The percentage rise was partly due to 400,000 new HIV cases in the year studied, the highest in the world, taking the total number of people infected in South Africa to 6.4 million.
Young black African women were the worst affected, with 23.2 percent of females aged 15-49 infected, compared with 18.8 percent of men, the study showed.
Treatment of the virus is increasing, with around 2 million people on an expanded antiretroviral treatment plan.
However, the study found the overall knowledge about how HIV is transmitted and can be prevented fell to 26.8 percent in 2012, from 30.3 pct in 2008.
Three-quarters
of those surveyed believed they were at low risk of contracting HIV,
even though one-in-ten of those tested were found to be already
infected.
South Africans under fifty were having increasing numbers of sexual partners and using condoms less.
"The increases in some risky sexual behaviours are disappointing, as
this partly accounts for why there are so many new infections still
occurring," said Professor Leickness Simbayi, an investigator on the
study.
Despite a government
push to spread the treatment of HIV, medical charities warned last year
that many clinics were running short of life-saving HIV/AIDs drugs.
[ID:nL5N0JD2Q0]
South Africa
awarded a $667 million two-year contract in 2012 to pharmaceutical
firms, including Aspen Pharmacare, Abbott Laboratories and Adcock
Ingram, to supply HIV/AIDS medication.
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