HIV/AIDS Newsbytes

Menstuff® is actively compiling newsbytes on the issue of
HIV/AIDS. Plus the HIV Information
Center 
Have You Had Your
AIDS Test? Why not?
ADIS & Youth
Nevirapine Sustains Advantage Over AZT
During Breastfeeding
Rapid Point-Of-Care Testing For HIV-1 During
Labor And Delivery
AIDS Is Africa's Major
Challenge
Merck Starts Global Test Of AIDS
Vaccine
One AIDS Treatment Plan Found
Ineffective
China's Denial Of AIDS Problem Propels
HIV/AIDS Spread
U.N. Tells Asia-Pacific To Fight
AIDS
Brazil Starts Patent Breaking AIDS
Drugs
WHO Director-General Calls For "Urgent
Treatment" For People With AIDS In Africa
Head Of U.S. Conference Of Mayors Urges
Action On AIDS
S. African AIDS Activist Takes AIDS
Drugs
One-Step HIV Test May Be Cheaper, Faster,
Less Wasteful
Bacteria May Show Promise In AIDS
Fight
Russia Reports Rise In HIV Cases
WHO Warns Asia Of Wider HIV/AIDS
Epidemi
U.S. Senators Tour AIDS-Ravaged
Africa
Asian AIDS Experts Agree To Promote
Condom Use Among Prostitutes
Human Rights Group Wants Law To Protect
AIDS Vaccine Trialists
Gov't Harasses HIV Prevention Group
Again
CDC's HIV Prevention Plan Faces
Criticism
Personal Care Home Settles AIDs Complaint
More Women Than Men Seek AIDS Tests In
Mozambique
Doctors Urged To Discuss HIV
Prevention
Experts: More Expensive To Not Treat
HIV
House Rejects Bid To Block Sex
Research
Spermicide Might Help Spread
Disease
Emory Scientist's AIDS Vaccine Tested In
Humans
Progress Reported On Cheaper AIDS
Drugs
Pain, Poor Coping Skills Diminish
Quality Of Life For HIV Patients
My Relatoinship Had A Negative HIV Test. Are
They A Safe Sexual Partner?
Sexual
Health Mini Profile

The Plague
Century
Can We Avoid The Coming
Plague?
Some With HIV Have Unprotected Sex Without
Disclosure
Juvenile Prisoners Need HIV
Prevention Education
Treatment For Cocaine Addiction May Reduce HIV
Risk
Living Longer With HIV Therapy
Study Profiles HIV Patients Who Best Comply With
Medication Schedules
Low-Cost Drugs For Poor Countries
Urged
U.S. Aid Targets Rwanda's AIDS
Orphans
Bayer Unit Sold HIV-Risky Drug
Living With AIDS
Gastrointestinal Manifestations Of
HIV
History
Repeats Itself in Global AIDS Struggle
New AIDS Drug To Cost 20,000 Dollars A
Year
Mutant HIV In San Francisco Men Resists
Drugs
Young HIV Carriers Unaware Of
Virus
HIV Drugs Not Causing Rise In Vascular
Disease
Infection Control Remains An Issue For
Tattoo, Piercing Shops
Black Americans Fighting Back Against
AIDS
Private Sector Must Do More To Fight
AIDS, Business Group Says
Pregnancy In Perinatally HIV-Infected
Adolescents And Young Adults
HHS Issues First Clinical Guide On
Supportive And Palliative Care For People With HIV/AIDS
U.N. Reduces Global Population Estimate For
2050 By 400 Million Because Of AIDS And Lower Birth Rates
Blacks Seen Wary Of AIDS Vaccine
Testing
AIDS Vaccine's Failure May Spur
Advance
Nutrition A Tool In Fight Against
AIDS
New AIDS Vaccine Shows Some
Promise
Albania Urged To Act Quickly To Keep AIDS Cases
Low
Trends In Leading Causes Of Death In Los
Angeles County
HIV Drugs Not Causing Rise In Vascular
Disease
HIV Patients Try To Remedy Gaunt
Appearance
Anthrax: Can A Killer Turn Into A
Healer?
Kenya To Offer Free Drug To Combat
Mother-To-Child HIV Transmission
Afghans Fear A Newcomer: HIV
Fewer Cambodian Men Paying For Sex, Condom
Use Rising
S.D. Towns Deal With HIV Fears
Parenthood Help For Men With
HIV
Nonoxynol-9 Ineffective In Preventing HIV
Infection
Behavior Must Change
Experts See Dangerous Trend In Use Of Viagra
With "Party Pills"
Cardiac Differences In Infants Born To
HIV-Positive Mothers May Persist
Protein Essential For Switching On T-Cell
Response
HIV Therapy During Pregnancy More Likely To
Help Than Hurt
France Launches Graphic Anti-AIDS
Campaign
Screening Teens For
STDs
Rich Nations Failing To Do Their Part To Stop
AIDS, U.N. Official
Says
New AIDS Treatment Program To Offer Lifelong
Care For Families In Thailand
Bill Gates And Jimmy Carter Plan AIDS Tour Of
Africa
Drugs Raising Number Of
HIV-Infected
NIAID Phase III HIV Vaccine Trial To
Determine Correlates Of Protection Will Not Proceed
Government Launches Trial Of Gel To
Protect Women Against HIV Infection
Blood Supply Safety Varies Between
Developed And Developing Countries
500 Patients Traced After Health Worker Found To
Have HIV
Scientists Warn On Primate Meat
Sale
Exposure
To Hepatitis C Has No Effect On Antiretroviral Treatment Outcomes In
HIV Patients
Young
HIV Carriers Unaware Of Virus
China
Allows AIDS-Related Marriage
Vietnamese
HIV Carriers Estimated To Exceed 154,000 By End Of This
Year
Adults
and Children World-Wide Living with HIV/AIDS
Magic Johnson Free Of AIDS
Symptoms
DA OKs Fast, Easy HIV Test
Significantly Improved Survival In
Intensive Care For HIV Patients
Editorial Questions Whether HIV-Related
Admissions To The ICU Will Continue To Decline
AIDS Drugs Intended For Africa Illegally
Sold On European Market
Cambodian Leader Says AIDS More Deadly
Danger Than Land Mines
United Nations: Cost Of AIDS Prevention
And Treatment Will Surpass 10 Billion Dollars Per Year By
2005
Viacom, Kaiser Plan AIDS
Project
FDA Approves First Nucleic Acid Test
(NAT) System To Screen Whole Blood Donors For Infections With Human
Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) And Hepatitis C Virus
(HCV)
Women Who Stayed HIV-Free
Studied
AIDS Deaths Around the
World
HIV Prevention Messages Failing To Convince
Gays: Condom-Free Anal Sex Keeps Virus On Increase
Millions Of Grandparents In Developing World
Caring For Grandchildren Orphaned By AIDS
Along Mexico-U.S. Border, Fears Of AIDS
Growth Come Into Focus
Preventing HIV Infection In
Newborns
Technique May Improve Safety Of Donated
Blood
Secretary Thompson Signs Agreement With
Mozambique
Host Of New Ailments As Aging AIDS
Population Continues Antiviral Treatment
Researchers Document Rare Case Of
Second HIV Infection With Different Strain
China Says The Number Of Its People Infected
With AIDS Virus To Reach 1 Million By End Of This Year
Significantly Improved Survival In
Intensive Care For HIV Patients
De Beers Becomes Latest Company To Make AIDS
Drugs Available To Its Employees
EU Pledges More Money To Fight AIDS In Poor
Countries
Chinese Version Of Anti-AIDS Drug
Available By Year End, Says Manufacturer
Alcohol Use,
Thrill-Seeking Prove Bad Mix For HIV-Positive Men
HIV Vaccine Testing Under Way In
Texas
HHS Awards Millions To Ensure Medical Care,
Support Services And Prescription Drugs For People With
HIV/AIDS
Parents Claim AIDS Children Are Dying Due To
Shortage Of Drugs
Elton John Urges More AIDS Funds
AIDS Cases Nearly Triple In
Russia
China Announces Jump In AIDS
Cases
AIDS Conference Ends On Hope That Rich Are
Listening
Immune Cells In Breast Milk Protect Infants
From HIV
Condom-Free Anal Sex Keeps Virus On
Increase
Along Mexico-U.S. Border, Fears Of AIDS Growth
Come Into Focus
Millions Of Grandparents In Developing World
Caring For Grandchildren Orphaned By AIDS
Preventing HIV Infection In
Newborns
Technique May Improve Safety Of Donated
Blood
HIV Infection Cases Surging Among
Latinos
Drug Manufacturers: Approving Generic AIDS
Drugs Could Reduce Quality
California Is Tightening Rules On HIV
Care
Company Withdraws AIDS Drug
Application
Court Rules Government Must Provide Key AIDS
Drug To HIV-Positive Pregnant Women Despite Appeal
Proceedings
Drug Manufacturers: Approving Generic AIDS
Drugs Could Reduce Quality
Initiative To Promote Access To Quality HIV
Medicines Releases First Batch Of Results
Helms Pledges To Seek AIDS Funding
California Is Tightening Rules On
HIV Care
Bush To Propose AIDS Initiative
South African AIDS Rates Slightly
Lower
Debate Over AIDS Prevention Bill Frays Tempers
In Cambodia's Parliament
Swedish Medical Company Reports Strong Results
In Early Tests Of HIV Drug
Drug Used In Treatment Of Alcoholism May
Have Role In Treatment Of HIV
Scientists Optimistic That AIDS Vaccine Could
Be Developed In Africa
Researchers Develop HIV Fighter
Europe Becoming Complacent Over HIV
Prevention
We Can Beat AIDS, TB And Malaria, UN Agencies
Say
WHO Issues Essential Medicines List
South Dakota Governor Says Hundreds Will Be
Tested For AIDS
AIDS Fund Issues Million In
Grants
Protesters Rally Against US Role In AIDS
Fight
South African Gold Mining Giant Finds Up To 30
Percent Of Work Force Is HIV Positive
Gastrointestinal Problems
Common
HIV epidemic blamed on
flies
Report Finds Young Black Men at Higher
Risk for HIV
Drug simplifies living with
HIV
Drug giants sue to cut HIV
lifeline
US Teens Lack Information
on Avoiding HIV
Kissing tied to AIDS-related
virus
Related Issues: Talking With
Kids About Tough Issues, AIDS & Elders,
AIDS, Bacterial
Vaginosis, Blue Balls, Chancroid,
Chlamydia, Condoms,
Contraception,
Crabs, Genital
Herpes, Genital Warts, Gonorrhea,
Hepatitis A,
B, C,
D, E,
Impotency, Nongonococcal
Urethritis, Pelvic Inflammatory Disease,
Reproduction, STDS,
Syphilis, Trichomoniasis,
Yeast Infection
Encyclopedia
Books
Slide Guides: STDS,
AIDS
Resources:
AIDS & Aging
Newsbytes
Nevirapine Sustains Advantage Over AZT
During Breastfeeding
Period Infants who received a single dose of the inexpensive
antiviral drug nevirapine (NVP) soon after birth--and whose mothers
took one dose of the same drug during labor--were 41 percent less
likely to acquire HIV at birth or during breastfeeding than infants
in infant-mother pairs who were treated with a multi-dose regimen
using AZT, according to new results from a study funded by the
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), one of
the National Institutes of Health.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/EMIHC276/333/21345/369236.html?d=dmtICNNews
Rapid Point-Of-Care Testing For HIV-1 During
Labor And Delivery
CDC study concludes that rapid HIV tests performed by obstetrics
staff during labor and delivery can offer fast and accurate
results.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/EMIHC276/31697/31807/352068.html?d=dmtContent

AIDS Is Africa's Major Challenge
The AIDS epidemic represents the biggest challenge to improving the
lives of people in Africa, but the disease can be contained with the
right programs and the required resources, according to a U.N.
report.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/EMIHC245/333/24524/369448.html?d=dmtICNNews

Merck Starts Global Test Of AIDS
Vaccine
Pharmaceutical giant Merck and Co. said Friday that it has started
the first global human tests of an experimental AIDS vaccine, working
with the Seattle-based HIV Vaccine Trials Network.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/EMIHC276/333/21291/369523.html?d=dmtICNNews

One AIDS Treatment Plan Found
Ineffective
A new study finds that temporarily stopping AIDS treatment is
ineffective and even dangerous as a strategy for controlling
drug-resistant HIV.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/EMIHC274/333/8013/368754.html

China's Denial Of AIDS Problem Propels
HIV/AIDS Spread (9/3/03)
China is fueling the spread of AIDS by refusing patients treatment
and information, and by failing to hold officials accountable for a
blood-selling scandal blamed for infecting thousands of people, a
human rights group said.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/EMIHC274/333/8013/368919.html

U.N. Tells Asia-Pacific To Fight
AIDS
U.N. officials on Tuesday urged Asia-Pacific countries to take
decisive action against the HIV/AIDS epidemic, which they said is
devastating the region the same way it ravaged Africa.
Source:
www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/EMIHC274/333/8013/368885.html

Brazil Starts Patent Breaking AIDS
Drugs
Brazil took the first formal step toward breaking patents with three
pharmaceutical companies selling AIDS drugs to South America's
largest country after talks failed to produce price reductions
acceptable to the government.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/EMIHC274/333/8013/369087.html

WHO Director-General Calls For
"Urgent Treatment" For People With AIDS In Africa
HIV/AIDS is a "catastrophe" and people affected need urgent access to
treatment, said Dr. Lee Jong-wook, Director-General of the World
Health Organization (WHO).
http://www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/EMIHC274/333/8013/368888.html

Head Of U.S. Conference Of Mayors Urges
Action On AIDS
The world's mayors must unite to help fight the AIDS epidemic
currently affecting millions of people in Africa, the president of
the U.S. Conference of Mayors said Monday after returning from a
two-week visit to the continent intended to focus attention on the
disease.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/EMIHC274/333/8013/369088.html

S. African AIDS Activist Takes AIDS
Drugs
A high-profile AIDS activist, who had vowed not to take AIDS drugs
until the general South African population had access to them,
announced Monday he has begun taking the potentially lifesaving
medication.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/EMIHC274/333/8013/369087.html

One-Step HIV Test May Be Cheaper,
Faster, Less Wasteful
A quick, readily available test for the AIDS virus that offers
results in half an hour may not only be faster but also much cheaper
than standard tests that take weeks to deliver results, a new study
suggests. Using this one-step rapid test also means that clients know
their HIV status immediately and don't have to return to the clinic
for a later visit.
Source: Center for the Advancement of Health,
www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/EMIHC274/333/8013/369073.html

Bacteria May Show Promise In AIDS
Fight
A modified form of bacteria normally present in the vagina may one
day be used to protect women from AIDS, according to new
research.
Source:
www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/EMIHC274/333/8013/369089.html

Russia Reports Rise In HIV Cases
The number of Russians registered as having contracted HIV has
reached 250,000 and efforts to slow the rapid spread of AIDS in the
country have failed, officials said.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/EMIHC272/333/8013/369175.html

WHO Warns Asia Of Wider HIV/AIDS
Epidemi
The World Health Organization warned on Wednesday that an HIV/AIDS
epidemic in the Asia-Pacific region could widen because of a rise in
sexually transmitted infections, particularly among young adults.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/EMIHC272/333/8013.html

U.S. Senators Tour AIDS-Ravaged Africa
The unemployed, HIV-positive South African woman sobbed as she told
her story to a U.S. Senate delegation seeking to learn more about the
AIDS epidemic ravaging sub-Saharan Africa.
Source: http://www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/EMIHC276/333/8013/368499.html?d=dmtICNNews

Asian AIDS Experts Agree To Promote
Condom Use Among Prostitutes
AIDS experts from several Asian countries agreed to expand a program
to ensure rigorous condom use among prostitutes as they ended a
regional meeting organized by the World Health Organization.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/EMIHC276/333/24524/368466.html?d=dmtICNNews

Human Rights Group Wants Law To Protect
AIDS Vaccine Trialists
The Botswana Center for Human Rights has criticized the government
for not passing legislation protecting people participating in
HIV/AIDS vaccine trials.
Source: www.intelihealth.com

Gov't Harasses HIV Prevention Group
Again
For the third time in a year, the federal government is examining the
books of a group that promotes the use of condoms to fight AIDS and
whose leaders have criticized the Bush administration's support for
"abstinence-only" sex education.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/EMIHC276/333/8013/368167.html?d=dmtICNNews

CDC's HIV Prevention Plan Faces
Criticism
Workshops on safe sex in San Francisco's Mission District.
HIV-prevention skits developed by teenagers in Chicago. A ministry
that counsels black women in Baltimore, where syphilis rates are
shockingly high. All are among the programs that could lose funding
under the new HIV prevention strategy from the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention, which calls for increased attention to people
who already carry the virus that causes AIDS.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/EMIHC276/333/24524/367314.html?d=dmtICNNews

Personal Care Home Settles AIDs
Complaint
A man who said he was refused admission to a personal care home
because its staff was uncomfortable caring for someone with AIDS has
settled a complaint against the facility, his attorneys said.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/EMIHC276/333/21344/366889.html?d=dmtICNNews

More Women Than Men Seek AIDS Tests In
Mozambique
Most of those taking advantage of new voluntary HIV testing and
counseling centers set up in Maputo are women, the health minister
said.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/EMIHC276/333/8013/366893.html?d=dmtICNNews

Doctors Urged To Discuss HIV Prevention
Doctors need to have more detailed discussions about sex and drug use
with HIV patients to keep them from spreading the virus, federal
officials said as they announced guidelines intended to help cut new
infections in half.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/EMIHC276/333/24524/366869.html?d=dmtICNNews

Experts: More Expensive To Not Treat
HIV
A leading economist on Sunday dismissed arguments that treating HIV
in developing countries is not cost-effective and increases the
virus' resistance, saying it is more expensive not to treat the virus
that causes AIDS.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/EMIHC276/333/21291/366700.html?d=dmtICNNews

House Rejects Bid To Block Sex
Research
The House handed a narrow defeat to conservatives who wanted to
forbid the National Institutes of Health from giving grants to
researchers conducting four sexual research projects, including
studies of older men and of San Francisco's Asian prostitutes and
masseuses.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/EMIHC276/333/22002/366669.html?d=dmtICNNews

Emory Scientist's AIDS Vaccine Tested In
Humans
An experimental AIDS vaccine developed by an Emory University
researcher is being tested in people, after years of studies in
monkeys.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/EMIHC000/333/333/360397.html

Progress Reported On Cheaper AIDS Drugs
Global business leaders reported progress on making cheaper AIDS
drugs available to poor nations as Microsoft founder Bill Gates made
another contribution to health in the developing world - announcing a
million grant to fund medical research.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/EMIHC000/333/333/360479.html

Pain, Poor Coping Skills Diminish
Quality Of Life For HIV Patients
HIV patients who live in pain and use poor coping strategies to
handle the stress of their illness also report that they have less
energy and more limits on their physical, social and work activities,
according to a new study.
Source: Center for the Advancement of Health,
www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/EMIHC000/333/333/360459.html

My Relatoinship Had A Negative HIV Test.
Are They A Safe Sexual Partner?
One negative HIV test doesn't guarantee security. If they test
negative again six montyhs down the road, and if you are certain you
were their only sexual contacat for those six months, you can then
rely on the test results. But, it also comes down to trust. If they
lie to you, that lie could cost you your life.

The
Plague Century
The 14th Century could be called the Plague
Century 1. Will the 21st Century Plague Century
II.
Source: www.healthcentral.com/columnists/columnistsFullText.cfm?ID=36601&storytype=Column_Flower

Can
We Avoid The Coming Plague?
However large AIDS looms in our future -- and
it looms far larger than most people think -- this battle is about
more than AIDS.
Source: www.healthcentral.com/columnists/columnistsFullText.cfm?ID=35205&storytype=Column_Flower

Spermicide Might Help Spread
Disease
Anal sex is the most dangerous sex act. To decrease the risk of
spreading disease, it has been advised that people to use condoms. It
turns out that may be the wrong advice.
Source: www.healthcentral.com/drdean/deanfulltexttopics.cfm?ID=47067&storytype=DeanTopics
Some With HIV Have Unprotected Sex
Without Disclosure
Thirteen percent of HIV-positive people are having unprotected sex
with partners who are HIV-negative or uncertain of their virus status
without telling these partners that they have HIV, according to a new
study in the American Journal of Public Health.
Source: Center for the Advancement of Health,
www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/EMIHC274/333/22002/365260.html?d=dmtICNNews

Juvenile Prisoners Need HIV
Prevention Education
Juvenile detainees are at high risk for HIV infection and should be a
target of prevention efforts, according to a recent study.
Source: American Journal of Public Health,
www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/EMIHC276/333/24524/365062.html?d=dmtICNNews

Living Longer With HIV Therapy
The use of highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) has
completely changed the prognosis for people with HIV.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/EMIHC276/8776/28838/338870.html?d=dmtContent
Treatment For Cocaine Addiction May Reduce
HIV Risk
Cocaine addiction has previously been linked to an increased risk of
contracting HIV, mainly as a result of sharing contaminated injection
equipment, unprotected sex, exchange of sex for drugs, increased
sexual drive from the stimulatory effects of cocaine, and impaired
judgement. Although research has indicated that patients receiving
treatment for heroin addiction have a decreased risk of HIV
infection, few studies have focused on changes in HIV risk following
treatment for cocaine addiction. Now, NIDA-funded researchers have
found more evidence that participation in cocaine treatment may
reduce the risk of HIV infection.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/EMIHC276/333/20789/364940.html?d=dmtICNNews
Study Profiles HIV Patients Who Best Comply
With Medication Schedules
In a study to assess the effects of age, substance abuse, and
neuropsychological function on adherence to antiretroviral treatment
among HIV-infected adults, researchers found that patients over the
age of 50 who did not abuse drugs and who were free of cognitive
impairment had the best adherence rates.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/EMIHC276/333/21291/364942.html?d=dmtICNNews
Low-Cost Drugs For Poor Countries
Urged
European Union governments approved a measure to encourage
pharmaceutical companies to sell cut-rate AIDS, malaria and
tuberculosis drugs to poor countries by reducing worries the
medicines will end up on the black market back in Europe.
Source: http://www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/EMIHC276/333/21291/364961.html?d=dmtICNNews

U.S. Aid Targets Rwanda's AIDS Orphans
The plight of AIDS orphans is one of the targets of new U.S.
legislation allocating billion for Rwanda and 13 other African and
Caribbean countries to support the fight against the disease.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/EMIHC251/333/8895/365003.html?d=dmtICNNews
Bayer: Trading Lives for a Better Bottom
Line
Cutter Biological, a division of Bayer, sold millions of dollars
worth of a blood-clotting medicine for hemophiliacs that carried a
high risk of spreading HIV to customers in Argentina, Asia,
Indonesia, Japan, Latin America, Malaysia, and Singapore in the
mid-1980s, (2/84) while selling a new, safer product that was
heat-treated to kill HIV in the United States and Europe. The sales
continued partly because of Cutter's desire to deplete stocks of the
older medicine, and partly because of fixed-price contracts, for
which the company believed the older product would be cheaper to
make. In March 1983 the federal Centers for Disease Control warned
that blood products appeared responsible for AIDS among hemophiliacs.
Three months later, Cutter sent a letter to distributors in nearly
two dozen nations saying that AIDS was "the center of irrational
response in many countries. The company assured its distributor that
the unheated product posed "no severe hazard" and was the "same fine
product we have supplied for years."
Source: www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn/A24657-2003May22?language=printer

Living With AIDS
Nearly a third of patients with the AIDS virus say life is generally
better since they received their diagnosis, according to study
findings. Read the story and comments from a Harvard physician.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/8776/28838/334713.html?d=dmtContent
One In Three HIV Patients Say Life "Better" Since Diagnosis
Nearly a third of patients with the AIDS virus say life is generally
better since they received their diagnosis, according to study
findings presented May 1 at the annual meeting of the Society of
General Internal Medicine in Vancouver, B.C. The study was based on
interviews with 449 HIV patients in 2002 and 2003.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/333/8013/364090.html?d=dmtICNNews

Gastrointestinal Manifestations Of
HIV
Gastrointestinal problems are common for people with HIV. In one
recent study, 88 percent of HIV-positive people were found to have
abnormalities in gastrointestinal function.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/8776/28838/334713.html?d=dmtContent

New AIDS Drug To Cost 20,000 Dollars A
Year
A new, breakthrough AIDS medicine will cost nearly 20,000 dollars a
year in the United States, almost triple the cost of the most
expensive treatment currently available.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH?t=21291&c=362483&p=~br,IHC|~st,333|~r,EMIHC276|~b,*|&d=dmtICNNews

Mutant HIV In San Francisco Men Resists
Drugs
Mutant strains of the AIDS virus resistant to many of the newest
drugs are turning up in larger numbers of newly infected gay men in
San Francisco.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/9105/342/352203.html

Young HIV Carriers Unaware Of Virus
A study of young gay and bisexual men in major U.S. cities found that
more than three-quarters of those infected with HIV were unaware they
had the AIDS virus.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/9105/342/352198.html

Infection Control Remains An Issue For
Tattoo, Piercing Shops
A new study of tattooing and body piercing finds that many operators
may be putting clients at risk of HIV and hepatitis B and C
infection.
Source: Center for the Advancement of Health,
www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/333/8013/361830.html

Black Americans Fighting Back Against
AIDS
With magazine articles and television ads, prayers and free testing,
the effort to fight AIDS among black Americans is taking on new vigor
in the face of bleak statistics about the disease. Read the story and
comments from a Harvard physician.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/333/8013/361803.html
or
www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/333/8013/361771.html

Private Sector Must Do More To Fight
AIDS, Business Group Says
Asia could be hit by the same kind of catastrophic AIDS epidemic as
Africa, and the world's business sector must help fight the disease,
international business leaders said Friday in Bangkok.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/333/8013/361779.html

Pregnancy In Perinatally HIV-Infected
Adolescents And Young Adults
A first-time CDC report shows that as perinatally HIV-infected
children are surviving to adolescence, they are becoming sexually
active and, in some cases, pregnant.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/333/8013/361728.html

HHS Issues First Clinical Guide On
Supportive And Palliative Care For People With HIV/AIDS
HHS Secretary Tommy G. Thompson announced the release of 'A Clinical
Guide to Supportive and Palliative Care for HIV/AIDS,' which provides
practical, experience-based advice and authoritative guidelines for
clinicians in providing palliative and supportive services to their
patients living with HIV/AIDS.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/333/8013/361613.html

U.N. Reduces Global Population Estimate
For 2050 By 400 Million Because Of AIDS And Lower Birth Rates
The United Nations reduced its estimate of the global population in
2050 by 400 million, primarily because of the prolonged and worsening
impact of the AIDS epidemic and lower than expected birth rates.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/333/8013/361627.html

Blacks Seen Wary Of AIDS Vaccine
Testing
Researchers trying to learn more about why an AIDS vaccine appeared
to work well in a small number of black volunteers may have trouble
finding people for further studies, advocates and educators warn.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/333/8013/361605.html

AIDS Vaccine's Failure May Spur
Advance
Though a once-promising AIDS vaccine candidate failed a significant
test, scientists and activists still applauded the biotechnology
company for conducting an ethical experiment and said the results can
be used to further the field.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/333/8013/361573.html

Nutrition A Tool In Fight Against
AIDS
A good diet can help people better cope with AIDS and may even help
delay the progression of the disease by boosting defenses, the U.N.
food and health agencies said.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/333/8013/361607.html

New AIDS Vaccine Shows Some
Promise
A highly anticipated experimental AIDS vaccine failed to protect most
people from the disease in its first major trial, although it did
show promise in protecting blacks and Asians, its developer said.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/333/8013/361519.html

Albania Urged To Act Quickly To Keep AIDS
Cases Low
International health officials urged Albania Friday to intensify
efforts to prevent the spread of AIDS and keep its status as a
low-prevalence country.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/333/8013/361484.html

Trends In Leading Causes Of Death In Los
Angeles County
Using the California Master Death File for 1990 to 2000, these
investigators classified leading cause of death categories based on
underlying cause of death.
Source: American College of Preventive Medicine,
www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/333/8013/361388.html

HIV Drugs Not Causing Rise In Vascular
Disease
Amid concern over the impact of potent HIV drugs on patients'
cardiovascular and cerebrovascular health, a study of 36,766 patients
treated for HIV in the Veterans Affairs health-care system from 1993
to 2001 found a steady drop in the rate of deaths and hospital stays
due to these vascular problems, even as use of highly active
antiretroviral therapy (HAART) increased. The study, appearing in the
February 20 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine, may
reassure doctors and patients who see benefits from HAART but worry
about vascular complications, among other side effects.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/333/8013/361393.html

HIV Patients Try To Remedy Gaunt
Appearance
Even as people with HIV are living longer than ever, a significant
number look deathly ill because of a condition called lipodystrophy -
a disruption in the body's methods of processing and distributing
fat.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/333/8013/350254.html

Anthrax: Can A Killer Turn Into A
Healer?
Biologists have devoted many years to studying how the anthrax toxin
invades a cell and does its killing work. In the past two decades,
researchers have discovered how the toxin forms a pore that provides
an entryway for two other toxin proteins to get into a cell's inner
recesses and wreak havoc.
Source: Scientific American,
www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/333/8013/350354.html

Kenya To Offer Free Drug To Combat
Mother-To-Child HIV Transmission
Kenya is about to become one of the few African countries offering
HIV-positive pregnant women a free drug that helps prevent
transmission of the virus from mother to child, a health ministry
spokesman said.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/333/8013/350475.html

Afghans Fear A Newcomer: HIV
Afghanistan's first-ever HIV scare began late last week, a fuse lit
by rumors, innuendo, and enmity toward Pakistan held by many in the
nation's fledgling intelligence services.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/333/8013/350304.html

Fewer Cambodian Men Paying For Sex,
Condom Use Rising
Fewer Cambodian men are visiting sex workers, while those who still
do are using condoms more frequently.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/333/8013/350373.html

S.D. Towns Deal With HIV Fears
For years, AIDS wasn't much more than a big-city problem to people in
this middle-of-nowhere town on the bleak plains of South Dakota. But
the fear finally struck home last week with the arrest of Nikko
Briteramos at SiTanka Huron University
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/23414/22002/349665.html

Parenthood Help For Men With HIV
When Sally Morrison and Paul Corser of New York decided they wanted
to have a baby, they went to local fertility doctors for help. But
everywhere they went they were turned down, for Corser was infected
with HIV.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/23414/22002/349419.html

Nonoxynol-9 Ineffective In Preventing HIV
Infection
Spermicides containing nonoxynol-9 do not protect against HIV
infection and may even increase the risk of HIV infection in women
using these products frequently, according to a WHO report released
today. The report also advises women at high risk of HIV infection
against using nonoxynol-9 spermicides for contraception.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/23414/22002/351931.html
Behavior Must Change
A year after the 189-nation General Assembly adopted a plan to halt
the AIDS epidemic, a U.N. report issued Sunday said "dramatic
changes" in sexual awareness and behavior are still needed in many
poor countries to stop the advance of the killer disease.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/333/8013/351642.html

Experts See Dangerous Trend In Use Of
Viagra With "Party Pills"
People who use Viagra to offset the impotence effect of "party drugs"
such as ecstasy and crystal methamphetamine also acknowledge having
unprotected sex with more partners - which can breed disease. And
Viagra can be deadly if used with amyl nitrite, commonly called
"poppers," which some gay men take to facilitate sex.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/333/8013/351666.html

Cardiac Differences In Infants Born To
HIV-Positive Mothers May Persist
The hearts of children whose mothers are infected with the human
immunodeficiency virus (HIV) show subtle differences in cardiac
structure and function by echocardiogram regardless of whether the
children are born infected with HIV. New results from a five-year,
multicenter study indicate that, on average, these children are born
with hearts that are larger than those of healthy children born to
healthy mothers and that may not pump as effectively. The authors
found the abnormalities to be initially mild and asymptomatic; they
report that the changes appear to persist -- and, in some cases, even
worsen -- in children born infected with HIV. The long-term cardiac
consequences in uninfected children born to HIV-positive mothers are
unknown.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/333/8013/351456.html

HIV Therapy During Pregnancy More Likely
To Help Than Hurt
Pregnant women with HIV can safely take AIDS drugs without risking a
premature baby or one with neurological problems, a study found..
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/333/8013/351149.html

Protein Essential For Switching On T-Cell
Response
A minor change in a cell protein impairs the ability of a key type of
immune cell to marshal the body's defenses against disease, according
to a study by researchers at the National Institute of Child Health
and Human Development (NICHD), the National Cancer Institute (NCI),
and the Food and Drug Administration (FDA). The study appears in the
June 14, 2002 issue of 'Science'. The researchers also found
that the change causes these white blood cells, known as T-cells, to
multiply out of control and to attack the body's own tissues.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/333/8013/351236.html

France Launches Graphic Anti-AIDS
Campaign
It's a common attention-getter: Advertisers and activists often
create characters like Smokey the Bear or the Pillsbury Doughboy to
get their messages across.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/enews?359558

Rich Nations Failing To Do Their Part
To Stop AIDS, U.N. Official Says
Rich nations are committing "mass murder by complacency" by failing
to contribute enough money to defeat the AIDS pandemic that is
ravaging Africa and killing millions every year, a top U.N. official
says.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/EMIHC000/333/333/359911.html

New AIDS Treatment Program To Offer
Lifelong Care For Families In Thailand
A new health program will provide lifelong care for Thailand's
babies, mothers and fathers who are HIV-positive, the Thai Red Cross
said.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/EMIHC000/333/333/359811.html

Bill Gates And Jimmy Carter Plan AIDS Tour
Of Africa
Microsoft Corp. co-founder Bill Gates has announced plans for a
trip to Africa with former U.S. President Jimmy Carter to publicize
the campaign against AIDS.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/333/22002/346333.html

Drugs Raising Number Of HIV-Infected
Doctors have been so successful in saving the lives of people with
AIDS that the number of Americans with HIV is actually increasing
again after holding steady for years and is now approaching 1
million, according to government estimates.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/333/8013/346336.html

NIAID Phase III HIV Vaccine Trial To
Determine Correlates Of Protection Will Not Proceed
The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID),
part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), and the U.S. Army
Medical Research and Materiel Command (USAMRMC) of the Department of
Defense (DoD), support a broad, comprehensive HIV/AIDS research and
development program. Two recent decisions will substantially
contribute to a coordinated and comprehensive U.S. government effort
to develop preventive HIV vaccines.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/333/8013/346357.html

Government Launches Trial Of Gel To
Protect Women Against HIV Infection
The British government, working with agencies in five African
countries, launched a five-year program to find an effective gel to
protect women against HIV infection.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/333/8013/346047.html

Blood Supply Safety Varies Between
Developed And Developing Countries
An article reviewing the current status of blood safety in several
countries finds that in developed countries, viral transmission from
contaminated blood or blood products is extremely rare, but, in
developing countries, up to 10 percent of HIV infections result from
transfusion of blood or blood products.
Source: American College of Physicians-American
Society of Internal Medicine, www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/333/8013/346018.html

500 Patients Traced After Health Worker Found
To Have HIV
The National Health Service said it traced 509 patients who had
contact with a London healthcare worker who was found to have the HIV
virus, which causes AIDS.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/333/8013/346029.html

Scientists Warn On Primate Meat
Sale
The killing of gorillas, chimpanzees and other primates for food is
threatening AIDS research and may cause diseases to spread,
scientists said.
Source: http://www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/333/8013/346058.html

Young HIV Carriers Unaware Of
Virus
A study of young gay and bisexual men in major U.S. cities found that
more than three-quarters of those infected with HIV were unaware they
had the AIDS virus.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/23414/22002/352198.html
Exposure To Hepatitis C Has No Effect On
Antiretroviral Treatment Outcomes In HIV Patients
A study of HIV-infected patients in Baltimore, Maryland, revealed
that individuals seropositive for hepatitis C had similar clinical
outcome measures when treated with antiretroviral drug regimens
compared to seronegative patients.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/333/8013/352182.html

China Allows AIDS-Related Marriage
In a first, China will allow a person infected with the virus that
causes AIDS to marry someone healthy, a matchup aimed at raising
awareness of the disease, state media said.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/EMIHC000/333/333/358429.html

Charges Filed In Canada Blood Case
Police filed charges Wednesday in what is considered one of Canada's
worst public health disasters, a tainted blood scandal that infected
thousands of people with HIV and Hepatitis C.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/EMIHC000/333/333/358329.html

Vietnamese HIV Carriers Estimated To
Exceed 154,000 By End Of This Year
The number of people in Vietnam estimated to be infected with HIV,
the virus that causes AIDS, will exceed 154,000 by the end of this
year, an official said Wednesday.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/EMIHC000/333/333/358259.html

Magic Johnson Free Of AIDS Symptoms
Magic Johnson's latest checkup confirmed that he is free of AIDS
symptoms, 11 years after he first tested positive for HIV.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/enews?355620

Syphilis Outbreaks Increase In N.Y.
An increase in syphilis infections among gay and bisexual men in New
York and elsewhere indicates they may be letting their guard down
against sexually transmitted diseases, the government said
Thursday.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/EMIHC000/333/333/355850.html

FDA OKs Fast, Easy HIV Test
A new simple, rapid, and accurate HIV test could make it much easier
for people to get tested, even away from traditional testing centers
such as hospitals and clinics.
Today, the FDA announced approval of the OraQuick Rapid HIV-1
Antibody Test, manufactured by OraSure Technologies, Inc. It
generates a result that is greater than 99% accurate within 20
minutes after collecting a drop of blood with a simple pinprick. That
rapid turnaround time is good news for doctors who have been
frustrated by current tests that can take as many as 14 days to
complete. The delay creates a tendency for people to come in for an
HIV test but then skip the later appointment, never learning their
HIV status.
It is estimated that some 8,000 people per year fail to return to
see their results. Moreover, of the estimated 900,000 people infected
with HIV in the United States, as many as one quarter of them, or
225,000 people, may be unaware that they carry the virus.
Source: Jim Kling, my.webmd.com/content/article/1624.52069

Significantly Improved Survival In
Intensive Care For HIV Patients
A patient infected with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) who is
admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU) in this era of highly
active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) has a markedly improved
survival rate.
Source: American Thoracic Society, www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/EMIHC000/333/333/353237.html

Editorial Questions Whether HIV-Related
Admissions To The ICU Will Continue To Decline
In an editorial directed at whether HIV-related admissions to the ICU
will continue to decline, Henry Masur, M.D., of the Critical Care
Department, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland, said
that, after the HAART era began, more and more patients started to be
admitted to the ICU for problems unrelated to their AIDS. These
included drug overdose, trauma, and gastrointestinal bleeding.
Source: American Thoracic
Society, www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/EMIHC000/333/333/353236.html

AIDS Drugs Intended For Africa Illegally
Sold On European Market
Health authorities scrambled to recover illegally imported AIDS
medication after uncovering a smuggling operation that sold the drugs
on the European market rather than in poor African nations at
discounted prices.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/EMIHC000/333/333/356207.html
Cambodian Leader Says AIDS More Deadly
Danger Than Land Mines
Prime Minister Hun Sen said that AIDS is Cambodia's most dangerous
scourge - deadlier than the millions of land mines that still dot the
countryside after decades of war.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/EMIHC000/333/333/356167.html

United Nations: Cost Of AIDS Prevention
And Treatment Will Surpass 10 Billion Dollars Per Year By 2005
The United Nations warned on Thursday that the global cost of
treating HIV and AIDS cases and containing the epidemic could reach
US 10.5 billion a year by 2005.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/EMIHC000/333/333/356564.html

Viacom, Kaiser Plan AIDS Project
Viacom Inc. will use its vast media holdings, including the
Paramount studio, CBS and MTV, in a global anti-AIDS campaign, the
company said.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/EMIHC000/333/333/356438.html

South Africa May Provide AIDS Medicine
The South African government, long criticized for its slow
response to the AIDS crisis, has announced it was investigating the
possibility of providing AIDS medicine through the public health
system.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/EMIHC000/333/333/356526.html

HIV Prevention Messages Failing To
Convince Gays: Condom-Free Anal Sex Keeps Virus On Increase
A small but worrisome proportion of gay men in the Bay Area are
engaging in unprotected anal intercourse, knowingly putting
themselves at risk for AIDS, a groundbreaking health study shows.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/333/8013/348288.html
FDA Approves First Nucleic Acid Test
(NAT) System To Screen Whole Blood Donors For Infections With Human
Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) And Hepatitis C Virus (HCV)
The Food and Drug Administration has licensed the first nucleic
acid test (NAT) system intended for screening donors of whole blood
and blood components intended for use in transfusion. This test
system can simultaneously detect the presence of HIV and HCV in blood
using a semi-automated system and is expected to further ensure the
safety of whole blood and blood components, including fresh plasma,
red cells and platelets, by permitting earlier detection of HIV and
HCV infections in donors.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/23414/22002/346575.html

Women Who Stayed HIV-Free Studied
For years, more than a dozen women have intrigued AIDS
scientists: They have remained HIV free despite having frequent,
unprotected sex with an infected partner.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/23414/22002/346464.html

Millions Of Grandparents In Developing
World Caring For Grandchildren Orphaned By AIDS
A multitude of grandparents in developing countries have found
themselves caring for grandchildren orphaned by the epidemic.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/333/8013/348328.html

Along Mexico-U.S. Border, Fears Of
AIDS Growth Come Into Focus
With thousands of people moving across the border every day, and
many eventually traveling farther north into California or farther
south into Mexico, health officials fear there could be an AIDS
explosion in the making.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/333/8013/348335.html

Preventing HIV Infection In Newborns
Although all pregnant women in Canada are supposed to be offered
voluntary HIV testing to allow treatment and possible prevention of
transmission to the baby, cases are still missed.
Source: Canadian Medical Association Journal,
www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/333/8013/348012.html

Technique May Improve Safety Of Donated
Blood
A new process now undergoing final testing may rid donated blood
of virtually all viruses and bacteria, bringing a new level of safety
to blood transfusions.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/333/8013/348039.html

Secretary Thompson Signs Agreement With
Mozambique
HHS Secretary Tommy G. Thompson signed a Memorandum of
Understanding with the health minister of Mozambique, an agreement
that pledges the United States will work with the ministry over the
next five years to improve HIV surveillance systems in the
country.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/333/8013/348165.html

Host Of New Ailments As Aging AIDS
Population Continues Antiviral Treatment
Successful use of antiviral drugs has transformed HIV from a death
sentence into a chronic long-term condition for many patients. Now,
doctors are confronting a host of new issues as aging HIV-positive
people seek treatment for such things as diabetes, liver and kidney
failure, heart disease and high blood pressure.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/333/21142/346549.html

Researchers Document Rare Case Of
Second HIV Infection With Different Strain
Swiss researchers have documented a rare case of a patient
contracting a second HIV infection years later with a different
strain of the virus.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/enews?354711
China Says The Number Of Its People
Infected With AIDS Virus To Reach 1 Million By End Of This Year
The number of people in China infected with the AIDS virus will
soar to 1 million by the end of this year, but the rate of new
infections seems to be falling, a Health Ministry official said.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/enews?354817

De Beers Becomes Latest Company To Make
AIDS Drugs Available To Its Employees
With a swipe at South Africa's often criticized AIDS policy,
diamond giant De Beers announced it would heavily subsidize the cost
of AIDS medicine for its employees.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/EMIHC000/333/333/353564.html

EU Pledges More Money To Fight AIDS In Poor
Countries
The European Union's head office said it would spend an
additional 22 million euro (million) to fight the spread of AIDS in
poor countries.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/EMIHC000/333/333/353510.html

Significantly Improved Survival In
Intensive Care For HIV Patients
A patient infected with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) who is
admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU) in this era of highly
active antiretroviral therapy has a markedly improved survival rate,
according to a study in the first issue for August 2002 of the
American Thoracic Society's peer-reviewed journal.
Source: American Thoracic Society, www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/EMIHC000/333/333/353543.html

Chinese Version Of Anti-AIDS Drug
Available By Year End, Says Manufacturer
A generic version of the anti-AIDS drug AZT will be available in
China before the end of the year as a low-cost alternative to
imported medicines, the manufacturer said.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/EMIHC000/333/333/353850.html

HIV Vaccine Testing Under Way In Texas
Human tests on a possible vaccine to prevent HIV are under way in
Austin, the first site in Texas to take part in the trials.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/333/8013/348455.html

HHS Awards Millions To Ensure Medical
Care, Support Services And Prescription Drugs For People With
HIV/AIDS
HHS Secretary Tommy G. Thompson today announced grants totaling
millions to provide medical care, support services and prescription
drugs for people living with HIV/AIDS.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/333/8013/348484.html

Parents Claim AIDS Children Are Dying Due
To Shortage Of Drugs
Shortages of drugs and the poverty of their families have led to the
death of dozens of children infected with the HIV virus so far this
year, a national union of parents' organizations said.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/333/8013/348472.html

Elton John Urges More AIDS Funds
British pop singer Elton John, testifying before Congress, said
America has an obligation to use its vast resources to stop the
spread of AIDS around the world.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/333/8013/348515.html

AIDS Deaths Around the World
There were 41,985,000 people living with AIDS or HIV in 2001,
according to the United Nations AIDS Agency. Though progress has
been made with treatments and vaccines, millions of people continue
to die from the disease. Last year, UNAIDS reported that
3,000,000 people died of AIDS, about 20,000,000 people since the
onset of the diesase in 1981. Here are some of the vital statistics
around the world. The majority of people with AIDS are
heterosexual men.
|
|
People w/AIDS
|
Men
|
New Cases
|
Transmission Modes
|
|
North America
|
940,000
|
80%
|
45,000
|
IV, HM, H
|
|
Caribbean
|
420,000
|
50%
|
60,000
|
MH, H
|
|
Latin America
|
1,400,000
|
70%
|
130,000
|
IV, MH, H
|
|
Western Europe
|
560,000
|
75%
|
30,000
|
IV, MH
|
|
Eastern Europe, Central Asia
|
1,000,000
|
80%
|
250,000
|
IV
|
|
North Africa, Middle East
|
440,000
|
60%
|
80,000
|
H
|
|
Sub-Saharan Africa
|
28,100,000
|
45%
|
3,400,000
|
H
|
|
East Asia, Pacific
|
1,000,000
|
80%
|
270,000
|
IV, MH, H
|
|
South, Southeast Asia
|
6,100,000
|
65%
|
800,000
|
IV, H
|
|
Australia, New Zealand
|
15,000
|
90%
|
500
|
MH
|
|
Total
|
40,985,985
|
51%
|
5,065,500
|
IV, MH, H
|
Modes: IV-Intravenous drug use; MH-male
homosexual sex; H-heterosexual sex
Adults and Children World-Wide Living
with HIV/AIDS
The following compares the change in the number of people in the
world living with HIV/AIDS, comparing 2001 data above with 2000. An
additional 4,880,985 people were diagnosed in 2001, a 12% increase.
Who knows how many continue living undiagnosed. Yet, the Bush
administration has vetoed a budget item approved by both sides of the
house, not to contribute $34,000,000 to the UN, some of which would
go to AIDS, some to teach the use of condoms, and more. It feels
like, where we can't reduce the world population with our bombs,
we'll do it by pulling much needed health funds. 
|
|
2001
|
2000
|
%+/-
|
|
North America
|
940,000
|
920,000
|
2%
|
|
Caribbean
|
420,000
|
390,000
|
7%
|
|
Latin America
|
1,400,000
|
1,400,000
|
0%
|
|
Western Europe
|
560,000
|
540,000
|
4%
|
|
Eastern Europe, Central Asia
|
1,000,000
|
700,000
|
30%
|
|
North Africa, Middle East
|
440,000
|
400,000
|
9%
|
|
Sub-Saharan Africa
|
28,100,000
|
25,300,000
|
10%
|
|
East Asia, Pacific
|
1,000,000
|
640,000
|
36%
|
|
South, Southeast Asia
|
6,100,000
|
5,800,000
|
5%
|
|
Australia, New Zealand
|
15,000
|
15,000
|
0%
|
|
Total
|
40,985,985
|
36,105,000
|
12%
|
Source: For 2000 data, UNAIDS/WHO 2000,
AIDS Epidemic Update, December, 2000,
Geneva: UNAIDS
AIDS Cases Nearly Triple In Russia
The number of Russians infected with the virus that causes AIDS has
nearly tripled since last year to more than 250,000 registered cases,
experts on the disease said at a conference.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/333/8013/348526.html

China Announces Jump In AIDS Cases
The Chinese government announced a 17 percent increase in the number
of Chinese infected with the AIDS virus and sharply raised its
estimate of the disease's spread.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/333/8013/348492.html

AIDS Conference Ends On Hope That Rich
Are Listening
After a week of rowdy protests, bold proclamations, serious
scientific exchange and intense hand-wringing, the 14th International
AIDS Conference finished on a weary note.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/enews?352503

Immune Cells In Breast Milk Protect
Infants From HIV
Scientists have found immune cells in the milk of HIV-infected
mothers that target and kill the virus. This finding, which could
help explain the low transmission rate from mother to child via
breastfeeding despite high levels of the virus in mother's milk,
appears in the August 2002 issue of the Journal of Virology.
Source: American Society for Microbiology,
www.intelihealth.com/enews?352479

Condom-Free Anal Sex Keeps Virus On
Increase
A small but worrisome proportion of gay men in the Bay Area are
engaging in unprotected anal intercourse, knowingly putting
themselves at risk for AIDS, a groundbreaking health study shows.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/333/8013/348288.html

Young HIV Carriers Unaware Of
Virus
A study of young gay and bisexual men in major U.S. cities found that
more than three-quarters of those infected with HIV were unaware they
had the AIDS virus.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/23414/22002/352198.html
Millions Of Grandparents In Developing
World Caring For Grandchildren Orphaned By AIDS
A multitude of grandparents in developing countries have found
themselves caring for grandchildren orphaned by the epidemic.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/333/8013/348328.html

Along Mexico-U.S. Border, Fears Of AIDS
Growth Come Into Focus
With thousands of people moving across the border every day, and many
eventually traveling farther north into California or farther south
into Mexico, health officials fear there could be an AIDS explosion
in the making.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/333/8013/348335.html

Preventing HIV Infection In Newborns
Although all pregnant women in Canada are supposed to be offered
voluntary HIV testing to allow treatment and possible prevention of
transmission to the baby, cases are still missed.
Source: Canadian Medical Association Journal,
www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/333/8013/348012.html

Technique May Improve Safety Of
Donated Blood
A new process now undergoing final testing may rid donated blood of
virtually all viruses and bacteria, bringing a new level of safety to
blood transfusions.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/333/8013/348039.html

HIV Infection Cases Surging Among
Latinos
Health officials in California and Mexico have detected "alarming"
increases in AIDS virus infections among gay and bisexual Latino men
moving across the border.
Source: http://www.intelihealth.com/enews?347267

Drug Manufacturers: Approving Generic
AIDS Drugs Could Reduce Quality
United Nations approval of generic HIV/AIDS drugs could reduce
quality of treatment in poor countries and might lead to widespread
drug resistance, the federation that represents international
pharmaceutical companies said Thursday.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/8799/22002/347521.html

California Is Tightening Rules On
HIV Care
Managed care plans in California will be required to refer HIV
patients to doctors certified as AIDS specialists under regulations
scheduled to take effect in July, making the state the first to
impose such a requirement on private health insurers.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/8799/22002/347292.html
Company Withdraws AIDS Drug
Application
Problems which federal officials said were "potentially quite
serious" prompted the withdrawal of an application for approval to
allow pregnant women and newborn babies to take an existing AIDS
drug.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/333/8013/347633.html

Court Rules Government Must Provide Key
AIDS Drug To HIV-Positive Pregnant Women Despite Appeal
Proceedings
A High Court judge ruled again that the government must provide a key
AIDS drugs to HIV- positive pregnant women even as they wait to
appeal the decision to the country's highest court.
Source:
www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/333/8013/347632.html

Drug Manufacturers: Approving Generic
AIDS Drugs Could Reduce Quality
United Nations approval of generic HIV/AIDS drugs could reduce
quality of treatment in poor countries and might lead to widespread
drug resistance, the federation that represents international
pharmaceutical companies said.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/333/8013/347521.html

Initiative To Promote Access To Quality
HIV Medicines Releases First Batch Of Results
A new effort to assess the quality of HIV medicines could make
treatment services more accessible to poor countries. The World
Health Organization (WHO) has evaluated several HIV-related medicines
and today publishes the first list of products which were found to
meet WHO recommended standards. This initial phase of the project
includes forty products from eight branded and generic manufacturers.
Managed by WHO, the initiative counts on the expertise of UNICEF and
the UNAIDS Secretariat, and is supported by the UN Population Fund
(UNFPA) and the World Bank.
Source: WHO/UNAIDS/UNICEF, www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/333/8013/347491.html
Helms Pledges To Seek AIDS Funding
Two Senate Republicans pledged to seek million more in federal money
to fight AIDS overseas.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/333/8013/347639.html

California Is Tightening Rules
On HIV Care
Managed care plans in California will be required to refer HIV
patients to doctors certified as AIDS specialists under regulations
scheduled to take effect in July, making the state the first to
impose such a requirement on private health insurers.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/333/8013/347292.html

Bush To Propose AIDS Initiative
Senate Republicans decided to seek less money for fighting AIDS in
Africa and elsewhere after White House officials said they would
unveil a new plan to combat the disease abroad, a GOP lawmaker
said.
Source: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/333/8013/351023.html

South African AIDS Rates Slightly
Lower
The AIDS infection rate among young Sout