Jillian Green and Shaun Smillie
According to the report, Estimates of Provincial Mortality, HIV and AIDS
in Gauteng accounted for 33 percent of all deaths in 2000 - one in three
- compared with 30 percent of all deaths nationwide. Compiled by the
MRC's Burden of Disease Research Unit, the report shows that overall
mortality rates and causes of death differ in the provinces, but that
HIV and AIDS is the leading killer across the board. These figures
are just going to get worse and worse, Mark Heywood, spokesperson
for the Treatment Action Campaign, said on Monday.
The findings relating to HIV and AIDS deaths were consistent with other
available reports. The deaths in 2000 were at the beginning of a
period of rapid HIV infection. More people have been infected since then
and more people are going to be dying. But Dr Letitia Rispel, head
of department for the Gauteng Health Department, said it would be
difficult to say what the situation would be now without taking
programmes implemented since 2000 into account. These include the
prevention of mother-to-child treatment, wellness programmes and the
anti-retroviral rollout programme. Only once we have taken these into
account will we get a clear picture.
The MRC report, which also looks at other causes of deaths in the
various provinces, shows that these varied from province to province.
For women in Gauteng, the main causes of death, excluding HIV and AIDS,
are stroke, lower respiratory tract infections, homicide, ischaemic
heart disease, road accidents, TB, hypertensive heart disease,
diarrhoeal diseases, septicaemia and diabetes mellitus. For men, the 10
leading causes of death, excluding HIV and AIDS, are homicide and road
traffic accidents, ischaemic heart disease, TB, lower respiratory
infections, stroke, suicide, diarrhoeal diseases, diabetes and chronic
obstructive pulmonary disease.
This differs from the 10 leading causes of death for Western Cape men.
For those, the 10 leading causes of death are homicide, HIV and AIDS,
traffic accidents, TB, heart disease and stroke, cancer of the upper
respiratory tract or lungs, suicide, chronic obstructive pulmonary
disease and lower respiratory infections. For women in the Western Cape
the main causes of death are HIV and AIDS, TB, heart disease, stroke,
traffic accidents, homicide, diabetes, diarrhoeal diseases, breast
cancer and lower respiratory infections.
And according to the report, Western Cape residents have the highest
life expectancy in the country, probably due to a relatively low HIV
infection rate. The report, co-authored by Professor Debbie Bradshaw,
director of the MRC's research unit, indicates that South Africa is
dealing with a quadruple burden of disease with communicable diseases,
non-communicable diseases, injuries (homicide and road traffic
accidents) and HIV all having a significant impact on cause-of-death
profiles. The authors recommend, among other things, that provinces
improve access to healthcare, ensure basic needs such as access to clean
water and sanitation are met, and that they promote active healthy
lifestyles. The high death rate due to HIV and AIDS highlights the
urgency to accelerate the implementation of a comprehensive plan for the
treatment and prevention of HIV and AIDS, the report reads.
The report's key findings are:
Life expectancy in KwaZulu Natal and Mpumalanga is 11 years lower
than in the Western Cape, which has the lowest mortality rate and
where life expectancy is 63. No life expectancy figure was given for
Gauteng.
HIV and AIDS is the leading cause of death and premature or early
death for all provinces.
Deaths from diarrhoeal disease, TB and nutritional deficiencies
are more likely in the poorer, more rural provinces.
Deaths from non-communicable disease is similar across all the
provinces, although the causes differ.
Death rates from injuries are particularly high in the Western
Cape, Gauteng and Mpumalanga, with men having twice the rate of
women. The report is the first to provide cause-specific death rates
for each province. With these statistics, provinces will be
able to respond to the specific health needs of the population in
that province, the report reads. The National Association of
People Living with HIV and AIDS was not surprised at the high HIV
and AIDS mortality rate. For a long time we have been seeing
parents burying their children, not the other way around - even as
people were not saying that it was AIDS their children were dying
from, said Napwa spokesperson Thanduxolo Doro. HIV and AIDS
was a multifaceted problem, said Doro, and if the government and the
business community were to deal with it, poverty had to be fought
and anti-retroviral drugs provided. The national health department
said it would comment once it had studied the report.
Gender breakdown
Male deaths for 2000 in Gauteng
Total 60 336
HIV/AIDS 30%
Non-communicable
diseases 38%
Injuries 19%
Other communicable (excluding HIV) 13%
Female deaths
Total 44 635
HIV/AIDS 36%
Non-communicable
diseases 43%
Injuries 14%
Other communicable
diseases 14%
Gauteng disease figures
HIV/AIDS 32,5%
Ischaemic heart disease 7,0%
Homicide/violence 6,5%
Stroke 4,9%
Road traffic accidents 3,7%
Lower respiratory infections 3,3%
Tuberculosis 3,0%
Diabetes mellitus 2,5%
Hypertensive heart disease 2,5%
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease 2,3%
Nephritis/nephrosis 1,6%
Septicaemia 1,5%
Trachea/bronchi/lung cancer 1,5%
Inflammatory heart disease 1,4%
Suicide 1,3%
Diarrhoeal diseases 1,2%
Fire 0,9%
Asthma 0,8%
Oesophageal cancer 0,7%
Low birth weight 0,7%
All figures from the Estimates of Provincial Mortality Study
Link to the study:
http://www.mrc.co.za/bod/estimates.htm
(Source: IOL website, May 17, 2005)