A man in a wheelchair leaves the almost-deserted Hillbrow Community Health Center in Johannesburg on Wednesday.A man in a wheelchair leaves the almost-deserted Hillbrow Community Health Center in Johannesburg on Wednesday. (Denis Farrell/Associated Press)

Doctors and activists say AIDS patients aren't getting treated because of a nationwide strike in South Africa, the country with the highest incidence of the virus that causes AIDS.

Dr. Ashraf Coovadia said Wednesday his Johannesburg hospital usually sees 60 to 80 HIV and AIDS patients daily, but that has dropped to 20-30 since the strike began a week ago.

He said patients may believe the hospital has been closed down by the strike, or fear getting caught in violence that has flared between police and health workers on the picket line.

AIDS activist Mark Heywood said he supports the call for better wages that has led nurses and doctors as well as teachers, court workers and other to strike. But Heywood said that skeleton staff should at least be left to care for AIDS patients.