-The Telegraph Salim Sheikh’s four-year-old daughter and Shailesh Balash’s 11-year-old son are among 23 thalassaemic children who have tested positive for HIV at the Junagadh Civil Hospital where they had been taking regular blood transfusions. Both Sheikh, a labourer, and police constable Balash say their children must have acquired the deadly infection from the hospital, because that is the only place where they received transfusions. The hospital authorities, however, denied they were to...
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Reproductive Health Security Empowers Women's Choices by Elizabeth Whitman
Each day, one thousand women die in childbirth and one million people become infected with sexually transmitted infections (STIs), including 7,000 cases of HIV. Yet these numbers are preventable, experts insist, when countries possess the resources and willpower to address and deal with them. Dignitaries and high-level officials gathered this week to discuss reproductive health commodity security (RHCS), or, simply put, ensuring that people have access to essentials of reproductive health...
More »UN study finds overall drop in funding for AIDS response in 2010
-The United Nations Funding disbursements from donor governments for the AIDS response in low- and middle-income countries dropped overall in 2010, mainly due to a reduction by the largest donor, the United States, the lead United Nations agency tackling the epidemic said today. According to an annual funding analysis carried out by the Joint UN Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) and the Kaiser Family Foundation, donor governments disbursed $6.9 billion in 2010...
More »UN focuses on global efforts to prevent and defeat hepatitis
-The United Nations The United Nations tomorrow will mark World Hepatitis Day for the first time to bring attention to the disease that affects almost one in every three persons on Earth. “We know what needs to be done,” said Margaret Chan, Director-General of the World Health Organization (WHO). “Viral hepatitis is one of the most prevalent and serious infectious diseases in the world. It deserves much more attention, understanding and...
More »UN hails studies showing antiretroviral drugs can prevent HIV infection
-The United Nations The United Nations today welcomed the results of studies that show that taking a tablet of an antiretroviral drug daily can reduce the risk of acquiring HIV by up to 73 per cent in people not infected by the virus that causes AIDS. The findings of the studies carried out in Kenya, Uganda and Botswana, showed that daily use of both tenofovir and tenofovir/emtricitabine antiretrovirals, taken as preventive...
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