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  • AIDS panel reiterates call for prison needle exchange

    By Carol Sanders, Winnipeg Free Press
    February 3, 2010
    Source: Montreal Gazette
    WINNIPEG — The longer Parliament is on hold, the longer prison inmates are sharing dirty needles and diseases with the community at large, former prisoners and health advocates say.
    The Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network was supposed to appear Tuesday before the Commons Standing Committee on Public Safety [...]

  • Vaccine stops TB in African HIV trial

    Last Updated: Friday, January 29, 2010
    Source: CBC News
    An experimental vaccine helps prevent tuberculosis in people infected with HIV, researchers have found.
    The Mycobacterium vaccae, or MV vaccine, reduced the rate of tuberculosis by 39 per cent among 2,000 people infected with HIV in Tanzania, researchers said in Friday’s online issue of the journal AIDS.
    Tuberculosis accounts for [...]

  • Armed conflicts have an impact on the spread of tuberculosis: the case of the Somali Regional State of Ethiopia

    Author: Abdi GeleGunnar Bjune
    Credits/Source: Conflict and Health 2010, 4:1
    Source: 7th Space Interactive
    A pessimistic view of the impact of armed conflicts on the control of infectious diseases has generated great interest in the role of conflicts on the global TB epidemic. Nowhere in the world is such interest more palpable than in the Horn of Africa [...]

  • Yukon fights TB spread with control team

    Tuesday, January 26, 2010 | 5:17 PM CT
    Source: CBC News
    Health officials in the Yukon are working to stop the spread of tuberculosis in the territory, which has one of the highest infection rates in Canada.
    Chief medical officer Dr. Brendan Hanley said the Yukon currently has 26 active cases of TB in three undisclosed rural communities.
    Two [...]

  • China's TB control project avoids 770,000 deaths

    Source: Xinhua
    BEIJING, Jan. 20 (Xinhua) — A total of 770,000 deaths from tuberculosis (TB) were avoided over the past eight years in China thanks to a large-scale TB control project, it was announced Wednesday.
    The project covering 670 million Chinese, nearly half of China’s population, also prevented 20 million people from getting infected with TB bacteria.
    China’s [...]

  • Glaxo offers free access to potential malaria cures

    Exclusive: GSK boss says drug companies must balance need to satisfy shareholders with social responsibility
    Sarah Boseley, health editor
    Wednesday 20 January 2010
    Source: The Guardian
    The chief executive of the world’s second biggest pharmaceutical company will today announce that he is putting into the public domain thousands of potential drugs that might cure malaria.
    Andrew Witty, the British boss [...]

  • Circumcising babies could help Africa AIDS fight

    Tue Jan 19, 2010 6:04pm GMT
    By Kate Kelland
    Source: Reuters
    LONDON (Reuters) - Circumcising newborn boys to stop them becoming infected with the AIDS virus in later life is more cost-effective than circumcising adult men, Rwandan health experts said on Tuesday.
    A study by Agnes Binagwaho and colleagues at Rwanda’s health ministry found that the operation, which has [...]

  • For doctors in Haiti, worst is yet to come

    Source: Reuters
    Maggie Fox, Health and Science Editor
    WASHINGTON
    Mon Jan 18, 2010 12:01pm EST
    WASHINGTON (Reuters) - An earthquake killing up to 200,000 people would have been bad enough anywhere, but in Haiti, where AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria are rampant, children are malnourished and hygiene is already a challenge, it may create one of the worst medical disasters [...]

  • China strives to make medical prescriptions affordable to all

    2010-01-15 15:15:00
    by Xinhua writers Bai Xu, Yang Dingdu, Shen Chong
    Source: Xinhua News
    WUHAN, Jan. 15 (Xinhua) - Wang Zhengyan became a celebrity recently after a “best doctors” poll from local people. She has been a doctor for 26 years.
    “She is loved by patients because she always prescribes medicines [...]

  • Atlantic Examines Drug-Resistant TB Control Worldwide

    Thursday, January 14, 2010
    Source: Kaiser Global Health Policy Report
    The Atlantic examines the emergence of drug-resistant strains of tuberculosis around the world, with a look at the situation in South Africa. “[T]he resurgence of tuberculosis is not limited to South Africa. India and China have the largest numbers of tuberculosis cases, and multi-drug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) has [...]

  • New Study Raises Concerns About HIV-Drug Resistance

    By Eben Harrell
    Thursday, Jan. 14, 2010
    Source: Time
    Last January a team of scientists at the World Health Organization (WHO) published a study in the British medical journal the Lancet making the audacious claim that the tools already exist to end the AIDS epidemic. Doctors have long noted that antiretrovirals — the drugs commonly used to [...]

  • Clean-Cut: Study Finds Circumcision Helps Prevent HIV and Other Infections

    The first microbiome study of the penis offers some clues as to why removing foreskin cuts the risk of HIV infection in circumcised men
    By Carina Storrs
    Source: Scientific American
    The World Health Organization declared three years ago that circumcision should be part of any strategy to prevent HIV infection in men. The organization based its recommendation on [...]

  • Tobacco use prevalence, knowledge, and attitudes among newly diagnosed tuberculosis patients in Penang State and Wilayah Persekutuan Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia

    Author: Ahmed Awaisu Mohamad, Haniki Nik Mohamed Noorizan, et al.
    Credits/Source: Tobacco Induced Diseases 2010, 8:3
    Source: 7th Space Interactive
    There is sufficient evidence to conclude that tobacco smoking is strongly linked to tuberculosis (TB) and a large proportion of TB patients may be active smokers. In addition, a previous analysis has suggested that a considerable proportion [...]

  • Circumcision health benefit virtually nil, study finds

    Little evidence that world’s most common surgical procedure can prevent sexually transmitted infections, urinary tract infections and penile cance
    André Picard
    Tuesday, Jan. 12, 2010
    Source: The Globe and Mail
    While it is the most common surgical procedure in the world, there is virtually no demonstrable health benefit derived from circumcision of either newborns or adults, a new study [...]

  • Study finds that UNICEF program in Africa fails to save more children

    By Maria Cheng (CP) – Jan 11, 2010
    Source: The Canadian Press
    LONDON — A UNICEF program that spent $27 million to decrease child deaths from disease in West Africa has failed, according to a new study that found a higher survival rate in some regions that weren’t included in the program.
    The U.N. children’s agency pursued strategies [...]

Archive for November, 2009

Sign the Equitable Licensing Petition!

Sunday, November 22nd, 2009

We the undersigned encourage McGill University to

1. Adopt a policy that reflects global access principles,
2. Apply these principles by including equitable licensing provisions in negotiations for licensing agreements,
3. Ensure transparency in the application of equitable licensing provisions.

*Submit your name and e-mail address using the comment box to sign the petition.
**Check out this pamphlet for more information: Equitable Licensing Pamphlet

HIV vaccine research takes new direction

Sunday, November 15th, 2009

Source: United Press International

DURHAM, N.C., Nov. 11 (UPI) — U.S. scientists seeking a vaccine for the human immunodeficiency virus say a study of HIV antibodies is leading them in a new direction.

The Duke University Medical Center-led researchers said that new direction came from a detailed study of how the most robust antibodies work to block the HIV as it seeks entry into healthy cells.

“Our study clearly showed that we’ve been overlooking a very important component of antibody function,” said S. Munir Alam, associate professor of medicine and lead author of the study.

Alam and Harvard Medical School Assistant Professor Bing Chen said they studied two potentially powerful antibodies against HIV, 2F5 and 4E10. Both of are rare, broadly neutralizing antibodies, meaning they can block a number of strains of HIV, the scientists said.
[...]
Read full article at

From HIV diagnosis to treatment: evaluation of a referral system to promote and monitor access to antiretroviral therapy in rural Tanzania

Sunday, November 15th, 2009

Published on: 2009-11-11
Individuals diagnosed with HIV in developing countries are not always successfully linked to onward treatment services, resulting in missed opportunities for timely initiation of antiretroviral therapy, or prophylaxis for opportunistic infections. In collaboration with local stakeholders, we designed and assessed a referral system to link persons diagnosed at a voluntary counselling and testing (VCT) clinic in a rural district in northern Tanzania with a government-run HIV treatment clinic in a nearby city.

Methods: Two-part referral forms, with unique matching numbers on each side were implemented to facilitate access to the HIV clinic, and were subsequently reconciled to monitor the proportion of diagnosed clients who registered for these services, stratified by sex and referral period.

Delays between referral and registration at the HIV clinic were calculated, and lists of non-attendees were generated to facilitate tracing among those who had given prior consent for follow up.Transportation allowances and a “community escort”from a local home-based care organization were introduced for patients attending the HIV clinic, with supportive counselling services provided by the VCT counsellors and home-based care volunteers. Focus group discussions and in-depth interviews were conducted with health care workers and patients to assess the acceptability of the referral procedures.

Results: Referral uptake at the HIV clinic averaged 72% among men and 66% among women during the first three years of the national antiretroviral therapy (ART) programme, and gradually increased following the introduction of the transportation allowances and community escorts, but declined following a national VCT campaign.

Most patients reported that the referral system facilitated their arrival at the HIV clinic, but expressed a desire for HIV treatment services to be in closer proximity to their homes. The referral forms proved to be an efficient and accepted method for assessing the effectiveness of the VCT clinic as an entry point for ART.

Conclusions: The referral system reduced delays in seeking care, and enabled the monitoring of access to HIV treatment among diagnosed persons.

Similar systems to monitor referral uptake and linkages between HIV services could be readily implemented in other settings.

Author: Ray NsigayeAlison WringeMaria RouraSamuel KalluvyaMark UrassaJoanna BuszaBasia Zaba
Credits/Source: Journal of the International AIDS Society 2009, 2:6

AIDS called leading killer of women

Sunday, November 15th, 2009

Source: The Boston Globe
(AP)
10 November 2009

GENEVA - In its first study of women’s health, the World Health Organization said yesterday that the AIDS virus is the leading cause of death and disease among women between the ages of 15 and 44.

Unsafe sex is the leading risk factor in developing countries for these women of childbearing age, with others including lack of access to contraceptives and iron deficiency, the WHO said. Throughout the world, one in five deaths among women in this age group is linked to unsafe sex, according to the agency.

“Women who do not know how to protect themselves from such infections or who are unable to do so face increased risks of death or illness,’’ WHO said in a 91-page report. “So do those who cannot protect themselves from unwanted pregnancy or control their fertility because of lack of access to contraception.’’

The data were included in a report on the unequal health treatment faced by girls and women.

Dr. Margaret Chan, the WHO chief, said women enjoy a biological advantage because they tend to live six to eight years longer than men. But in many parts of the world, they suffer serious disadvantages because of poverty, poorer access to health care, and cultural norms that put a priority on the well-being of men, she said.
[...]
Read full article at The Boston Globe

About MGAC
McGill Global AIDS Coalition is an HIV/AIDS advocacy group dedicated to the eradication of HIV/AIDS and to the realization, worldwide, of the right to health. We are committed to helping to create an effective student advocacy network in Canada and to educating the McGill and Montreal community on global health issues
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