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Freeman Chair in China Studies

HIV/AIDS Crisis in China

Even accepting Chinese estimates of 1 million persons with HIV/AIDS, and an annual growth rate of about 25 percent, China will have nearly 6 million HIV/AIDS cases by 2010, easily placing it among the most heavily-infected countries in the world in just the next 5 to 8 years. U.S.-China cooperation in combating HIV/AIDS stands out as a positive area for bilateral cooperation and would make a significant contribution to stemming the spread of HIV/AIDS, but much more work needs to be done in both countries to realize this goal.

Since publishing "The Coming AIDS Crisis in China " (New York Times, July 16, 2001), the Freeman Chair holder, Bates Gill, has helped lead nongovernmental efforts in Washington to inform the policy community of this looming health care challenge, and its implications for China, its neighbors, and for U.S.-China relations.

The project benefits enormously from its close working relations with the HIV Drug Resistance Program, National Institutes of Health, partners within the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the Chinese Ministry of Health and CDC, and the HIV/AIDS Task Force at CSIS. Project activities include:

Even accepting Chinese estimates of 1 million persons with HIV/AIDS, and an annual growth rate of about 25%, China will have nearly 6 million HIV/AIDS cases by 2010, easily placing it among the most heavily-infected countries in the world in just the next 5 to 8 years. …. U.S.-China cooperation in combating HIV/AIDS stands out as a positive area for bilateral relations ….

- Remarks by Bates Gill before the Congressional-Executive Commission on China,
September 9, 2002

 

 

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