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  • Gates Foundation Gives Millions for Coverage of World Health

    Source: New York Times
    By DONALD G. McNEIL JR.
    Published: December 8, 2008
    A major limitation on journalists covering global health is the cost: getting to a story can mean airfare to Africa or Asia, hotels, Jeep rentals, satellite phones, translators, sometimes even armed guards.
    Meanwhile, many news organizations are cutting back.
    Now the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, which [...]


  • Source: Wall Street Journal
    9/12/08
    By JEANNE WHALEN
    LONDON — The fight against malaria, one of the world’s biggest killers, has just gotten a booster.
    An experimental vaccine has shown promise in two studies in African children, who account for the majority of the more than one million victims that malaria claims every year. Published online Monday in the [...]

  • Govt boosts aid to help 'failed state' Zimbabwe: PM

    Dec 4, 2008
    LONDON (AFP) — The govenment announced 10 million pounds of emergency aid to help tackle Zimbabwe’s cholera crisis Thursday, while denouncing President Robert Mugabe as leader of a “failed state.”
    The pledge came as Zimbabwe pleaded for international help after declaring the epidemic that has killed over 560 people a national emergency, and admitted [...]

  • Measles Deaths Worldwide Fall by 74 Percent

    Source: VOA News
    By Jessica Berman
    Washington
    04 December 2008
    Health officials say aggressive efforts to vaccinate young children against measles have resulted in a 74 percent global decline in the number of deaths due to the illness. Experts say the biggest decline, 90 percent, occurred in the Eastern Mediterranean region.
    Global health officials say that from 2000 through 2007, [...]

  • GlaxoSmithKline and The Carter Center Reaffirm Commitment to Global Public Health with Expansion of LF Program

    Source: MarketWatch
    Last update: 7:00 p.m. EST Dec. 4, 2008
    LONDON and PHILADELPHIA, Dec 04, 2008 /PRNewswire-FirstCall via COMTEX/ — - GSK CEO marks 10th anniversary of drive to eliminate lymphatic filariasis (LF) with donation of one-billionth albendazole tablet and grant to The Carter Center
    In a meeting today with former U.S. President and founder of The Carter [...]

  • AIDS conference urges West to keep funding pledges

    Source: AFP
    3 December 2008
    DAKAR (AFP) — AIDS activists urged Western donors Wednesday to keep their pledges to a fund to fight the disease amid fears that the global financial crisis could hurt the campaign.
    “Already we are missing billions of euros in funding and the current financial crisis means that it could become more difficult to [...]

  • Essential medicines out of reach for most people

    Source: WHO Press Release
    Lack of medicines in public sector forcing patients to pay high prices, finds new study
    Low availability, high prices keep essential medicines out of reach: WHO study
    1 December 2008 | GENEVA — An alarming lack of availability of essential medicines in the public sector drives patients to pay higher prices in the private [...]

  • New HIV Cases Could Be Reduced By 95% With Universal Voluntary Testing And Immediate Treatment, Mathematical Model Shows

    ScienceDaily (Dec. 1, 2008) — Universal and annual voluntary testing followed by immediate antiretroviral therapy treatment (irrespective of clinical stage or CD4 count) can reduce new HIV cases by 95% within 10 years, according to new findings based on a mathematical model developed by a group of HIV specialists in WHO.
    Authors of the study also [...]

  • UN warns against cuts to AIDS prevention programmes

    (Adds remarks on new class of drugs, new paragraphs 9-14)
    By Stephanie Nebehay
    GENEVA, Nov 28 (Reuters) - HIV infections could surge if countries pinched by the global financial crisis cut AIDS prevention programmes, a United Nations agency said on Friday.
    Paul De Lay, a senior official at UNAIDS, said that economic turmoil was a threat to development [...]

  • Experimental TB Drug Explodes Bacteria From The Inside Out

    Source: ScienceDaily
    Nov. 28, 2008
    An international team of biochemists has discovered how an experimental drug unleashes its destructive force inside the bacteria that cause tuberculosis (TB). The finding could help scientists develop ways to treat dormant TB infections, and suggests a strategy for drug development against other bacteria as well.
    A report describing the research, led by [...]

  • World Bank presses aid to developing world to ease crisis

    29 November 2008
    WASHINGTON (AFP) — The World Bank Saturday urged industrialized nations to maintain aid flows to developing nations to offset an expected decline in private capital flows to emerging markets due to the credit crisis.
    “Over the past year, many developing countries have already had to cope with high food and fuel prices, and are [...]

  • UK funds for S Africa Aids fight

    By Susan Watts
    BBC Newsnight
    Aids hopes of SA’s new health minister
    The UK is to give South Africa’s new Health Minister Barbara Hogan £15m to help combat Aids in the country.
    Ms Hogan was appointed health minister in September to help shake up a health service in crisis.
    South Africa has one of the most severe HIV/Aids epidemics in [...]

  • UNAIDS Urges More Transparency on HIV Reporting

    Source: Voice of America (VOA)
    By Lisa Bryant
    Paris
    28 November 2008
    A new report by UNAIDS urges countries to adopt flexible policies that reflect how and why the latest HIV infections are transmitted. The report coincides with the 20th anniversary of World AIDS Day. For VOA, Lisa Bryant has more from Paris.
    HIV infected patients resting in a hospital [...]

  • Drugmakers abuse patents to block generics, says EU, EFPIA objects

    Source: PharmaTimes
    28 November 2008
    By Lynne Taylor
    Tactics used by pharmaceutical manufacturers to delay or block the entry onto the market of cheaper generics mean that European Union member states spent around 3 billion euros more during 2000-2007 than they would have if the generics had been available without delay, according to the preliminary findings of an [...]

  • Model Predicts Halt to Africa's AIDS Epidemic

    By David Brown
    Washington Post Staff Writer
    Wednesday, November 26, 2008; Page A04
    A strategy of testing adults every year for HIV and immediately treating every person found to be infected could virtually end the AIDS epidemic in Africa in about a decade, new research suggests.
    While nobody is seriously espousing that approach, the “thought experiment” outlined this week [...]


Critical ARV shortage in the Free State - TAC

TAC
10 November 2008

Statement issued by the Treatment Action Campaign November 10 2008

Life-threatening antiretroviral treatment shortage in the Free State: DoH issues orders, “stop putting new clients on ARVs”

On Friday morning, TAC national offices began receiving phone calls from concerned healthcare workers and journalists requesting information about the antiretroviral (ARV) shortages at public sector health facilities in the Free State province. We have subsequently learned that healthcare workers have been instructed by senior government healthcare officials to stop initiating new patients on antiretroviral therapy (ART), and to halt baseline blood work and treatment literacy programmes in the province.

An anxious healthcare worker has since forwarded TAC a chain of emails sent by Palesa Santho, the pharmacist for the Free State’s ART programme, and Dr. Mvula Tshabalala, the head of the province’s Comprehensive HIV and AIDS Management Programme. These emails were sent to a list of government healthcare workers and focus on the province’s shortages in ART treatments, instructing the workers to stop putting new patients on ART. The subject from one of the emails sent by Dr. Tshabalala is: ‘STOP PUTTING NEW CLIENTS ON ARVS’. (The emails in question can be accessed in PDF here.)

This is an extract from one of the emails sent by Dr. Tshabalala:

“The province (FS) is experiencing an acute shortage of antiretroviral drugs (ARVs). This will lead to clients on treatment defaulting not because of their own fault. The only way to avoid this is by keeping the remaining ARVs for the exclusive use of those on treatment already with the exception of clients on the PMTCT program (pregnant women)”.

Dr. Tshabalala’s email also explained that the ART waiting list would be ‘postponed’:

“Those on waiting list will be postponed without changing their position on those lists”.

His email went on to state that it was not known when new patients would begin to initiate ART:

“Presently it is not possible to speculate when the province will be able to start new clients on ARVs”.

Dr. Tshabalala advised that ‘drug readiness training’ should be suspended because it ‘ will raise false hopes… y the time we start them with ARS they may have forgotten everything they were told because they did not practice it’.

Dr. Tshabalala advised that baseline blood work for HIV-positive patients was no longer necessary because it would need repeating ‘when the drugs are here’. He advised that CD4 tests should continue so that people could be put onto the waiting list, acknowledging that most patients ‘come to our sites having done the CD4 counts alredy ‘. This advice, heralding from the head of the Comprehensive HIV and AIDS Management Programme, fails to consider possible fluctuations in CD4 counts which may have resulted between the time of the patient’s last CD4 test and her/his presentation at a healthcare site.

Acute shortages in ART in the Free State threaten patients who are already accessing ART, and whose drug regimens may be interrupted as a result of the shortages, potentially resulting in drug resistance to the detriment of the patient’s health. These drug shortages also prevent patients in urgent need of ART from accessing the life-saving medications. As is evident in Dr. Tshabalala’s assurance that pregnant women will still be given access to ART, a system of triage is now in operation in the Free State with regard to these essential medicines.

These treatment shortages are a violation of the health rights of South Africans and the precepts of the National Strategic Plan on HIV/AIDS. TAC and the AIDS Law Project demand:

* An immediate end to the treatment shortages and stoppages which threaten the lives of HIV-positive citizens in the Free State;

* A detailed investigation into the source of these shortages and stoppages which allegedly stem from gross financial mismanagement within the Free State Health Department. This must include an audit of each ART site and of its suppliers;

* The establishment of an interim committee and process which will ensure that treatment is made available to patients while the investigation and audit is underway;

* That staff members responsible for the treatment shortages and lack of communication to the public be held accountable;

* That stronger systems are in place to deal with issues arising from the scale-up of the ART roll-out.

Halting the ART roll-out, treatment education programmes and diagnostics procedures should never be regarded as possibilities.

TAC spoke to Palesa Santho, the province’s pharmacist for the ARV programme, and Dr. Mvula Tshabalala, the head of the Comprehensive HIV and AIDS Management Programme, both of whom declined to comment. TAC was referred to Elke de Witt, from the communications department, who failed to answer her telephone despite repeated attempts. Modoer Khokho, the Executive Manger, was also unavailable for comment.

Statement issued by the Treatment Action Campaign November 10 2008

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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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