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Download this publication - HIV/AIDS Data Hub

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COUNTRY PROGRESS REPORTP h i l i p p i n e sTotal estimated number of <strong>AIDS</strong>-related deaths from 1984 to 2011 was 3,700 (PNAC,“Estimates,” 2011) with around 500 deaths in 2011 alone. But <strong>AIDS</strong>-related deaths reported inthe Registry were very few – in 2011, only 94 <strong>AIDS</strong>-related deaths were report (see Figure 2.2).FIGURE 2.2Number of <strong>HIV</strong> and <strong>AIDS</strong> Cases and Deaths Reported in the Philippines by Year,January 1984 to December 2011 (N=8,364)Modes of <strong>HIV</strong> TransmissionSource: Philippine <strong>HIV</strong> and <strong>AIDS</strong> Registry, December 2011, DOH-NECFrom 1984 to 2011, sexual contact was the primary mode of <strong>HIV</strong> transmission in the country,which accounted for more than 90 percent of reported cases. In smaller proportion, <strong>HIV</strong> wasalso transmitted through sharing of contaminated needles among persons who injected drugs(PWID). Fewer still were reported cases of transmission from mother to child, and throughtransfusion of contaminated blood.From within the same period, 41 percent of sexual modes of <strong>HIV</strong> transmission was throughunprotected heterosexual contact, 36 percent “homosexual” and 23 percent “bisexual.” A closeexamination of the distribution of sexual transmission in the last five years (from 2007 to 2011)showed that unprotected heterosexual contact declined to below 25 percent while unprotectedhomosexual and bisexual contacts (or male-to-male sexual contact) have become predominantmodes (DOH-NEC, “Registry, Dec 2011”).<strong>HIV</strong> cases among overseas Filipino workers (OFW) continue to rise despite decrease inproportion to total reported cases, from 42 percent in 2006 to 20 percent in 2009, and just 14percent in 2011 (Ibid.). Local transmission has started to outpace infections contractedoverseas. It should be noted, however, that <strong>HIV</strong> infections among OFW was reportedly mostlydue to unprotected male-to-male sex or unprotected sex with sex workers.Table 2.1 shows increasing number of reported cases among males who have sex with males(MSM) in the <strong>AIDS</strong> Registry, which was also detected in the bi-annual <strong>HIV</strong> surveillance of DOH-NEC, the Integrated <strong>HIV</strong> Behavioral and Serologic Surveillance (IHBSS). <strong>HIV</strong> prevalence amongMSM quadrupled from 0.28 percent in 2007 to 1.05 percent in 2009. By 2011, it rose to 2.12percent with at least three sites reaching up to six percent (PNAC, “2010 UNGASS” and DOH-NEC, “2011 IHBSS”). Among female sex workers (FSWs), <strong>HIV</strong> prevalence doubled from 0.162012 Global <strong>AIDS</strong> Response Progress Report 15

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