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As AIDS conference opens in Mexico, migrants are a focus

21 July 2019, MVT 22:02
(FILES) In this file photograph taken on November 30, 2012, a Cambodian doctor (R) offers Anti Retro Viral (ARV) drugs to a woman (L) who is living with HIV, at the Khmer-Soviet Friendship hospital in Phnom Penh. - HIV-related deaths last year fell to around 770,000 -- some 33 percent lower than in 2010 -- the United Nations said July 15, 2019, but warned that global efforts to eradicate the disease were stalling as funding dries up. An estimated 37.9 million people now live with HIV -- a record 23.3 million of those have access to some antiretroviral therapy (ART), UNAIDS said in its annual report. (Photo by TANG CHHIN Sothy / AFP)
21 July 2019, MVT 22:02

The spread of HIV as a serious aspect of Latin America's migration crisis -- whether through Venezuelans forced to emigrate to obtain medicine or Central American migrants unaware they carry the virus -- will be a focus of the world AIDS conference opening Sunday in Mexico City.

Some 6,000 scientists, physicians, activists and government officials are due to learn about the latest in treatments and research and discuss the human and social costs of AIDS and HIV.

At present, no program focuses on Latin America's HIV-infected migrants, said Brenda Crabtree, a Mexican physician and AIDS specialist who is co-chairperson of the conference.

Ahead of the conference, organizers took early-arriving participants to a clinic in Iztapalapa, one of Mexico City's poorest and most dangerous neighborhoods.

The Condesa Clinic welcomes patients from any country, without inquiring about their legal status, and provides free care.

While some parts of the Mexican public health system demand that a patient's papers be in order, the Condesa clinic aims to be a "sanctuary" for migrants, Crabtree said.

In Venezuela, some 120,000 people live with HIV/AIDS and need retroviral medicines, but nearly 80,000 are currently unable to obtain those drugs, she added.

About one in four foreign patients at Condesa is Venezuelan; 16 percent are Colombian; and another 16 percent come from Central American countries, clinic director Florentino Badial said.

There are also growing numbers of Haitians and Cubans.

Most of the Venezuelans and Colombians arrived legally in Mexico in search of work; most of the Central Americans are undocumented.

The Central Americans, generally less well educated, "are afraid," said Luis Manuel Arellano, a clinic employee. "But we treat them like we would any Mexican."

When a caravan brought thousands of migrants to Mexico in November, the clinic offered free testing and found six undetected cases of HIV, which were then treated.

"Migrants are not abandoned," Arellano said. "We take care of their health."

Carlos Gamez, a 32-year-old Cuban, arrived in Mexico in 2017, having just been diagnosed with HIV. He was able to find drugs at the clinic.

"If I had had to pay, it would not have been possible," he said.

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