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Indians more prone to HIV-AIDS than other population
by Raj on Apr 27, 2008 09:28 AM

(Xinhua)
Updated: 2008-04-26 16:27

NEW DELHI - A gene mapping exercise of "people of India" shows that Indians are more vulnerable to HIV- AIDS than other population groups across the world because a protective gene marker against HIV-1 is virtually absent in the country, according to the latest study released by Indian Science and Technology Ministry.

The study also shows that the risk increases as one moves from north to south India. It also says the Indian gene pool is quite varied and the term or description "Indian" is hardly homogenous. It includes several variations across population groups spread across the country's land mass.

On the vulnerability to HIV-AIDS, the study says, "there is a high-to-low gradient from north to south (India). These results are consistent with the observations by Majumder and Dey in 2001, and the antenatal clinical HIV prevalence survey (2005) that reports a high frequency of HIV in south Indian populations."

The study, which was carried out by more than 150 scientists and researchers, is the largest scientific endeavor since Green Revolution effort in 1970s, the mapping covered four main linguistic families of Indians -- Austro-Asiatic, Tibeto-Burman, Indo-European and Dravidian. It also encompassed the mostly endogamous (marrying within the larger social group) Indian population defined by distinct religious communities, hierarchical castes and subcastes, and isolated tribal groups.

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