Close
About
FAQ
Home
Collections
Login
USC Login
Register
0
Selected
Invert selection
Deselect all
Deselect all
Click here to refresh results
Click here to refresh results
USC
/
Digital Library
/
ONE National Gay and Lesbian Archives
/
ONE Archives: Posters and Graphic Materials
/
A global view of HIV infection
(USC DC Image)
A global view of HIV infection
Loading details...
You do not have the permission to view Original image
Download
Share
Copy Asset Link
Request this asset
Description
Text continues: "More than 29 million adults living with HIV/AIDS as of end 1997." Black text on white background. The center of the poster contains a color coded map of world denoting aids rates, statistical information on right, smaller regional maps on bottom.
Asset Metadata
Title
A global view of HIV infection
Subject
HIV (Infections)--Transmission
(subject),
World Health Organization
(corporate name)
Tags
OAI-PMH Harvest
Type
images
Format
1 print : lithograph, color
(format),
image/tiff
(imt),
posters
(aat),
sheet 61 x 78 cm (poster format).
(format)
Language
English
Source
ONE Archives: Posters and Graphic Materials
(subcollection),
ONE National Gay and Lesbian Archives
(collection),
University of Southern California
(contributing entity)
Relation References
Online Archive of California: https://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/c89p37jd/
(references)
Creator
Laserladen DTP AG
(creator)
Contributor
Coll2018-001 ONE Archives LGBTQ Poster Collection
(provenance)
Publisher
University of Southern California. Libraries
(digital)
Repository Email
askone@usc.edu
Repository Name
ONE National Gay & Lesbian Archives
Repository Location
909 West Adams Boulevard, Los Angeles, California, 90007; phone (213) 821-2771
Rights
This item is protected by copyright. Copyright holder is unknown, unidentifiable or unlocatable. For more information, see https://rightsstatements.org/page/InC-RUU/1.0/?language=en
Access Conditions
This online display has been made possible by a generous grant from the Council on Library and Information Resources. For access to the physical items, contact ONE Archives at askone@usc.edu; or...
Permanent Link (DOI)
https://doi.org/10.25549/one-c4-46327
Identifier
map-case 5.3 (
box
), P02978 (
call number
), one-2018001-p02978~01.tif (
filename
), one-c4-46327 (
legacy record id
)
IIIF ID
[Document.IIIFV3ID]
DM Record ID
46327
Unique identifier
UC12336333
Legacy Identifier
one-2018001-p02978~01.tif
Type
Image
Internet Media Type
image/tiff
Resolution
23.6 in × 18.5 in at 300dpi
59.9 cm × 47.0 cm at 300dpi
Transcript (If available)
Content
Adult prevalence rate
MS «8.0. - 32.0%
M20 - 8.0%
WS s0.5% = - 2.0%
ME «(0.13% — 0.5%
0.03% — 0.13%
0.0% — 0.03%
not available
The spread of HIV over time
In Latin America and the Caribbean, HIV was present at low levels throughout the region from
the start of the 1980s. Rates then increased primarily in Brazil, in countries of Central America
and especially in Haiti, where heterosexual spread had predominated from the beginning. At the
end of 1997 most of the countries in this region had well-established epidemics, with rates in
the Caribbean being generally the highest.
In the African continent, epidemic HIV spread had already appeared in the early 1980s in a geo-
graphical band stretching from West Africa across to the Indian Ocean on the east coast, while
the countries north of the Sahara and those in the southern cone of the continent seemed
untouched. By 1987, the epidemic had become more concentrated in the same east-west band,
and was gradually beginning to colonize the south of the continent. A decade later, HIV had
been recorded all over the continent. HIV spread by 1997 was most dramatic in southern Africa,
with 20% and more of all adults being infected in some countries.
Until the late 1980s, no country in Asia had experienced a major epidemic — the continent appeared
practically immune. By 1992, however, a number of countries, led by Thailand, were grappling
with increasing numbers of infections. These were generally concentrated among drug injectors
and among sex workers and their clients. Although no country has reached anything like the
prevalence levels common in sub-Saharan Africa, HIV was by 1997 well established across the
continent. The countries of South-East Asia, with the exception of Indonesia, the Lao People’s
Democratic Republic and the Philippines, were comparatively hard hit, as was India. China, too,
was recording an increasing number of cases
This poster was produced in collaboration with the Institute for Social and Preventive Medicine at the University
of Zurich in Switzerland
The designations employed and the presentation of the material in this map, including tables and colouring
of country areas, do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever on the part of UNAIDS or WHO
concerning the legal status of any country, territory, city or area or of its authorities, or concerning the
delimitation of its frontiers or boundaries
a gee)
ol
1987
1982
1997
1992
1997
A global view of HIV infection
More than 29 million adults living with HIV/AIDS as of end 1997
CS
Albania <100 0.01
Austria 7,500 0.18
elgium 7,200 0.14
Denmark 3,100 0.12
Finland 500 0.02
France 110,000 0.37
German 35,000 0.08
Greece 7,500 0.14
Iceland 200 0.14
Ireland 1,700 0.09
Italy 90,000 0.31
Luxembourg 30! 0.14
Malta 200 0.11
Netherlands 14,000 0.17
Norway 1,300 0.06
Portugal 35,000 0.69
Sloven <100 0.01
Spain 120,000 0 57
Sv zerland 12,000 0.32
TFYR Macedonia <100 0.01
United Kingdom 25,000 0.09
Yugoslavia* 5,000 0.10
ER DTS
Alneria* 11.000 00
500
1,000
8,100
raq* 300
Israel 2,100
Kuwait* 1 400
ebanon* 1,500
Libyan Arab Jamahiriya* 1,400
Morocco* 5,000 0.03
Oman 1,200 0.11
Qatar* 300 0.09
Saudi Arabia* 1,100 0.01
Sudan* 40,000 0.99
Syrian Arab Republic* 80 0.01
Tu " 2,200 0.04
Tu 2,000 0.01
Unite tes* 2,400 0.18
Yemen 900 0.01
sub-Saharan Africa
Angola 100,000 2.12
Botswana 25 10
Burkina Faso 00 UL:
Burundi i 8.30
Cameroon 310,000 4.89
Central African Republic 170,000 10.77
Chad 83,000 2.72
Comoros* _ 400 0.14
Céte d'ivoire 670,000 10.06
Democratic Republic of Congo 900,000 4.35
Djibouti 10.30
Er 3.17
Gabon 4.25
Gambia 13,000 2.24
Ghana 200,000 2.38
Guinea 70,000 2.09
Guinea-Bissau 11,000 2.25
Kenya 600,000 11.64
Lesotho 82,000 8.35
Liberia 42,000 3.65
Madagascar 200 0.12
Malaw 670,000 14.92
84,000 1.67
5,900 0.52
500 0.08
fie 200,000 14.17
19.94
1.45
4.12
0.04
12.75
eone 3.17
Somalia* 11,000 0.25
South Africa 2,800,000 12.91
Swaziland 81,000 18.50
160,000 8.52
Uganda 870,06 9.51
United Rep. of Tanzania 1,400,000 9.42
Zambia 730,000 19.07
Zimbabwe 1,400,001 25.84
© Gon
Re,
World Health Organization
s
Afghanistan* <100 <0.005
Bangladesh 21,000 .03
Bhutan* <100 <0.005
Brunei Darussalam” 300 2
Cambodia 0,000 2.40
India 4,100,000 0.82
ndonesia 51,00! 0.05
Iran (Islamic Republic of)* 1,000 <0.005
Lao People’s Dem. Rep. 1,000 0.04
Malaysia 66,000 0.62
Maldives* <100 0.05
Myanmar 440,000 1.79
Nepa' 25,000 0.24
Pakistan 62,000 0.09
Ph es 23,000 0.06
Singapore 3,100 0.15
a 6,700
Thailai 770,000 2.23
Viet Na 86,000 0.22
Armenia <100 0.01
Azerbaijan <100 <0.005
Belarus 9,000 7
Bos Herzegovina* 750 0.04
Bulgaria* 300 0.01
Czech Republic 2,000 0.04
Estonia 00 0.01
Georgia <100 <0.005
Hungary 2,000 0.04
Kazakhstan
Kyrgyzstan
Latvia
Poland
Slovakia
Tajikistan
Turkmenistan
Ukraine
Uzbekistan
China 400,000
Dem. People’s Rep. of Korea” <100
iji 260
Hong Kong 3,100
Japan 6.800
Mongolia <100 0.01
Papua New Guinea 4,200 0.19
Republic of Korea 3,100 0.01
SER ES TT
Australia 11,000 0.14
New Zealand 1,300 0.07
Canada 43,000 0.33
nited s of America 810,000 0.76
6,200 3.77
4,200 2.89
Dominican Republic 81 000 89
Hait 180.000 17
Jamaica
Argentina 120,000 0.69
Belize 2,100 1.89
Brazil 0 0.63
Colombia 0.36
0.28
052
1.46
Mexico 0.35
Nicaragua 0.19
Paraguay 0. 13
Peru 0.56
Suriname Tax.
Venezuela 0.69
The estimates above include all adults aged 15-49 with HIV infection (whether or not they had developed symptoms of AIDS) who
were alive at the end of 1997. For countries marked with an asterisk, not enough data were available to produce an estimate of HIV
prevalence for end 1997. For each of these countries the 1994 prevalence rate published by WHO/GPA (WER 1995:70:353-360) was
applied to the country’s 1997 adult population (15-49) to produce the estimates given in the table
| 1982, 1987,
|
|
1992 1997
Inherited Values
Title
ONE Archives: Posters and Graphic Materials
Description
ONE National Gay & Lesbian Archives is the oldest active Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Queer, Questioning (LGBTQ) organization in the United States and the largest repository of LGBTQ materials in the world. Founded in 1952, ONE Archives currently houses over two million archival items including periodicals, books, film, video and audio recordings, photographs, artworks, organizational records and personal papers.
A small subset of this material has been digitized and is available online.
For additional information about the Archives, please see our Website (https://one.usc.edu/).
ONE Archives’ digital collections have been made possible by generous support from the California State Library (https://www.library.ca.gov), the Council on Library and Information Resources (CLIR) (https://www.clir.org/), The GRAMMY Foundation (https://www.grammy.com/grammy-foundation), the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) (https://www.neh.gov/), ONE Archives Foundation (https://www.onearchives.org), and a USC Libraries Dean's Challenge Grant.
Linked assets
ONE Archives: Posters and Graphic Materials
Conceptually similar
II conferencia Latina del HIV/SIDA
AIDS affects, effects, infects everyone
Take this test before it's time to take this one
HIV is a gay disease
Protect yourself, others and our future
5 Bundesversammlung der Menschen mit HIV und AIDS
AIDS national conference on women and HIV infection
Hágase esta prueba : antes de que sea tiempo de hacer se ésta
Live long, sugar
Show hospitality to one another without complaint
Respect yourself : protect yourself
Not all sex workers need to be saved : I'm a sex worker, and I love my job
Hands across West Hollywood
Compared to last year, newly reported HIV cases among gay men have jumped by 50%!
Who will say Kaddish for me?
The HIV-affected and gay and lesbian community is united
The 100% original one of a kind celebrity t-shirt auction
A celebration of life : life party dance-ation
Never give up
To share and guide others
Similar tones
View images with similar tones