York and in other parts of the country passed away," he said.

And while the advent of antiretroviral treatments in 1996 changed an HIV diagnosis from a death sentence to that of a chronic, managed disease, Swanda said the long-term effects of living with the virus -- and with the drugs that keep it in check -- are still being uncovered.

Anthony Fauci, a highly regarded expert in the area of AIDS treatment, noted that "the good news is that people who are infected with HIV, with antiretroviral drugs their projected life span is essentially approaching normal."

On the other hand, he said, doctors have noticed that many common diseases of old age "tend to occur with a greater frequency in people who have been HIV infected for a long period of time."

The virus appears to send the immune system into overdrive, and "when the immune system is chronically activated, essentially all the time, that leads to that deleterious effect of promoting the aging process," explained the doctor, who heads the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), the federal health institute responsible for AIDS research.

From outward appearances, Swanda -- trim and fit-looking -- is the picture of health. But the longtime gay activist, who works in Washington with other HIV-positive senior citizens, said he feels older than his years.

"For instance, I got cataracts at 66 years old. My mother got cataracts when she was 76 years old," said Swanda, a volunteer with the National Association of People with AIDS.

He also suffers from high blood pressure, is in the early stages of heart disease and osteoporosis, and has been diagnosed with "pre-diabetic" symptoms.

Depression also seems to be a common ailment for those living with HIV.

"I think almost everybody with HIV is taking anti-depression medication of some sort," Swanda said.

Meanwhile, the antiretroviral drugs on which Swanda depends to keep his HIV in check cost an exorbitant $1,800 per month. Although health insurance covers 90 percent of the cost, he still has to dig into his pocket to pay $4,700 each year.

And the high price tag appears to be only one of the costs associated with taking the powerful drugs over decades, said Swanda.

He suffers from high cholesterol -- a known side effect of the HIV-fighting antiretroviral medication.

"The antiretroviral causes your cholesterol to go way up, so you take anti-cholesterol medication," he said, but that comes with side effects of its own.

"I started to take anti-cholesterol (medication) at (a) fairly young age... and there are side effects to that -- muscle deterioration," he said.

The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said that by 2015, nearly half the people with HIV will be aged 50 or older, and that a growing number of people are getting infected with the virus when they are over the age of 50.

"In the US they are starting to do more research on the long term use of the antiretrovirals. That is the good news. The bad news is that there is a long way to go" towards understanding what the drugs do to the body," Swanda said, adding that the effects of the drugs have also not been thoroughly tested in older populations.

He hopes that research into these issues will make it possible for future patients to age more gracefully with HIV.

But his activism is also motivated by the memory of HIV-infected friends who, unlike him, were not lucky enough to grow old at all.

"They are gone, I am here, and it's a reason why I am an activist," he said.

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