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Persons using assistive technology might not be able to fully access information in this file. For assistance, please send e-mail to: [email protected]. Type 508 Accommodation and the title of the report in the subject line of e-mail. Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome: Meeting of the WHO Collaborating Centres on AIDSFollowing a consultation on acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) in April 1985, the World Health Organization (WHO) established a network of Collaborating Centres on AIDS to provide a framework for international cooperation, including training, provision of reference reagents, evaluation of methods, and epidemiologic surveillance (1). The directors of the WHO Collaborating Centres, together with other experts in virology and public health, met in Geneva, Switzerland, September 25-26, 1985, to make recommendations for WHO's 1986-1987 international activities on AIDS. Participants at the meeting reviewed the epidemiologic status of AIDS and affirmed the disease was now a major public health problem in several countries of the developed and developing world. Over 13,000 AIDS cases were reported from 1981 to September 1985 in the United States, and the number of reported cases will probably double in 1986. More than 2,000 cases have been reported from 40 other countries. The Director-General of WHO expressed the great degree of concern felt in almost all 166 Member States of WHO regarding AIDS. In the United States and western Europe, approximately 90% of cases among adults continued to occur in homosexual and bisexual men, intravenous drug users, and sexual partners of persons in these groups. Although it is expected that additional AIDS cases may develop in recipients of blood and blood products who are already infected with the causative virus of AIDS, lymphadenopathy-associated virus/human T-lymphotropic virus type III (LAV/HTLV-III), future infections from blood and blood products can now virtually be considered preventable by screening blood donations for evidence of antibodies to the virus. Most pediatric cases of AIDS have occurred among children of persons in known risk groups. In several developing countries, however, most adult AIDS patients have been sexually active heterosexual men and women. There is no evidence that LAV/HTLV-III is spread through casual contact with an infected individual, such as contact in family settings, schools, or other groups living or working together. The risk of infection of health-care workers seems very remote. At present, there is no evidence that blood-sucking insects transmit the disease. The group concluded that an internationally accepted case definition of AIDS, relevant to its most severe clinical manifestations, was needed for surveillance purposes. For therapeutic trials or other research purposes, broader definitions may be required. In countries where appropriate technologies are available, the surveillance definition for AIDS given by CDC and published by WHO (2) was endorsed by the group. Surveillance definitions are now being developed for use in countries where access to diagnostic techniques is limited. The group concurred on the following issues:
Division of Communicable Diseases, WHO, Geneva. Adapted from WHO Weekly Epidemiological Record 1985;60:333-5. References
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