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During the mid-1980s Australia experienced a remarkable decline in
HIV incidence that can rightly be considered a public health milestone of global
importance. The effects of this decline lasted for about 20 years and greatly
benefited all Australians. In contrast, as we enter the mid-2000s, we see the global
epidemic continues to intensify, HIV vaccines remain a distant possibility, and
Australia is experiencing rising HIV incidence again. Clearly, better understanding
of HIV prevention has important implications both for Australia and the world.
Therefore, we believe, it is timely to revisit Australian experiences of the mid-1980s
in order to understand those early events better.
To gauge the influence (if any) of government strategies, funding levels and other
events during a period of dramatic decline in HIV transmission, incidence figures
are mapped against Federal HIV/AIDS funding patterns and the occurrence of key
national interventions and events. The analysis reveals that the greatest decline in
HIV preceded almost all substantive initiatives undertaken at the national level,
which are often held responsible for Australia’s successful early containment of
HIV. In particular, dramatic declines were already well advanced and/or preceded
(i) substantive growth in national HIV/AIDS prevention education funding, (ii)
publication of the first National AIDS Strategy, (iii) establishment of key national
HIV/AIDS bodies and (iv) promulgation of the ‘Ottawa Charter’. Explanations for,
and lessons learned from Australia’s dramatic early declines in HIV incidence are
discussed.