South Africa’s biggest company, diversified miner Anglo American, said on Tuesday it planned to start distributing anti-Aids drugs to its HIV-positive staff.
It gave no overall cost estimates of the plan to tackle the disease which affects around 4,7-million South Africans — or around one in nine of the population.
”Operating companies will now be encouraged…(to make) anti-retroviral treatment (ART) available at company expense to HIV-positive employees,” it said.
This would apply to staff who did not have an ART benefit through a medical aid scheme and who had progressed to a stage of HIV infection where ART was clinically indicated.
In Southern Africa, Anglo employs around 90 000 people. Its AngloGold subsidiary has 44 000 staff and diamond miner De Beers, in which it owns 45%, employs around 18 000.
South Africa has more people living with HIV/Aids than any other country, but the government has been criticised for delays in treating the disease effectively.
Anglo representative Anne Dunn said the company estimates the group’s HIV/Aids prevalence rate at around 23%. But she said cost calculations were complicated by the fact that not all HIV-infected employees may need the drugs immediately.
And not all staff could be expected to come forward and be tested.
Of the 90 000 staff in Anglo’s southern African operations, around 12 000 are on medical aid schemes.
And, as a reference to how many employees could be expected to take up the ART offer, she said that in De Beers’ Debswana operations only around 13 percent of staff took up ART in the first year it was made available.
The country’s biggest bullion producer AngloGold has said HIV-Aids is costing its South African mining operations between $4 and $6 an ounce of gold produced, but that could rise to $9 if the company did nothing to manage the impact of the pandemic.
AngloGold expects to produce a total 5,8-million ounces of gold in 2002, with 3,4-million ounces mined in South Africa.
Anglo did not give a specific timetable for the rollout of ART to its staff, but said it would vary by company and depended on each company’s health facilities.
It expected the cost of anti-Aids drugs to come down as usage increased and generic alternatives became available.
Anglo said offering ART to its sick staff would prolong their working lives and contain future Aids-related costs.
These included absenteeism, medical expenses, pension benefits and the recruitment and training costs required to replace employees who become too ill to work. – Reuters