By Steven Eke BBC Russian affairs analyst |

A new survey on awareness of, and attitudes to, HIV and Aids has revealed a high degree of ignorance of basic issues in two of the countries with the fastest growing epidemics - Russia and Ukraine. Graphs and charts of the survey's main findings 
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Nearly 3,000 people were interviewed for the survey, which is part of a landmark week of BBC programming on HIV and Aids. When asked: 'which issue worries you most?', Russians and Ukrainians overwhelmingly said "personal financial security".
Only 8% say HIV or Aids.
That might be a reflection of the comparatively small number of Aids-related deaths to have occurred in these countries.
In the African nation of Tanzania, by contrast, 98% of respondents said HIV/Aids was their biggest fear.
Misconceptions
The proportion of respondents in Russia who knew that HIV is potentially life-threatening was in line with the global average - 94% - but the figure was slightly lower in Ukraine.
 It was widely known that contaminated syringes can transmit HIV |
There was greater awareness in both countries that HIV is transmitted sexually and by contaminated syringes than from mother to baby. In a similar vein, one in 10 Ukrainians believes the virus can be transmitted merely by touching someone who is already a carrier.
But Russians and Ukrainians were among or above the European averages when it came to attitudes to sex education for people under 14 - a clear majority thought it was a good idea.
Rampant sickness
While the absolute numbers of Aids-related deaths in Russia and Ukraine are still low, the speed with which HIV is spreading means both countries face a medical time-bomb.
But both already face immediate medical concerns - notably, what to do about the region's pre-existing epidemic of ill-health.
Ukraine's health minister, for example, recently revealed that the mortality rate among middle-aged Ukrainians is up to 12 times higher than that for Western Europe.
Smoking, obesity and high blood pressure, not Aids, are the main causes.