Energy News  
EPIDEMICS
Global economic crisis threatens fight against AIDS

HIV-positive woman in China says hospital refuses treatment
Beijing (AFP) July 16, 2010 - A migrant worker seriously injured in a wage dispute in China said Friday that a hospital had refused to treat her after doctors found out she was HIV-positive. Li Na, 37, told AFP she was beaten up Monday when she and fellow workers at a construction site in the Inner Mongolia region asked their company for unpaid wages, and was sent to hospital. "They didn't treat me, they didn't give me any medicine, and the company said that if I didn't leave the hospital, they would not pay any of the workers," Li said, adding she had left as a result. "She was spitting blood, but when doctors did some tests and found out she was HIV-positive, they refused to treat her," her brother-in-law Wu Jibiao, who is also a colleague, said in a separate phone interview.

Wu said that she was still spitting blood, her blood pressure was sky high and she could not walk. He added that doctors told Li's co-workers that she was HIV-positive -- a sensitive issue in China where people with HIV/AIDS still encounter huge discrimination. "Some people talk to me but won't come near me. The workers all know... I just want to hide, I don't want other people to look at me," Li said over the phone, as she started to cry. The People's Hospital of Dalate Qi, where Li was sent, was not immediately available for comment, and local police said they were unaware of the case. Li said she found out she had HIV around eight years ago, after she sold blood in the central province of Henan, her home region. Her nine-year-old daughter is also HIV-positive.

"I'm worried I won't find work now, and I can't go home. I just feel there's nowhere for me to live," she said. Henan was the scene of a huge scandal in the 1990s when people were infected with HIV after repeatedly selling their blood to collection stations that pooled it in a tub and then injected it back into them after taking the plasma. The blood-selling scandal, which was initially covered up by local officials, saw entire villages in Henan devastated by AIDS. China says that at least 740,000 people are living with HIV, but campaigners say the actual figure could be far higher.
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) July 17, 2010
The global fight against HIV/AIDS is threatened by stagnating economies around the world, which have caused governments to shrink their budgets and, with them, grants to fight the illness.

"We are facing a major challenge in terms of funding because the global economic downturn has got a lot of governments looking hard at their budgets, and some doing decreases in the kind of aid that goes for global health, and AIDS in particular," said Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates, who now runs a philanthropic foundation that bears his and his wife's names.

That very topic will be widely discussed at the 18th international conference on AIDS in Vienna next week, said Gates, who will deliver a speech at the meeting.

Dr Anthony Fauci, head of the US National Institute for Allergy and Infectious Disease (NIAID), said the economic crisis couldn't have come at a worse time for the fight against AIDS.

"There are not enough resources to meet the demands of people who need treatment and prevention," he said, adding that the sharp dip in funding to fight AIDS has hit "just as we are reaping the fruit of success in getting therapy and prevention to the developing world."

Some five million people in poor countries are being treated for or to prevent HIV/AIDS today, compared with just one tenth of that number six years ago.

The cost of antiretrovirals has fallen from 15,000 dollars per person per year in 2001 to 120 dollars a year today.

And the rate of infection with human immunodeficiency virus -- or HIV -- has dropped 17 percent compared to 2001, when it was at its acme.

But, said Fauci, that doesn't mean it's time to rest on one's laurels.

"Every time you treat one person, two to three people get newly infected.

"So we have the challenge of treating people who need to be treated -- and there are more and more because there are 2.7 million new infections per year -- and at the same time of preventing new infections," he said.

"We are in somewhat of a crisis and the solution to it is not particularly evident right now," he said.

Dr Julio Montaner, president of the International AIDS Society (IAS), warned of the devastating consequences if governments "don't do more in terms of the quality and quantity of care for people with HIV."

Doing nothing would "result in dire human and economic costs in the short and long term," he said.

In 2006, United Nations member states committed to achieving universal access to HIV prevention, treatment and care by this year.

But with the deadline here, the global community has failed to deliver on this pledge.

In 2009, UNAIDS estimated that 25 billion dollars will be needed by this year for the AIDS response in low- and middle-income countries. That's 11.3 billion dollars more than is actually available today.

Gates urged governments and NGOS to "apply new innovations to get more out of every dollar of funding that is available," and to focus on preventive methods that have been shown to work, such as male circumcision.

Dr Paul Zeitz, founder and executive director of the Global AIDS Alliance (GAA), said increasing infections and flat funding have left the global AIDS movement in crisis and millions of lives at stake.

In Africa, which is at the epicenter of the AIDS pandemic, the enrollment to get life-saving medicine has stopped, he said.

"Country after country is stopping enrollment," he said.

Zeitz called on world leaders to be true to their word and step up to the plate in the fight against AIDS. Among those he singled out for criticism were US President Barack Obama who during his campaign for the US presidency pledged to increase funding for AIDS more than three-fold.

Since he has been elected, nothing has been done, said Zeitz.

earlier related report
Southern Africa in circumcision drive to fight AIDS
Harare (AFP) July 16, 2010 - Thomas Mukone wonders exactly how he would tell his wife that he wants a circumcision at age 41, even with the government in Zimbabwe urging adult men to get snipped to slow the spread of AIDS.

"It's not easy to discuss this as she is bound to accuse me of promiscuity," he said. "It is a really nice programme, but how will I tell my wife that I want to go for circumcision?"

Zimbabwe has joined the growing list of countries in southern Africa that is pushing, and sometimes paying, for adult men to get circumcised, in the wake of studies that found men without a foreskin are 60 percent less likely to catch HIV.

Scientists think this is because the foreskin has more cells that are easier for HIV to infect. The findings have sparked a regional drive to make circumcision a routine party of prevention efforts.

Zimbabwe aims to have 30,000 men undergo circumcision by year end, said Owen Mugurungi, head of the national HIV prevention programme.

It's an ambitious target -- 82 men would have to get trimmed every day in a country where the medical service struggles to provide basic care.

Mugurungi said 4,000 men have taken part so far, including many in the army, and donor funding means the procedure is free for volunteers.

But convincing men to undergo the procedure requires tackling issues both complicated and intimate in the region hardest-hit by AIDS.

"In many households, the issue of circumcision is still treated with suspicion and we need to do more campaigns" to educate the public, Mugurungi said.

Trials in Kenya and Uganda have shown that circumcision, while far from being a silver bullet, dramatically reduced the number of new infections for men.

Uganda, a pioneer in HIV prevention, is currently running television and radio campaigns to encourage men to visit clinics for safe circumcision procedures.

Botswana has launched a scheme to circumcise 500,000 men -- a quarter of the total population -- by 2012.

Zambia, Lesotho and Swaziland all encourage circumcision as a matter of policy, and South Africa is running a pilot project to offer free circumcisions.

Each country is facing its own hurdles.

In some communities, circumcision is practised as a rite of passage for teenage boys. Xhosa boys in South Africa are taken to initiation schools where their foreskins are cut by traditional doctors of varying competence.

Every year, dozens of boys die of complications from the procedure, while scores more suffer amputations or gangrenous infections. That can scare off potential volunteers from safe medical circumcisions performed in clinics.

Zulus abandoned the tradition more than a century ago, but their king has proposed reviving the practice to fight HIV, with trained medical staff doing the work.

In countries like Swaziland, where HIV infects 26 percent of adults, circumcision trials began five years ago and worries have already sprung up that after the procedure men see less need to use condoms, creating a new HIV risk.

Still, the country is aiming to circumcise 80 percent of men aged 15-24 over the next four years.

The question remains, will the men participate?

Malawi has refused to look at circumcision as an option, saying it is too difficult culturally for people to accept.

"Malawi is not a circumcised country, so circumcision cannot work," said Mary Shawa, head of Malawi's AIDS and nutrition programme. "It's very difficult to implement as a policy."

Still, across most of the region billboards are sprouting up like those in Zimbabwe, which show five footballers forming a wall in front of the goal line, under the message: "Male circumcision is one of the top defenders against HIV."

Admire Murerwa, 21, a street vendor selling his wares a few metres (yards) from the sign, is not convinced.

"Yes, circumcision is right," Murerwa said. "I still think the condom is better to reduce HIV infection. Circumcision is right, but it also depends on how one behaves for you not to be infected."

earlier related report
Respect for rights can help curb spread of AIDS: HRW
Vienna (AFP) July 17, 2010 - Respect for the rights of the people most vulnerable to the AIDS virus is vital in stopping the spread of the disease, Human Rights Watch said Saturday ahead of a world conference on AIDS.

Joseph Amon, the US-based group's health and human rights director, called on governments of more than 160 countries to repeal laws criminalising sex workers, drug addicts and homosexuals.

"Only by protecting the human rights of marginalized and vulnerable populations can we succeed in ending HIV transmission and ensuring universal access to care," he said in a statement.

It was "not enough to talk about education, HIV testing, or treatment without addressing the human rights abuses that act as barriers to these services," he added.

"Governments and donors shouldn't simply preach prevention and care while ignoring the need to reduce stigma and violence, and we need to challenge them when they do."

"Laws in more than 160 countries that criminalize sex workers, drug users, men who have sex with men, and HIV exposure or transmission impede effective HIV outreach and discourage people from seeking treatment," Human Rights Watch said.

"Much like laws protecting 'morality' or 'decency', these laws also create a risk of selective or arbitrary prosecution, the group warned.

"Punitive laws that criminalize certain groups or behaviours fuel stigma and discrimination, increase the risk of HIV, and prevent HIV/AIDS services from reaching the most vulnerable populations," Amon said.

AIDS experts gather in Vienna on Sunday for the 18th International AIDS Conference since acquired immune deficiency syndrome came to light in 1981.

Expected to draw more than 20,000 researchers, policymakers and grassroots workers, it comes amid some optimism that after almost 30 years significant progress is being made towards conquering the disease that destroys the body's immune system.

However more than 33 million people live with the virus and each year 2.7 million more cases of HIV occur. Stigma, ignorance and discrimination are entrenched in many places and millions of needy people have yet to clutch the drug lifeline.



Share This Article With Planet Earth
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit
YahooMyWebYahooMyWeb GoogleGoogle FacebookFacebook



Related Links
Epidemics on Earth - Bird Flu, HIV/AIDS, Ebola



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


EPIDEMICS
Significant progress made towards AIDS vaccine: US official
Washington (AFP) July 14, 2010
After decades of trying to develop a vaccine against AIDS, global health authorities are finally beginning to make "significant advances" towards their goal, Anthony Fauci, head of the US institute of infectious diseases, told AFP. "Up to a few years ago, even though we have been trying for a couple of decades to develop a vaccine, unsuccessfully, we have not even had a small clue that we we ... read more







EPIDEMICS
NASA Goddard Was In The Earthquake Zone

A Puzzling Collapse Of Earth's Upper Atmosphere

Britain unveils Google Earth map showing temperature rises

GOES Brings Hurricane Alley Live To The Wireless

EPIDEMICS
Lockheed Martin Unveils GPS Exhibit At UN

Tracking System Leads Rescuers To Birds Caught In Gulf Of Mexico Oil Spill

New System Helps Locate Car Park Spaces

Skyhook Wireless Partners With Samsung Electronics For Leading Location System

EPIDEMICS
Illegal logging of tropical forests in decline: study

SLeone lifts ban on timber exports: government

Ferns And Fog On The Forest Floor

Storm may have killed half a billion trees

EPIDEMICS
Ukraine Milk Company Powered By 4,000 Cows And GE Biogas Engine

All Systems Go At World's Largest Cellulosic Ethanol Plant

ExxonMobil And Synthetic Genomics Advance Algae Biofuels Program

Breaking Biomass Better

EPIDEMICS
SOLON Selected As Solar Module Provider For National Grid Solar Site

Quantum And Asola Expand Into Canada

Day4 Energy Announces The Completion Of Two Major PV Projects In Germany

Solar Savings Could Help Britain's Churches And Other Religious Buildings

EPIDEMICS
Study Shows Stability And Utility Of Floating Wind Turbines

Leading French Wind Farm Developer Says Yes To Triton

Floating ocean wind turbines proposed

China to dominate wind power

EPIDEMICS
China mine explosion leaves at least six dead

Carbon monoxide kills nine miners in China

Nine trapped in flooded China coal mine: state media

China coal mine explosion kills 47

EPIDEMICS
Tibet's next leader?

China tells dissident writer book on PM could mean prison

Google says still waiting for China licence decision

Celebrations and sadness as Dalai Lama turns 75


The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2010 - SpaceDaily. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement