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A Global Problem According to UNAIDS (The Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS) at the end of 2002, an estimated 3.2 million children worldwide under age 15 were living with HIV/AIDS. Approximately 610,000 children under 15 had died from the virus or associated causes in that year alone. As HIV infection rates rise in the general population, new infections are increasingly concentrating in younger age groups. December 2002 UNAIDS/WHO worldwide statistics show
More than 95 percent of all HIV-infected people now live in developing countries, which have also suffered 95 percent of all deaths from AIDS. In those countries with the highest prevalence, UNAIDS predicts that, between 2000 and 2020, 68 million people will die prematurely as a result of AIDS. In seven sub-Saharan African countries, mortality due to HIV/AIDS in children under age five has increased by 20-40 percent. Life expectancy for a child born in Botswana, the country with the highest HIV prevalence in the world, has dropped below 40 years—a level not seen in that country since before 1950. The United States has a relatively small percentage of the world's children living with HIV/AIDS. From the beginning of the epidemic through the end of 2002, 9,300 American children under age 13 had been reported to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) as living with HIV/AIDS. The vast majority of HIV-infected children acquire the virus from their mothers before or during birth or through breast feeding. Because of the wide-spread use of AZT and other highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) in HIV-infected pregnant women in the United States, only 92 new cases of pediatric AIDS were reported in 2002. More than three times that number are infected with HIV but have not yet developed AIDS.
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