Summary

Russia loses 30,000 working-age citizens annually to HIV, with 1.7 million total infections and nearly 500,000 deaths to date.

The epidemic strains the economy as treatment costs reach $670 million annually, compounded by shortages of antiretroviral drugs and gaps in early testing.

Heterosexual transmission now dominates, though marginalized groups like drug users, sex workers, and gay men remain disproportionately affected.

Reduced funding for HIV testing and inconsistent treatment availability hinder efforts to curb the epidemic, posing critical public health and economic challenges for Russia.

  • @[email protected]
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    1320 hours ago

    Caring and prioritizing may be different. Having concrete numbers can enable decision makers to convince others.

    Something being the right thing to do is not a convincing argument.

    • @angrystego
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      315 hours ago

      I think you just described the sad thing perfectly.

      • @[email protected]
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        158 minutes ago

        Gotta make some judgements for human lives/money at some point.

        E.g. safety at you place of work. There is some middle ground between working naked at a steel smelter and covered in protective gear at your desk job. Some times people have differing opinions.

        The mean value of a Russian life is rather low. So it may actually seem close to some.