HARARE—
The government of Zimbabwe is intensifying its efforts to fight
HIV, the virus that causes AIDS. Officials are collecting data from about
15,000 randomly selected households to measure the burden of HIV across the
African country and the impact of HIV prevention, care and treatment
services. The Ministry of Health Friday launched the program in Bulawayo,
the country's second largest city. The survey is known as the Zimbabwe
Population-based HIV Impact Assessment, or ZIMPHIA, for short.
The government says the results will serve as a baseline to
measure progress toward the United Nations' treatment targets designed to end
the AIDS epidemic. Officials also say the findings will help to focus
programs and resources toward populations at greatest risk for HIV and in most
need of services. "Both results [from the survey] - HIV negative and positive -
are linked to prevention initiatives or care treatment and support," said
Dr. Mutsa Mhangara, one of the people heading up the program. "ZIMPHIA
also aims to measure the population access to HIV services like health
facilities...These are some of the measures which will be measured to say to
what extent our population is getting these services." 
ZIMPHIA is part of an initiative being funded by the U.S.-based Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention and supported by PEPFAR, the U.S. President's
Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief. Dr. Beth Tippett Barr, the CDC's country director in Zimbabwe says
so far, the survey is going well."It has been implemented in three districts. It will be interesting
to see in Bulawayo," said Barr. "This is the first time that it
is coming to an urban environment. In some ways, it might be easier
because people are close together; in some ways it might turn to be harder as
people are busy trying in all sorts of directions trying to have things
done. So we will see." 
The survey was formally launched in Harare in September. Zimbabwe is one
of the countries hard hit by HIV, although the infection rate has been falling,
largely due to financial and technical support from Western countries.
The Joint United Nations Program on HIV/AIDS, or UNAIDS, estimates that Zimbabwe has an HIV adult prevalence of 15 percent. It says about 1.6 million there are living with the AIDS virus.
The Joint United Nations Program on HIV/AIDS, or UNAIDS, estimates that Zimbabwe has an HIV adult prevalence of 15 percent. It says about 1.6 million there are living with the AIDS virus.
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