Global warning 2008 AD:
Potential HIV/AIDS in the Caribbean countries
In the year 2008, Americans are
becoming increasingly concerned about the spread of HIV/AIDS in the Caribbean and rightly so. Many people are also becoming
more and more aware of the threat of HIV/AIDS, in many other countries of the
world, as there is no country which remains exempt from the threat of this
devastating disease, which is gradually running rampant throughout the world.
The people who live in Caribbean countries are vulnerable and wide open to
HIV/AIDS infection, for a number of different reasons.
First, the Caribbean
region is an extremely high risk area for HIV/AIDS, partly because of open
tourism. There are virtually thousands of people, who are entering the Caribbean countries, from all over the world, every day.
This includes people from many other parts of the world, where HIV/AIDS is
already documented, as being widespread.
Secondly, the status of health
care in these Caribbean countries, depending
upon the area, may or may not be on a high enough level, to prevent an influx
of the disease or to provide the necessary treatment necessary to control the
spread of HIV/AIDS, if an epidemic were to begin and run rampant.
Thirdly, the poverty level in
the Caribbean countries is extremely high,
rendering people from this region likely to have immune deficiencies, severe
enough to elevate the spread of the disease.
These three reasons alone would
suggest that any global epidemic, not just HIV/AIDS, represents an extremely
serious threat, to the people who live in the Caribbean .
Yes, Americans should be
concerned, but not just Americans. This concerns everyone.
The question becomes one of
whether or not, if or when, there is an epidemic of HIV/AIDS in the Caribbean , is it possible to contain the spread of
HIV/AIDS within that area or to prevent it from spreading from there, to other
people outside of that particular region?
One might ask if there is any
kind of legislation in effect in the Caribbean ,
that would allow HIV/AIDS to be contained? Or, is there any legislation in
North America, Mexico ,
Central America or South America , that would
protect the population in these countries from receiving an influx of highly contagious
people, who may already have been infected with HIV/AIDS? If not, why not?
There are some serious concerns
here. Many of these are education, health education and HIV/AIDS education
related issues.
Education, health education and
HIV/AIDS education for the people who are currently living in the Caribbean , is important. But, this is also true with
respect to education, health education and HIV/AIDS education, on a larger or
global scale.
People can be taught to prevent
and to contain the spread of illness, at least to some degree, through a higher
standard of education, health education and HIV/AIDS education.
The economy in the Caribbean , does involve tourism to a large degree.
Because of the sun, the sand and the surf, it is highly unrealistic to assume
that tourism will decrease to any extent, in the Caribbean
area. It is realistic to assume that a high influx of HIV/AIDS into the
Caribbean or the sudden spreading of this disease in the Caribbean
population, could put the tourism industry in serious jeopardy. The economy of
the region would suffer tremendously, increasing the poverty level of the
people, as well as the likelihood of an HIV/AIDS epidemic spreading further.
It is in everyone's best
interest in the Caribbean and on a global level, not just Americans, to attempt
to prevent the spread of HIV/AIDS into the Caribbean and from the Caribbean , into other neighboring countries. Each person,
family, community and country has a degree of responsibility, which must be
assumed both now and in the future.