THE HINDU Editorial Vocabulary - July 27, 2018 - Topic 2
A new report from the Joint United Nations
Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) bears good news
for the global war against the syndrome. Between 2010 and 2017, several
countries made rapid progress in reducing HIV incidence and getting
antiretroviral therapy to patients. Today, three out of four people with HIV
know their status, and 21.7 million get treatment. While the largest reduction
in incidence came from eastern and southern Africa, Asia also made gains.
India, in particular, brought down the number of new cases and deaths by 27%
and 56%, respectively, between 2010 and 2017.
As the UNAIDS report says, some
satisfaction is warranted. This applies also to India, which has done a few
things right. For example, tuberculosis is the biggest killer of HIV patients
across the world. India is now able to treat over 90% of notified TB patients
for HIV. Social stigma surrounding AIDS-infected people in India, while high,
is declining slowly too. Survey data show that in the last decade, the number
of people unwilling to buy vegetables from a person with HIV came down from
over 30% to 27.6%. But even as India celebrates such progress, it is important
to be mindful of the scale of the challenge. With 2.1 million cases, India is
among the largest burden countries in the world. And there are critical gaps in
its strategy.
The UNAIDS report points out that a country’s
laws can legitimise stigma and give licence to the harassment of groups at the
highest risk of HIV. These include men who have sex with other men, people who
inject drugs, and sex workers. Indian laws don’t do well on this count. The
Immoral Traffic (Prevention) Act criminalises several aspects of sex work,
while Section 377 of the IPC criminalises gay sex. Studies show that fear of
prosecution under such laws prevents homosexual men, drug-users and sex workers
from seeking HIV screening and treatment. As a result, these groups lag behind
average treatment rates, although their requirements are higher. According to a
2017 UNAIDS report, for example, awareness of their HIV status among men who
have sex with other men was 41% in India; 52% of those who knew their status
were receiving treatment, and of these, 83% had suppressed viral levels. These
are troubling patterns. If India is serious about tackling HIV, it must find
ways to reach such groups. Short of changing the law, the Centre can consider
targeted interventions. An experiment in Karnataka, between 2004 and 2011,
finds favourable mention in the report. It shows that sensitising police
personnel and educating female sex workers can greatly reduce arbitrary police
raids and arrests. As the UNAIDS report emphasises, the right to health is
universal. India must take note of this to ensure that no one is left behind in
the fight against HIV.
Vocabulary
Antiretroviral: an
antiretroviral drug.
Example: Prescriptions
were written for a variety of antiretrovirals , antibiotics, antidepressants,
and appetite enhancers
Rapid: happening
in a short time or at a fast pace.
Example: The
country's rapid economic decline
Synonyms: quick, fast, swift, speedy, expeditious, express, brisk, lightning, meteoric
Reduction: the
action or fact of making a specified thing smaller or less in amount, degree,
or size.
Example: Talks
on arms reduction
Synonyms: cutback, cut, downsizing, scaling
down, trimming, pruning, axing
Declining: become
smaller, fewer, or less; decrease.
Example: The
birth rate continued to decline
Synonyms: decrease, reduce, lessen, diminish, dwindle, contract, shrink
Unwilling: not
ready, eager, or prepared to do something.
Example: He
was unwilling to take on that responsibility
Synonyms: reluctant, unenthusiastic, hesitant, resistant, grudging, involuntary
Harassment: aggressive
pressure or intimidation.
Example: They
face daily harassment by the police
Synonyms: persecution, intimidation, pressure, force, coercion, hassle
Legitimise: make
legitimate.
Example: Voters
legitimize the government through the election of public officials
Synonyms: validate, legitimate, permit, authorize, sanction, license, condone
Prosecution: the
institution and conducting of legal proceedings against someone in respect of a
criminal charge.
Example: Olesky
faces prosecution on charges he spied for Russian intelligence
Immoral: not
conforming to accepted standards of morality.
Example: An
immoral and unwinnable war
Synonyms: unethical, bad, wrongful, wicked, evil, foul, unprincipled
Intervention: the
action or process of intervening.
Example: They
are plants that grow naturally without human intervention
Arbitrary: based
on random choice or personal whim, rather than any reason or system.
Example: His
mealtimes were entirely arbitrary
Synonyms: capricious, whimsical, random, chance, unpredictable, casual, wanton
