2009

PENNSYLVANIA: World AIDS Day Confab Offered in Bethlehem
Pocono Record (11.19.09) - Friday, November 20, 2009
On World AIDS Day, Dec. 1, the AIDS Activities Office at Lehigh Valley Health Network and the Allentown Health Bureau will present a conference entitled, HIV: The Aging of a Growing Population. The keynote address will be delivered by Jane Fowler, who was diagnosed with HIV at age 55. She is the founder and director of


NEW YORK: N.Y. Protestors Target Uganda Anti-Gay Law
Agence France Presse (11.19.09) - Friday, November 20, 2009
On Thursday in Manhattan, about 40 people gathered at Uganda s UN mission to protest that nation s proposed new anti- homosexuality law. The United States and France have condemned the measure, which would impose the death penalty for aggravated homosexuality, including acts by persons who are HIV-positive.


SOUTH AFRICA: 32 Percent of South African Children to Lose a Parent to AIDS by 2015
Business Day (South Africa) (11.19.09) - Friday, November 20, 2009
South African Press Association
Citing data from its latest survey, the South African Institute of Race Relations reports that 32 percent of all children in the nation will have lost one or both parents to AIDS by 2015. The SAIRR report says that in 2007, 2.5 million children had lost one or both parents, and AIDS was the cause of more than half thes


UNITED STATES: The Cost and Causalities of Silence: HIV/AIDS in Black America
New York Beacon (10.08.09) - Friday, November 20, 2009
Tony Wafford
There is a terrible and terrifying creature stalking the black community night and day. This terrible and terrifying creature is called HIV/AIDS, and it has come to our community and is consuming our life energy and undermining our future. It is now the number-one killer of our people between the ages of 22-45. To sav


SOUTH CAROLINA: SHARE Informs Students About AIDS
Daily Gamecock (University of South Carolina) (11.18.09) - Friday, November 20, 2009
Derek Legette
Students at the University of South Carolina (USC) are using World AIDS Day to elevate the profile of sexual health on campus. We want to keep students, our campus, and the community alert and not condone risky behaviors, said Ebony Allen, SHARE s World AIDS Day coordinator. USC s student sexual health awareness activi


CALIFORNIA: Stimulus Money to Support UCSF HIV Studies
Bay Area Reporter (San Francisco) (11.19.09) - Friday, November 20, 2009
Seth Hemmelgarn
Using federal stimulus funds, the National Institutes of Health has awarded $1 million grants to two HIV studies that will be conducted by University of California-San Francisco researchers. The first study will examine mobile phone text-messaging to improve treatment adherence among HIV patients who face complex regim


UNITED STATES: Cervical Cancer Screening Can Wait Until 21, Group Says
Washington Post (11.20.09) - Friday, November 20, 2009
Rob Stein
Women should have their first cervical cancer screening at age 21, and most can be rescreened less frequently than previously recommended, the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) said today. The new guidelines are based on scientific evidence that more frequent testing does not prevent significan


AUSTRALIA: Victoria Calls for HIV Protocols
Sydney Star Observer (11.19.09) - Friday, November 20, 2009
HIV/AIDS advocates in Victoria want authorities to provide clearer policies for determining when criminal charges should be lodged against HIV-positive people who risk infecting others. Though there are national guidelines, a recent review suggests many state policies are unclear about what circumstances trigger a heal


CALIFORNIA: Research Shows Neighborhoods Where AIDS Treatments Lag
New York Times (11.06.09) - Friday, November 20, 2009
Carol Pogash
A project to map HIV viral loads in San Francisco shows that while more HIV cases are in the largely gay Castro neighborhood, residents with HIV in poorer neighborhoods tend to be sicker or untreated. The city s health department is combining medical data with epidemiological tools to help target treatment in a groundb


SOUTH CAROLINA: HIV Tests, Vigils Planned for World AIDS Day
The State (Columbia, S.C.) (11.17.09) - Thursday, November 19, 2009
South Carolina s Department of Health and Environmental Control will mark World AIDS Day on Dec. 1 by offering free or low-cost rapid HIV tests in many county health centers and community agencies. Some 14,000 state residents are known to be living with HIV/AIDS, and health officials estimate that another South Carolin


NEBRASKA: County's STD Rates Down Slightly, but Still High
Omaha World-Herald (11.17.09) - Thursday, November 19, 2009
Michael O'Connor
The latest data show that STD rates declined slightly last year in Douglas County but remained above national averages. The county s chlamydia rate dropped from 553.5 cases per 100,000 to 542.6 last year. The national prevalence rate for chlamydia is 401.3 cases per 100,000. The county s gonorrhea rate fell from 185.1


DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA: Churches 'Silent' on AIDS
Washington Times (11.13.09) - Thursday, November 19, 2009
Joseph Young
At a recent HIV/AIDS symposium for District of Columbia faith leaders, the featured speaker criticized clergy members and the federal government as being silent for too long about the epidemic. On Nov. 7 at the Walter E. Washington Convention Center, the D.C. Department of Health sponsored the gathering to discuss HIV/


UNITED STATES: Common Cold Virus May Have Foiled HIV Vaccine Test
Associated Press (11.16.09) - Thursday, November 19, 2009
Randolph E. Schmid
A common cold virus used in an experimental HIV vaccine may have been an inappropriate vehicle for stimulating immune cells to fight HIV, a new study suggests. In 2007, researchers halted the STEP trial after it appeared that volunteers who received Merck & Co. s vaccine candidate were more likely to later contract


THAILAND: No Promotion for HIV/AIDS Workers: Study
The Nation (Bangkok) (11.17.09) - Thursday, November 19, 2009
Thai employers attitudes toward workers with HIV/AIDS have improved in the past decade, a new study suggests. However, these employees still remain less likely to be promoted. Employers reason that if an employee living with HIV/AIDS is promoted, they have to shoulder more responsibilities and this could cause their he


CANADA; UNITED STATES: Sex-Ed Goes Thumbs-First with Text Services
Edmonton Journal (11.17.09) - Thursday, November 19, 2009
Laura Stone; Canwest News Service
Toronto s new text-messaging program, TOHealth, is one among many initiatives that use texting- and Web-based services to provide sexual health information to teens. On the Web, Seattle-based Scarleteen.com recently began a texting service for its 10,000 US visitors a day, and there are tentative plans to make it avail


GLOBAL: US AIDS Program Undaunted by Recession, Head Says
Associated Press (11.18.09) - Thursday, November 19, 2009
Donna Bryson
The global recession is a concern but does not threaten the Obama administration s commitment to the President s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR), US officials said Wednesday. Both the president and Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton have assured that PEPFAR remains one of the highest priorities, said Eri


TEXAS: Texas Sex Educators Take Tentative Steps Beyond Abstinence
Dallas Morning News (11.09.09) - Thursday, November 19, 2009
Jessica Meyers
The combination of funding cuts, changes in state law and Texas high teen pregnancy rate is leading some administrators to rethink the state s commitment to abstinence-only sex education. When you see the alarming percentage and numbers of kids pregnant vs. the national average, you start to wonder what everyone is doi


GEORGIA: Spelman Observes World AIDS Day
Atlanta Journal-Constitution (11.17.09) - Wednesday, November 18, 2009
Sheila M. Poole
Spelman College s Sisters Chapel will host a presentation Thursday by Mica Shaw, coordinator of Sister Soul, an AID Atlanta outreach targeting African-American women. Following Shaw s 11 a.m. talk, free HIV testing will be offered from 4 to 7 p.m. in Upper Manley. Wrapping up the day will be a dialogue in the dark, at


LAOS: First HIV Testing Center Opens in Vientiane
Deutsche Presse-Agentur (11.12.09) - Wednesday, November 18, 2009
Thanks to the recent opening of the Christophe Merieux Lao Center in Vientiane, doctors in Laos now can monitor locally the progress of patients being treated with HIV-fighting antiretrovirals. Previously, it was necessary to send patients blood samples to Thailand for testing, a


GLOBAL: Elton Fears Youths Complacent About HIV
Advocate (11.17.09) - Wednesday, November 18, 2009
Christopher Mangum
During an appearance at his foundation s annual fundraiser in New York City on Monday, Sir Elton John said he worries that young people are not taking seriously the threat of HIV infection. We are finding that too many young people are not listening to what we are saying, he told BBC Radio 1 s Newsbeat. I m afraid peop


PENNSYLVANIA: Filling Need for Needles
Intelligencer Journal/New Era (Lancaster) (11.13.09) - Wednesday, November 18, 2009
Jeff Hawkes
Since 1998, businessman Robert E. Field has personally financed Lancaster s needle exchange program, which operates on $50,000 annually. But after December, Field said he will end the funding arrangement and seek support for the NEP from the wider community. The state Pharmacy Board s September move to allow over-the-c


MISSOURI: St. Louis No Longer Is Number 1 in 2 STDs
St. Louis Post-Dispatch (11.17.09) - Wednesday, November 18, 2009
Blythe Bernhard
St. Louis ranked second-highest in the number of reported cases of gonorrhea and chlamydia per 100,000 population last year, compared to other US cities and counties, a new CDC report shows. For the past two years, the city ranked first for both diseases, and it ranked in the top five for the last decade. In 2008, the


UNITED STATES: We Never Thought This Would Happen: Transitioning Care of Adolescents with Perinatally Acquired HIV Infection from Pediatrics to Internal Medicine
AIDS Care Vol. 21; No. 10: P. 1222-1229 (10..09) - Wednesday, November 18, 2009
Tara Vijayan; Andrea L. Benin; Krystn Wagner; Sostena Romano; Warren A. Andiman
Thanks to life-extending therapies, transitioning the medical care of children with perinatally acquired HIV from pediatric care to internal medicine practices has become increasingly important, the authors noted. Their work in the current study aims to describe challenges to caring for these adolescents and the potent


CANADA: Tenants Enjoy Life Without Labels
Toronto Star (11.16.09) - Wednesday, November 18, 2009
Noor Javed
A 112-unit complex on Sherbourne Street is the first in Toronto to be built to meet the housing needs of two unrelated groups: senior citizens and people living with HIV/AIDS. It s not about creating little boxes with labels on them, saying that if you have this particular need, you have to go in this particular box,


CANADA: First Nations Women's Conference Reveals 'Hidden Epidemic' of HIV
Ottawa Citizen (11.16.09) - Wednesday, November 18, 2009
Jana G. Pruden
Aboriginal women of Canada are recognizing the hidden epidemic of HIV and AIDS in their midst. I m seeing women who are leaders in our community, women who are living with this virus step up and say, That s enough now. We have a voice, and our voice needs to be heard, said Margaret Akan, head of the All Nations Hope AI


UNITED STATES: Immigrant Seekers Won't Have to Get HPV Vaccine
Associated Press (11.16.09) - Wednesday, November 18, 2009
Anabelle Garay
Effective Dec. 14, immigrant females ages 11-26 will no longer be required to be vaccinated against human papillomavirus (HPV) to become legal permanent US residents. Since July 2008, these women and girls had to obtain at least the first dose of the vaccine before their immigration status could be changed. However, CD


IDAHO: Southeastern District Health Department to Celebrate World AIDS Day
Idaho State Journal (Pocatello) (11.16.09) - Tuesday, November 17, 2009
To commemorate World AIDS Day, the HIV/AIDS Regional Planning Council will present an event on Dec. 1 from 7 to 8:30 p.m. at the First Congregational United Church of Christ, 309 Garfield Ave., Pocatello. The evening will include screenings of personal videos created by young adults living with HIV, which were produced


EUROPEAN UNION: Female Health Co. Gets Patent on Improved Condom for Women
Chicago Daily Herald (11.16.09) - Tuesday, November 17, 2009
Bloomberg News
In a statement issued Nov. 12, Chicago-based Female Health Co. reported it has received a European patent on FC2, its second- generation female condom. The improved product was approved Oct. 1 by the US Food and Drug Administration. The company said its patent applications are pending in the United States and


AUSTRALIA: Patients to Be Tested After Hospital HIV Scare
Australian Associated Press (11.16.09) - Tuesday, November 17, 2009
David Barbeler
Officials at Bundaberg Hospital in southern Queensland are recommending blood tests for 274 people treated between Nov. 6 and 13 at the facility s dental clinic. Authorities discovered that one batch of dental instruments cleaned on Nov. 6 was not subjected to the final steam sterilization process, so patients treated


CALIFORNIA: HIVers Needed for Flu Remedy Study
Bay Area Reporter (San Francisco) (11.12.09) - Tuesday, November 17, 2009
HIV-positive Bay Area residents who have influenza can apply to enroll in a study of a new triple combination antiviral drug (TCAD) against the seasonal infection, researchers told a Nov. 10 San Francisco forum on flu and HIV/AIDS. Persons who call the Flu Hotline, set up by Quest Clinical Studies and Conant Medical Gr


ZAMBIA: Multiple Sex Partners and Perceived Risk of HIV Infection in Zambia: Attitudinal Determinants and Gender Differences
AIDS Care Vol. 21; No. 10: P. 1211-1221 (10..09) - Tuesday, November 17, 2009
Mai Do; Dominique Meekers
The authors introduced their study by noting, While there is much attention on perceived risk of HIV and subsequent cautionary behavior, evidence of the reciprocity of the relationship between recent risky sexual behavior and perceived risks of HIV infection remains scarce. Their research tests the hypothesis that havi


UNITED KINGDOM: National Health Service Missed Target on Sex Disease Tests - Watchdog
The Guardian (London) (11.12.09) - Tuesday, November 17, 2009
Denis Campbell
Six years after the launch of Britain s National Chlamydia Screening Program, only half of local primary care trusts (PCTs) have reached a testing rate projected to reduce the STD s prevalence, a new report suggests. To have a significant impact on chlamydia requires overall testing levels of 26 percent or above, said


GLOBAL: Global Fund Approves $2.4 Billion to Fight AIDS, TB, Malaria
Voice of America News (11.15.09) - Tuesday, November 17, 2009
Peter Heinlein
At their meeting last week, the directors of the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB and Malaria approved its second-largest round of grants to fight the diseases. Recommended funding totaled $2.4 billion over two years, $350 million less than last year s $2.75 billion, which was approved before the global economic downturn.


DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA: D.C. AIDS Office Ordered to Answer HUD
Washington Post (11.17.09) - Tuesday, November 17, 2009
Darryl Fears
D.C. Council member David Catania (I-At Large) on Monday gave city health officials 24 hours to gather AIDS spending documentation sought by the federal Department of Housing and Urban Development. Since June, HUD has been requesting a program audit and other information from the city s HIV/AIDS Administration (HAA). L


UNITED STATES: Sex Infections Still Growing in US, Says CDC
Reuters (11.16.09) - Tuesday, November 17, 2009
Common STDs in the United States are at unacceptably high levels, a CDC official said Monday in announcing the latest statistics on chlamydia, gonorrhea, and syphilis. We have among the highest rates of STDs of any developed country in the world, said Dr. John Douglas, director of CDC s Division of STD Prevention.


FLORIDA: Tests Find No New Active TB Cases at School
St. Petersburg Times (11.13.09) - Monday, November 16, 2009
TB testing of about 300 students and staff at Plant City High School, undertaken after one student was found to have an active case, has identified no one else with the active form of the disease. Eight persons were found to carry the latent form of the disease, which was well under what we actually expected, said Stev


DELAWARE: Officials to Check Possible Spread of TB by Homeless Man
News Journal (Wilmington) (11.14.09) - Monday, November 16, 2009
Hiran Ratnayake
A homeless man who had been staying in the Wilmington area has been diagnosed with tuberculosis, prompting Delaware Division of Public Health workers to launch an investigation. We are advised by CDC to test close contacts, for example, persons sleeping in the same room as the infected person, said Heidi Truschel-Light


CALIFORNIA: Hanford HIV Clinic Open Until July
Fresno Bee (11.10.09) - Monday, November 16, 2009
Lewis Griswold
Hanford s HIV clinic has been saved for the time being from closure, after Kings County tapped reserve funding to backfill some state cuts. The news will be welcomed by the 40 patients who would otherwise have had to travel to Fresno for treatment, said Dr. Annie Wong, who runs the clinic. Some are too poor for the tra


CALIFORNIA: Lack of Money Shutters Salinas HIV/AIDS Center
The Herald (Monterey County, California) (11.09.09) - Monday, November 16, 2009
Laith Agha
State budget cuts have forced Central Coast HIV/AIDS Services Salinas to shut its drop-in center, a field office that provided needle exchange, condoms, and STD screening. The center was strategically located near Chinatown, and many of its clients were homeless, addicts or sex workers. CCHAS maintains an office on Bal


UNITED STATES: School-Based Condom Education and Its Relations with Diagnoses of and Testing for Sexually Transmitted Infections Among Men in the United States
American Journal of Public Health Vol. 99; No. 12: P. 2180- 2182 (12..09) - Monday, November 16, 2009
Brian Dodge, PhD; Michael Reece, PhD, MPH; Debbie Herbenick, PhD, MPH
The study s authors note that potential associations between school-based condom education and sexual health outcomes, including STD diagnoses, are not well understood. In the current study, sexually active men over age 18 were asked whether they had been tested for and diagnosed with any of six commonly reported STDs


KENYA: In Fight Against AIDS, Kenya Confronts Gay Taboo
Time (11.07.09) - Monday, November 16, 2009
Nick Wadhams
Kenya s upcoming census of those at risk for HIV represents an opportunity to soften the country s long-standing stigma against homosexuality, say advocates and public health officials. As a country and as an African culture, we live in full denial of the existence of homosexuality, said James Kamau, national coordinat


DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA; NEW YORK: Study in D.C. to Test Whether HIV Treatment Can Prevent Spread
Washington Post (11.13.09) - Monday, November 16, 2009
Darryl Fears
A controversial strategy to eradicate HIV with aggressive treatment of those already infected is being tested in Washington. The purpose is to get the level [of HIV in the blood] down so that people will not infect anyone because their viral load is so low, said Anthony S. Fauci, director of the National Institute of A


UNITED STATES: AIDS Patients to President: Send More Money South
Associated Press (11.16.09) - Monday, November 16, 2009
Shelia Byrd
Southern states are hard-hit by the AIDS epidemic and short- changed in federal funds to address the crisis, say area activists. They want to get their message across on Monday to Jeffrey S. Crowley, director of the White House s Office of National AIDS Policy, during a Jackson, Miss., discussion on national AIDS prior


CALIFORNIA: HIV-Poz Group Holds 10-Year Reunion
Bay Area Reporter (San Francisco) (11.12.09) - Friday, November 13, 2009
Cynthia Laird
Stop AIDS Project s Positive Living for Us Seminar (PLUS) is holding a 10-year reunion and awards ceremony at 6 p.m. on Friday, Nov. 13, at the Swedish American Hall, 2174 Market St., San Francisco. PLUS is a weekend retreat that provides education and emotional support. I think the program is incredible; it was a gods


GERMANY: Nobel Laureates Honor Annie Lennox
Agence France Presse (11.11.09) - Friday, November 13, 2009
In Berlin Tuesday at a summit of Nobel Peace Laureates, former Eurhythmics singer Annie Lennox received the 2009 Woman of Peace award in recognition of her work to fight HIV/AIDS. Since 2003, Lennox s SING campaign has raised $2 million to build awareness of the disease s impact on women and children. SING works in con


DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA: Clergy Seek Answers to D.C. AIDS Crisis
Washington Informer (11.12.09) - Friday, November 13, 2009
Denise Rolark Barnes
The City Council recently met with area faith leaders, physicians, and health advocates in a discussion about the District of Columbia s HIV/AIDS rate and how to work collaboratively to reduce it. At the time we took over the committee four years ago, there hadn t been a hearing held about HIV/AIDS in two years, said D


UNITED STATES: The NYC Condom: Use and Acceptability of New York City's Branded Condom
American Journal of Public Health Vol. 99; No. 12: P. 2178- 2180 (12..09) - Friday, November 13, 2009
Ryan C. Burke, MPH; Juliet Wilson, MSc; Kyle T. Bernstein, PhD, MPH; Nicholas Grosskopf, EdD, CHES; Christopher Murrill, PhD, MPH; Blayne Cutler, MD, PhD; Monica Sweeney, MD; Elizabeth M. Begier, MD, MPH
In a high-profile media campaign launched on Feb. 14, 2007, the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene (DOHMH) introduced the NYC Condom. This male condom - a standard-size, lubricated Lifestyles brand - was the first specially packaged condom unique to a municipality. The department distributed 5 millio


SOUTH AFRICA: Push for Routine Offers of HIV Tests
Business Day (South Africa) (11.11.09) - Friday, November 13, 2009
Tamar Kahn
In yet another break with the policies of the previous administration, South Africa s health minister is asking doctors and nurses to take the initiative and routinely suggest HIV tests to their patients. Health Minister Aaron Motsoaledi also is leading a government effort to increase the acceptance of voluntary HIV te


CALIFORNIA: Keeping It Safe After the Clothes Come Off
ABC News (11.05.09) - Friday, November 13, 2009
Lisa Ling; Arash Ghadishah
Former adult-film performer Darren James, whose 2004 HIV diagnosis shut down California s porn industry for one month, is now part of a campaign to require the use of condoms on production sets to decrease the risk of infections. James said he does not know specifically how he acquired the virus, but he does know he un


UNITED STATES: Black Churches Tackle Poverty, HIV; Activists from Across Country Meet to Map Out Strategies
Chicago Tribune (11.13.09) - Friday, November 13, 2009
Lolly Bowean
US black church leaders met recently in suburban Chicago to discuss how their ministries can help fight HIV/AIDS. We are Christians because we endeavor to be like Jesus. It is mandated that we minister to the sick. HIV and AIDS is no exception, said Tanya Bender Henderson, an educator from Mt. Jezreel Baptist Church in


DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA: Housing and Urban Development Threatens to Cut Off D.C. AIDS Funding Next Year
Washington Post (11.12.09) - Friday, November 13, 2009
Debbie Cenziper
Federal housing authorities are threatening to withhold from the District of Columbia $12.2 million in assistance for people with HIV/AIDS next year unless city health officials comply with requests for improved oversight. In a recent series of reports, the Washington Post found the District s HIV/AIDS Administration (


CANADA: AIDS Researchers in Winnipeg to Brainstorm on New Ways to Fight Disease
Canadian Press (11.11.09) - Thursday, November 12, 2009
Winnipeg Sun
More than 75 leading HIV/AIDS researchers from around the world are heading to Winnipeg for a symposium that will seek to strengthen existing ties between researchers and speed the development of a viable vaccine for HIV/AIDS, said Heather Medwick, acting president of the Winnipeg-based International Center for Infecti


IRAN: Recorded AIDS Deaths in Iran Top 3,400: Report
Agence France Presse (11.12.09) - Thursday, November 12, 2009
Quoting health ministry figures, the ILNA News Agency said today that Iran has recorded at least 3,409 deaths from AIDS, and another 2,097 people have been diagnosed with the disease. To date, 20,130 people, of whom 93 percent are men, have been diagnosed with HIV. Blaming a shortage of testing facilities and the fear


THE NETHERLANDS: Dutch Law Forces Rapists to Undergo HIV Test
Agence France Presse (11.10.09) - Thursday, November 12, 2009
The Dutch parliament on Tuesday gave final approval to a law under which prosecutors can compel suspected rapists to undergo blood testing. This can then be used to determine whether the suspect is a carrier of [HIV] or of other serious infectious diseases like hepatitis B or C, which can be transferred to a victim in


ILLINOIS: Clinton Says Reform Vital to Homeless with HIV
Chicago Tribune (11.12.09) - Thursday, November 12, 2009
Angie Leventis Lourgos
The crisis in health care is responsible for much of the homelessness among persons with HIV, former President Bill Clinton told advocates at a speech Wednesday in Chicago. The event raised an estimated $400,000 for its sponsor, the Chicago House and Social Service Agency, which provides housing and other services to p


CALIFORNIA: HIV Study Calls for Volunteers with Dark Hair
San Francisco Chronicle (11.05.09) - Thursday, November 12, 2009
Victoria Colliver
An upcoming San Francisco-based study will attempt to use samples of participants hair as a tool for gauging HIV treatment adherence. In the Strand Study, researchers from the city Department of Public Health (SFDPH) and University of California-San Francisco (UCSF) will test people s hair to measure both treatment com


NEW YORK: An Armada to Fight AIDS in Rochester
City Newspaper (Rochester) (11.11.09) - Thursday, November 12, 2009
Tim Louis Macaluso
Nearly two-dozen Rochester health, social service, and faith organizations have joined in a campaign to raise HIV/AIDS awareness and fight the disease among Latinos and African Americans. On Nov. 21, the coalition will launch its efforts with Hope Takes Action: A Road to Victory for Rochester, a community gathering wit


UNITED STATES: 1 in 12 Truckers Has Hepatitis C
Albuquerque Journal (10.28.09) - Thursday, November 12, 2009
Olivier Uyttebrouck
In a 2004-2006 study of long-distance truckers in New Mexico, state Department of Health researchers found that 8.5 percent had hepatitis C, most likely due to IV drug use. Many did not know about their HCV infection, and most had not injected drugs in years or decades. Of 652 drivers who were approached at truck stops


UGANDA: Uganda Renews Media Strategy in HIV/AIDS Fight as Infection Rate Soars
Xinhua News Agency (11.11.09) - Thursday, November 12, 2009
On Tuesday, a Ugandan AIDS official said the government will concentrate more on promoting HIV prevention messages in collaboration with media outlets. The country must refocus on prevention because of the increasing number of new HIV infections, Kihumuro Apuuli, the director-general of Uganda s AIDS Commission, told m


UNITED STATES: Provision in a Bill Aimed at Helping Needle Exchanges Would Hurt Most of Them
New York Times (11.11.09) - Thursday, November 12, 2009
Katie Zezima
Congress is considering a bill that appears to boost needle- exchange efforts but would in fact pose a huge challenge to most of them, advocates say. The proposed legislation would end a 20-year-ban on using federal funding for needle-exchange programs but prohibit federally funded NEPs within 1,000 feet of where child


WASHINGTON: HIV/AIDS Curriculum Preview Set in Richland
Tri-City Herald (Tri-Cities) (11.10.09) - Wednesday, November 11, 2009
Parents of fifth-grade students in Richland School District will have the opportunity to preview videos dealing with HIV/AIDS prevention and human growth and development at 6:30 p.m. Monday at Chief Joseph Middle School, 504 Wilson St. State law requires that HIV/AIDS instruction be presented to students in grades five


MICHIGAN: White House to Hold Meeting on Development of HIV/AIDS Strategy in Ferndale
Michigan Messenger (11.09.09) - Wednesday, November 11, 2009
Todd A. Heywood
On Nov. 18, the White House Office of National AIDS Policy (ONAP) will host a meeting in Ferndale to seek community input into the development of the National HIV/AIDS Strategy (NHAS). The specific goals of NHAS will be to reduce HIV incidence, increase access to care and optimize health outcomes, and reduce HIV-relate


SOUTH AFRICA: South Africa's Death Rate Doubled in a Decade: Health Minister
Agence France Presse (11.10.09) - Wednesday, November 11, 2009
In a move that highlights the sharp break President Jacob Zuma has made with the HIV/AIDS policies of his predecessor, South Africa s health minister on Tuesday reported mortality figures he characterized as shocking. In 11 years, from 1997 to 2008, the rate of death has doubled in South Africa, Aaron Motsoaledi said i


TENNESSEE: Knox Middle Schoolers Report Risky Behaviors
Knoxville News-Sentinel (11.09.09) - Wednesday, November 11, 2009
Kristi L. Nelson
At the recent quarterly meeting of the Knox County School Health Advisory Council, the county s director of Community Assessment and Health Promotion presented results from the 2008 Knox County Middle School Youth Risk Behavior Survey. I don t like hearing some of the things I am going to tell you, said Dr. Kathy Brown


UNITED STATES: Availability of HIV-Related Health Services in Adolescent Substance Abuse Treatment Programs
AIDS Care Vol. 21; No. 10: P. 1238-1246 (10.09.09) - Wednesday, November 11, 2009
H.K. Knudsen; C.B. Oser
Because alcohol and drug abuse heightens adolescents risk of becoming infected with HIV, substance abuse treatment programs for youths may represent an important site of HIV prevention, the authors wrote. In the current study, they explored the adoption of three HIV-related health services: risk assessment during intak


UNITED KINGDOM: Rise in Reported Cases of Women Committing Child Sex Abuse
Agence France Presse (11.09.09) - Wednesday, November 11, 2009
Calls to a UK-based child abuse hotline have more than doubled over the last five years, and the number of children reporting abuse by a woman has grown dramatically, the charity said on Monday. In the past year, 6,000 children reported sexual abuse by a male to Childline, a telephone- and Web-based service of the Nati


SOUTH AFRICA: Victory for Soldiers Living with HIV
Business Day (South Africa) (11.09.09) - Wednesday, November 11, 2009
Wilson Johwa
Last week, South Africa s Cabinet approved a new policy that will allow the national defense force (SANDF) to selectively recruit and deploy soldiers who are HIV-positive. The move follows a high court decision last year that declared SANDF s old policy unconstitutional. A court order gave the government and AIDS advoc


UNITED STATES: US Officials Begin Push Against Human Trafficking
Associated Press (11.09.09) - Wednesday, November 11, 2009
Russell Contreras
Protecting the estimated 17,500 victims of human trafficking who travel through the nation each year is the goal of a new public awareness campaign by US immigration officials. Most victims are lured to the United States with promises of lucrative jobs but instead find themselves in the commercial sex trade or other fo


TENNESSEE: HIV/AIDS Program Has Wait
Knoxville News-Sentinel (11.09.09) - Wednesday, November 11, 2009
Associated Press
Tennessee s AIDS Drug Assistance Program has begun placing prospective new enrollees on a waiting list for the first time since its inception in the early 1990s, state health officials say. The state s ADAP has reached its capacity - both because unemployment has pressured more patients to seek its assistance, and stat


FLORIDA: Plant City High Students Tested for TB
ABCactionnews.com (Tampa) (11.10.09) - Tuesday, November 10, 2009
Linda Hurtado
Today at Plant City High School, about 300 of the facility s 2,100 students underwent testing for tuberculosis. The testing was prompted by one student s diagnosis with TB; that person is now under a doctor s treatment at home. Only students and employees who had been in direct contact with the ailing student were bein


UGANDA: Rights Group Leery of Uganda AIDS Test Law
United Press International (11.06.09) - Tuesday, November 10, 2009
Uganda risks undoing a decade of progress against AIDS if its government passes a new HIV testing bill under consideration, Human Rights Watch said Friday. HRW said the measure would mandate HIV testing but would not protect against discrimination or preserve patients confidentiality. Though the testing provision tar


CALIFORNIA: Shanti Marks 35 Years of Caring
Bay Area Reporter (San Francisco) (11.05.09) - Tuesday, November 10, 2009
Matthew S. Bajko
Founded in 1974 to provide emotional and practical support to cancer patients, Shanti s model of care left it well- positioned to respond in the 1980s when AIDS began devastating the Bay Area s gay male population. Today Shanti, whose name is Sanskrit for inner peace or tranquility, still trains volunteers to care for


UNITED STATES: Economic Burden of Sexually Transmitted Infections: Incidence and Direct Medical Cost of Chlamydia, Gonorrhea and Syphilis Among Illinois Adolescents and Young Adults, 2005-2006
Sexually Transmitted Diseases Vol. 36; No. 10: 629-636 (10..09) - Tuesday, November 10, 2009
Elizabeth Pultorak; William Wong; Charles Rabins; Supriya D. Mehta
The estimated incidence and direct medical costs of sexually transmitted infections (STIs) among Illinois residents ages 15 to 24 are substantial, the authors noted, adding that local assessment of the magnitude and economic burdens of STIs can aid in targeting resources and prevention programs. Illinois Department of


AUSTRALIA: Older Also Say They Practice Unsafe Sex
The Age (Melbourne) (11.10.09) - Tuesday, November 10, 2009
Danny Rose
Many Australians who report having unprotected sex do not get tested for STDs, according to a study released Monday to mark Sexual Health Week. Of more than 1,000 sexually active Australians ages 18-40 polled last month, 93.1 percent said they had sex at least once without a condom, including 47.5 percent who were ages


UNITED KINGDOM; UNITED STATES: ViiV Vows Joint Venture Will Help Fight HIV
Financial Times (11.03.09) - Tuesday, November 10, 2009
Andrew Jack
On Nov. 3, drug makers Pfizer and GlaxoSmithKline officially launched their joint HIV venture, a company called ViiV Healthcare. Some observers hail the effort as a way of sharing the business risks and costs of drug development. Others are wary it may precede a complete withdrawal from a HIV drug market under pricing


GLOBAL: WHO: AIDS Leading Cause of Death, Disease in Women
Associated Press (11.09.09) - Tuesday, November 10, 2009
Bradley S. Klapper
According to the World Health Organization s new report, Women and Health: Today s Evidence Tomorrow s Agenda, HIV is the leading cause of death and disease among women ages 15 to 45. The other two major killers of these women are pregnancy- related conditions and tuberculosis, says the report released by WHO Monday in


UNITED STATES: Findings Inconclusive on Teaching Abstinence
Washington Post (11.07.09) - Tuesday, November 10, 2009
Rob Stein
Comprehensive risk-reduction programs to prevent or reduce pregnancy, HIV, and other STDs have sufficient evidence of their efficacy, and such sex education programs can benefit public health, a non-federal panel of health experts concluded in a new report. However, a similar review for abstinence education interventio


CHINA: China Police Hunt for 2 Million Unsafe Condoms: Report
Agence France Presse (11.09.09) - Monday, November 09, 2009
The state-run China Youth Daily reports that police in Hunan province have shuttered a factory producing fake, nonsterile condoms and are now trying to track down more than 2 million that have been shipped. Police say the suspect, Li Anping, bought the condoms wholesale, added an unknown lubricant and packaged them wit


TENNESSEE: HIV/AIDS Rate Prompts Visit
Commercial Appeal (Memphis) (11.05.09) - Monday, November 09, 2009
Tom Charlier
Shelby County is home to less than 15 percent of the state s residents but almost 40 percent of its 14,000-plus HIV/AIDS patients, a fact that drew a visit Wednesday from the Department of Health and Human Services assistant secretary for health. This is a completely preventable epidemic, Dr. Howard K. Koh said prior t


CALIFORNIA: Monterey County HIV, AIDS Groups to Merge
Salinas Californian (11.04.09) - Monday, November 09, 2009
Kimber Solana
To save money and become more efficient, two Monterey County HIV/AIDS groups have announced plans to join forces. We saw the writings on the wall, said Tom Melville, a spokesperson for John XXIII HIV/AIDS Services. The organization will combine with the Monterey County AIDS Project (MCAP) to become Central Coast HIV/AI


CALIFORNIA: San Francisco Syphilis Rates Flatline
Bay Area Reporter (San Francisco) (11.05.09) - Monday, November 09, 2009
Matthew S. Bajko
The re-introduction of the Healthy Penis educational campaign is being credited in part with a leveling-off of syphilis rates in San Francisco. Syphilis cases in the city fell 20 percent from 2005 to 2007, but increased 55 percent - from 472 to 658 - between 2007 and 2008. The 473 cases seen in the first nine months of


UGANDA: Experience of Sexual Violence Among Women in HIV Discordant Unions After Voluntary HIV Counseling and Testing: A Qualitative Critical Incident Study in Uganda
AIDS Care Vol. 21; No. 11: P. 1363-1370 (11..09) - Monday, November 09, 2009
Donath Emusu; Nataliya Ivankova; Pauline Jolly; Russell Kirby; Herman Foushee; Fred Wabwire-Mangen; Drake Katongole; John Ehiri
The researchers investigated experiences of sexual violence among women in HIV discordant unions, relationships in which one partner is HIV-infected and the other is not, attending HIV post-test club services in Uganda . The qualitative critical incident technique was used to interview a volunteer sample of 26 women fr


SOUTH AFRICA: Health to Seek Extra Billions to Combat HIV/AIDS
Business Day (South Africa) (11.02.09) - Monday, November 09, 2009
Linda Ensor
South Africa s Department of Health is planning to request a boost in funding for HIV/AIDS treatment based on estimates of the number of people needing antiretroviral therapy, a senior health official said recently. The extra funds would be administered by DOH rather than through the provinces, said Kamy Chetty, the de


AUSTRALIA: Alarm on Surge in HIV Cases
The Age (Melbourne) (11.09.09) - Monday, November 09, 2009
Julia Medew
A federal advisory committee of infectious-disease experts is recommending that Australia re-invigorate its domestic HIV prevention efforts. The draft strategy advice is in response to what the committee said is a resurgent epidemic among gay men as well as to emerging epidemics among travelers to high- risk countries


UNITED STATES: Consumer Reports Puts 20 Condoms to the Test
ABC News (11.03.09) - Monday, November 09, 2009
Joseph Brownstein
In recent testing of 20 condom brands sold on the US market, all met minimum national and international performance standards, according to Consumer Union, the independent nonprofit publisher of Consumer Reports. Condoms are usually inflated with 17-18 liters of air in tests for breaking. All of them test at the standa


SOUTH AFRICA: AIDS Program May Be Reducing South Africa Deaths
Business Day (South Africa) (11.05.09) - Friday, November 06, 2009
Tamar Kahn
New figures showing a slight decline in the number of deaths in South Africa might be a data problem, or might be good news, the Department of Health s deputy director-general for strategic health programs told Parliament on Wednesday. We hope at least part of it is the ARV [antiretroviral] program, Yogan Pillay said.


WISCONSIN: Assembly OKs Bill Requiring Teaching Birth Control
Associated Press (11.06.09) - Friday, November 06, 2009
By a vote of 48 to 43, the Wisconsin Assembly on Thursday gave final approval to a bill that would require schools teaching sex education to include instruction on preventing pregnancy. The bill must pass the Senate before advancing to the desk of Gov. Jim Doyle.


UNITED STATES: Many Doctors Overuse Pap Testing: Survey
Reuters Health (11.02.09) - Friday, November 06, 2009
Guidelines for Pap screening were substantially revised earlier this decade in response to research showing that low- risk women age 30 and older did not need annual testing. However, a new study suggests that many US primary care doctors recommend Pap screening more often than guidelines suggest. Researchers surveyed


UNITED KINGDOM: Sex Education to Be Compulsory for Pupils Aged 15 to 16 Even if Parents Object
The Guardian (London) (11.06.09) - Friday, November 06, 2009
Jessica Shepherd
Changes set to take effect in September 2011 will make sex education class compulsory for children ages 15-16, even if their parents object. Parents will still have the right to withdraw children under age 15 from the classes. Currently, parents of youths up to age 19 can opt them out of sex education. About 0.04 perce


SOUTH AFRICA: South Africa Tries to Enlist Men in AIDS Battle
Agence France Presse (11.06.09) - Friday, November 06, 2009
Charlotte Plantive
To more effectively get the HIV prevention message to men, South Africa is expanding its efforts beyond the nation s health centers, which traditionally are used predominately by women. There is nothing especially made for men. We need to do something to talk to men, said Mzi Lwana, head of the Men and AIDS program at


GLOBAL: Medical Aid Group Warns of Waning Support for AIDS Treatment Scale-Up
Voice of America News (11.05.09) - Friday, November 06, 2009
Joe De Capua
In a new report, Doctors Without Borders (DWB) is warning of a major funding deficit and a looming crisis in AIDS funding. On Thursday in Johannesburg, South Africa , the report s author spoke about the problem. In 2005, leaders of the G-8 nations committed to supporting universal access to AIDS prevention, treatment,


UNITED STATES: AIDS Confab Highlights Progress, Needs in US
Bay Area Reporter (San Francisco) (11.05.09) - Friday, November 06, 2009
Seth Hemmelgarn
HIV/AIDS funding, treatment, care, and prevention were among topics discussed last week at the 2009 US Conference on AIDS in San Francisco. On Oct. 30, attendees applauded as they watched video of the White House ceremony in which President Barack Obama signed the reauthorization of the Ryan White CARE Act and announce


INDIANA: In Indiana, Blacks Continue to Be at Higher Risk for HIV
Indianapolis Star (11.06.09) - Friday, November 06, 2009
Will Higgins
Indiana s health commissioner said Thursday that the state s African-American residents continue to be disproportionately affected by HIV/AIDS. It s a substantial increase, and it s an area of real concern to us, Judith Monroe said at a news conference. State figures show that blacks, who represent less than 10 percent


INDIANA: HIV Program Thursday to Feature Model-Actor Boris Kodjoe
Indianapolis Star (11.04.09) - Thursday, November 05, 2009
Indiana s sixth annual HIV Statewide Awareness Program is being held Thursday in Indianapolis Madame Walker Theatre. The free event which seeks to encourage members of minority communities to learn more about AIDS and get tested for HIV; its sponsors include the State Department of Health, the Indiana Family and Social


AUSTRALIA: Australian Researchers Say Foreign Students Need Sex Education
Deutsche Presse-Agentur (11.05.09) - Thursday, November 05, 2009
Responding to the findings of an Adelaide University survey of female students from China and Malaysia , Professor Nigel Stocks said Australia has a duty to provide better sex education for international students. The research found that most foreign students know little about how to prevent unwanted pr


TAIWAN: Intention to Obtain Human Papillomavirus Vaccination Among Taiwanese Undergraduate Women
Sexually Transmitted Diseases Vol. 36; No. 11: P. 686-692 (11..09) - Thursday, November 05, 2009
Yu-Yun Hsu; Susan Jane Fetzer; Keng-Fu Hsu; Yuan-Yuan Chang; Chih-Pyng Huang; Cheng-Yang Chou
In the current study, the researchers set out to examine health beliefs and intention to obtain vaccination against human papillomavirus (HPV) among undergraduate women in Taiwan , and to investigate a predictive model of HPV vaccination intention. At five universities in South Taiwan, a convenience sample of 845 f


SOUTH AFRICA: Heterosexual Anal Intercourse Among Community and Clinical Settings in Cape Town, South Africa
Sexually Transmitted Infections Vol. 85: P. 411-415 (10..09) - Thursday, November 05, 2009
S.C. Kalichman; L.C. Simbayi; D. Cain; S. Joosete
While anal intercourse is known to be an efficient route of HIV transmission and may play a role in Southern Africa s HIV epidemics, the authors note there are little data on the anal sex practices of heterosexuals in South Africa . The researchers used anonymous surveys to collect data from convenience samples of 2,59


AFRICA: To Battle HIV, Go for Public Tests, Resolve Clergymen
Daily Nation (Kampala, Uganda) (11.02.09) - Thursday, November 05, 2009
Religious leaders in Africa are banding together publicly to urge HIV testing as a way to control the spread of the virus. In Africa, we don t talk about sex, we practice it, Hannu Happonen said at a Nairobi, Kenya , meeting of Churches United Against HIV and AIDS in Eastern and Southern Africa. However, it is time we


KENYA: Drug Use at Record Levels Leads to AIDS Outbreak
Inter Press Service (10.21.09) - Thursday, November 05, 2009
Susan Anyangu
Unprecedented levels of drug use in Kenya are driving the spread of HIV there, experts say. The challenge here is passing HIV risk-reduction messages to drug and alcohol addicts as well as advising those who test positive to seek help in terms of care, said Masudi Omar of the drug addiction treatment facility Reachout


CHINA: China's Economy Powering Syphilis Spread
Reuters (11.03.09) - Thursday, November 05, 2009
Laura MacInnis
China is experiencing a resurgence of syphilis cases, a senior health official said. The country had nearly eradicated the STD in the 1960s through a campaign of propaganda, mass screening, closing brothels, and providing free treatment for sex workers, Xiang-Sheng Chen, deputy director for STD control at China s Cen


KENTUCKY: Kentucky AIDS Aid Lacking
Lexington Herald-Leader (11.01.09) - Thursday, November 05, 2009
John Cheves
Since June, almost 100 people have been placed on a waiting list for Kentucky s AIDS Drug Assistance Program - the longest line for ADAP enrollment in the nation. As people lose jobs and insurance during the recession, demand for the program s assistance has exceeded its capacity, said Sigga Jagne, Kentucky s HIV/AIDS


ILLINOIS: Educators, Others Learn About HIV
Windy City Times (Chicago) (10.28.09) - Wednesday, November 04, 2009
Byron Flitsch
Educators, program facilitators, and others were among those taking part in a recent forum, HIV: Hey, It s Viral! hosted by United Way of Metropolitan Chicago. A key topic of discussion was the need for city schools to implement a modernized sex education curriculum. The meeting included a screening of a 20-minute docu


WISCONSIN: Wisconsin Assembly Takes Up Birth Control Education
Associated Press (11.04.09) - Wednesday, November 04, 2009
Scott Bauer
The Wisconsin Assembly on Tuesday gave preliminary approval to a bill that would require schools teaching sex education to present instruction on preventing unplanned pregnancies and STDs. According to the Department of Public Instruction, nearly all schools in the state offer at least one type of sex education class b


UNITED STATES: Costs and Effectiveness of Partner Counseling and Referral Services with Rapid Testing for HIV in Colorado and Louisiana, United States
Sexually Transmitted Diseases Vol. 36; No. 10: P. 637-641 (10..09) - Wednesday, November 04, 2009
Ram K. Shrestha; Elin B. Begley; Angela B. Hutchinson; Stephanie L. Sansom; Binwei Song; Kelly Voorhees; Amy Busby; Jack Carrel; Samuel Burgess
The researchers assessed the costs and effectiveness of partner counseling and referral services (PCRS) with rapid HIV testing in Colorado and Louisiana between April 2004 and January 2006. In Colorado, PCRS is provided to index patients and partners statewide. In Louisiana, PCRS is provided to those in Baton Rouge and


UNITED STATES: Implementation of and Barriers to Routine HIV Screening for Adolescents
Pediatrics Vol. 124; No. 4: P. 1076-1084 (10..09) - Wednesday, November 04, 2009
Timothy D. Minniear, MD; Barry Gilmore, MD; Sandra R. Arnold, MD; Patricia M. Flynn, MD; Katherine M. Knapp, MD; Aditya H. Gaur, MD
In the current study, researchers developed and implemented a process to facilitate routine HIV screening among adolescents ages 13-18 in a large urban pediatric emergency department (ED). The authors surveyed health care providers about their knowledge and beliefs about HIV, and they developed a protocol for free, opt


SOUTH AFRICA: Harnessing World Cup to Change Children's Lives
Reuters (10.28.09) - Wednesday, November 04, 2009
Alongside next year s World Cup, the Football for Hope festival will be training children and teens in South Africa how to play soccer, and how to avoid HIV/AIDS. More than 30 organizations chosen for their success in addressing social issues will take part in FFH, which was launched by soccer s ruling body FIFA and st


SWAZILAND: Swaziland Battles Twin Plagues of HIV, TB
Agence France Presse (10.30.09) - Wednesday, November 04, 2009
Tabelo Timse
The companion scourges of TB and HIV have so devastated the population of Swaziland that they threaten to destabilize the nation, participants at a recent three-day local conference on the epidemics learned. This double epidemic of HIV and TB means that life expectancy has fallen to under 32 years in Swaziland, said A


GLOBAL: Non-Governmental Organizations Praise End to HIV Travel Ban
Inter Press Service (10.30.09) - Wednesday, November 04, 2009
Jim Lobe
Domestically and abroad, health advocates are applauding the Obama administration s repeal of the policy banning non- nationals with HIV from visiting or immigrating to the United States . On Friday, Obama announced that the final rule ending the 22-year-old restriction would be published on Monday, and that it would g


UNITED STATES: With Highest Rate of Cases, Navy Sees HIV Infections Rise
Virginian-Pilot (Norfolk) (11.02.09) - Wednesday, November 04, 2009
Kate Wiltrout
Last year, the Navy, whose HIV rate was already higher than that of any other branch of the US military, made 36 HIV diagnoses per 100,000 sailors tested. This was more than double the Navy s 1999 rate. Officials are not sure why the figure has risen, but they do know that most infected sailors acquired HIV through unp


AUSTRALIA: Health Chief Sounds Tomato Warning
Australian Associated Press (11.02.09) - Tuesday, November 03, 2009
Reacting to the news that 23 cases of hepatitis A were diagnosed in the previous week, health authorities in Victoria have renewed their warnings about eating semi-dried tomatoes. More than two-thirds of those recently diagnosed reported having eaten the tomatoes, said Dr. John Carnie, the state s chief medical officer


TENNESSEE: State AIDS Drug Assistance Reaches Enrollment Capacity
Memphis Daily News (11.03.09) - Tuesday, November 03, 2009
Tom Wilemon
The state AIDS Drug Assistance Program has reached its enrollment capacity, the Tennessee Department of Health announced Monday. Going forward, new patients seeking ADAP s assistance will be put on a waiting list. Persons on the waiting list will receive help accessing HIV drugs through patient assistance programs spon


NORTH CAROLINA: STD Rates Increase in Iredell
McDowell News (Marion) (10.29.09) - Tuesday, November 03, 2009
Bethany Fuller
North Carolina counties are reporting modest increases in HIV but more dramatic jumps in other STDs. Syphilis cases in Mecklenburg, Forsyth, Wake, and Wayne counties are at least twice the number they were at this time last year, according to the North Carolina HIV/STD Quarterly Surveillance Report: Vol. 2009, No. 3.


UNITED STATES: Study Links Girls' Body Size to Sexual Behavior
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette (10.31.09) - Tuesday, November 03, 2009
David Templeton
Sexually active high school girls who were either overweight or who believed they were, as well as girls who were underweight, tended to use condoms less than girls of normal weight in a new study. Race and ethnicity played a role in the relationships between body and sexual behavior, though how exactly is not clear, a


INDIA: Uproar Against Changes to HIV Bill
The Telegraph (Kolkata) (10.26.09) - Tuesday, November 03, 2009
HIV/AIDS advocates are protesting changes made to an anti- discrimination bill, saying officials with the Ministry of Law and Justice have stripped away many crucial protections. The law ministry has gone beyond its mandate and deleted substantive provisions - the work of the law ministry was only to check whether the


GLOBAL: Experts Warn of Drastic AIDS Funding Shortfall
Agence France Presse (11.03.09) - Tuesday, November 03, 2009
When the global AIDS pandemic hits its 50th year, annual spending needed to fight the disease in developing countries could reach $35 billion, three times the current level, according to a new study. At the same time, more than 1 million people could be newly infected each year, estimated researchers for the AIDS 2031


UTAH: The Birds, the Bees and the Basics
Salt Lake Tribune (10.28.09) - Tuesday, November 03, 2009
Lisa Schencker
In the midst of a political debate on teaching sex education in schools, the Utah PTA has launched a program to help parents take on the job themselves. The curriculum, using materials from the Department of Health and Human Services Parents Speak Up campaign, targets adults who will then instruct parents on the finer


UNITED STATES: US Lawmakers Push to Ramp Up Hepatitis Battle
Agence France Presse (11.02.09) - Tuesday, November 03, 2009
A bill introduced Thursday in the US House of Representatives would increase federal spending to prevent and treat hepatitis B and C. The diseases disproportionately affect Asian- Americans, and Asian-American lawmakers are pushing the new legislation. HR 3974, whose short title is the Viral Hepatitis and Liver Cancer


CALIFORNIA: Scaring Up Some Funds at AIDS Walk
Desert Sun (Palm Springs) (10.01.09) - Monday, November 02, 2009
Aldrich M. Tan
The Desert AIDS Project s 22nd annual AIDS Walk on Saturday attracted more than 850 people, some of whom took part wearing Halloween costumes. This event is important not only for the funds that it raises, said Barry Dayton, DAP s spokesperson, but also as proof of the critical mass of people that support HIV/AIDS serv


UNITED STATES: 'Runway' Star Brings Education Idea to San Francisco
San Jose Mercury News (10.31.09) - Monday, November 02, 2009
In San Francisco Saturday at the United States Conference on AIDS, Jack Mackenroth of the TV series Project Runway was presenting information on Living Positive by Design, his HIV/AIDS education initiative. Through Living Positive by Design, I hope to highlight the importance for people living with HIV to have a positi


UNITED NATIONS: UN Urges Nations to Follow Obama's Lead, Lift HIV Travel Ban
Agence France Presse (11.01.09) - Monday, November 02, 2009
President Barack Obama s announcement that he would overturn the 22-year-old policy banning non-nationals with HIV from entering the United States drew high praise from the leader of the UN. In a statement released by UNAIDS , Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon congratulated Obama on his decision and added, I urge all othe


ILLINOIS: Nurses Hit the Streets by Night
Chicago Tribune (10.21.09) - Monday, November 02, 2009
Pam DeFiglio
The University of Illinois College of Nursing recently hosted a screening of Bevel Up: Drugs, Users and Outreach Nursing, a documentary film about how nurses deliver health care to people on the streets of Vancouver. About 50 nurses attended the screening in Chicago, including some who provide care on its streets. In


UGANDA: Size Matters When It Comes to AIDS Defense
Reuters (10.29.09) - Monday, November 02, 2009
Male circumcision reduces female-to-male HIV transmission, and the current study examined whether the surface area of the foreskin is associated with HIV infection prior to circumcision. In Uganda , researchers enrolled 965 HIV-negative men for male circumcision trials and measured the surface area of the foreskin afte


UGANDA: France Joins US in Slamming Uganda's Draft Anti-Gay Law
Agence France Presse (11.02.09) - Monday, November 02, 2009
US opponents of a draft law that strengthens Uganda s anti-gay legal code are attempting to enlist Secretary of State Hillary Clinton to their cause. The egregious bill represents one of the most extreme anti- equality measures ever proposed in any country, Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (D-Florida) and three other members o


SOUTH AFRICA: AIDS a Massive Threat - Zuma
Business Day (South Africa) (10.30.09) - Monday, November 02, 2009
Wyndham Hartley
On Thursday, South African President Jacob Zuma emphatically acknowledged the serious nature of the country s HIV/AIDS epidemic. There is a danger that South Africa s annual mortality numbers will outstrip its birth figures, and if we do not respond with urgency and resolve, we may well find our vision of a thriving na


GLOBAL: Sex, Alcohol, Fat Among World's Big Killers
Reuters (10.28.09) - Monday, November 02, 2009
Kate Kelland
About a quarter of the 60 million premature deaths globally each year are due to unsafe sex, poor childhood nutrition, alcohol, inadequate sanitation and hygiene, and high blood pressure, according to a new World Health Organization report. Global life expectancy could gain almost five years if these five problems were


UNITED STATES: Obama Lifts Ban on US Entry for Those with HIV
Associated Press (10.31.09) - Monday, November 02, 2009
Darlene Superville
The order to repeal the ban against HIV-positive people traveling and immigrating to the United States will be finalized on Monday, President Barack Obama has announced. The new rule lifting the restriction will be effective early next year, he said at the White House on Friday. If we want to be the global leader in co


NEW MEXICO: Scientists Use World's Fastest Supercomputer to Create the Largest HIV Evolutionary Tree
Science Daily (10.28.09) - Friday, October 30, 2009
Researchers at the Los Alamos National Laboratory are using the ultimate supercomputer to analyze genetic sequences from more than 400 HIV-infected people to help find a vaccine against HIV/AIDS. The Roadrunner computer is being used to compare more than 100,000 sequences from both chronic and acute HIV patients in ord


ASIA: UN Official Calls for Decriminalizing Drug Use
Deutsche Presse-Agentur (10.27.09) - Friday, October 30, 2009
A UN human rights official on Tuesday called for officials in Asia to decriminalize drug use and end mandatory drug rehabilitation camps. Compulsory detoxification camps in countries such as China , India , Malaysia , and Vietnam amount to keeping sick people jailed, An


UNITED STATES: End of Federal HIV Travel Ban 'Imminent'
Southern Voice (Atlanta) (10.30.09) - Friday, October 30, 2009
The Obama administration s change in rules to allow HIV- positive foreign nationals to enter the United States should be announced soon, according to Immigration Equality, an advocacy group for the LGBT/HIV-positive community. The repeal of the travel ban has moved from the Department of Health and Human Services to th


FLORIDA: Tampa's AIDS Agency Stretches to Meet Need
St. Petersburg Times (10.27.09) - Friday, October 30, 2009
Justin George
On a shoestring budget in a tough economic climate, a 20-year- old AIDS service organization in Tampa has found a way to preserve its mission to help the area s HIV-positive people. Francis House provides food, medical services, prescription drugs, and even the occasional recreational outing. Eight staff members work o


UNITED KINGDOM: Young Women and Limits to the Normalization of Condom Use: A Qualitative Study
AIDS Care Vol. 21; No. 5: P. 561-566 (05..09) - Friday, October 30, 2009
Lisa M. Williamson; Katie Buston; Helen Sweeting
While encouraging condom use by young women is a major focus of HIV/STI prevention, the degree to which they see themselves as being at risk limits their use of this method, the authors wrote. In the current study, they examined the extent to which condom use has become normalized among young women. Twenty 20-year-old


KENYA: Kenya to Launch Homosexual Census
BBC (10.29.09) - Friday, October 30, 2009
Kenya is planning to enumerate its gay population in an effort to fight HIV/AIDS, despite homosexual activity being illegal in the country, a senior health official said recently on BBC s Network Africa. Kenyan gays do not have needed information about HIV and how it is prevented, said Nicholas Muraguri, head of the


KENYA: Practical Measures Needed on Teen Sexual Education
Inter Press Service (Johannesburg) (10.27.09) - Friday, October 30, 2009
Susan Anyangu
Many secondary school students in Kenya are already sexually experienced but lacking in sexual and reproductive health awareness, according to a recent survey. The Nairobi-based Center for the Study of Adolescents polled youths from four provinces in 2008. Of girls surveyed, 40 percent reported being sexually experienc


AFRICA: Health-Africa: Fresh Campaign Against Pediatric AIDS
Inter Press Service (10.22.09) - Friday, October 30, 2009
Nalisha Kalideen
Though HIV-positive herself, Raloke Odetoyinbo was determined to bear a child that did not carry the virus. With the help of attentive medical care and antiretroviral medication, the Nigerian woman realized her dream and now works to extend that chance to others. The outlet for Odetoyinbo s effort is a new, three-year


NEW YORK; DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA: Fighting HIV, a Community at a Time
New York Times (10.27.09) - Friday, October 30, 2009
Susan Okie
A study planned for the District of Columbia and the Bronx in New York City will determine the feasibility of offering nearly every adult in the community routine HIV testing, as well as prompt treatment for those infected. The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) is paying to study the test an


SOUTH CAROLINA: AIDS Walk-a-Thon Set for this Saturday
The Item (Sumter) (10.29.09) - Thursday, October 29, 2009
On Saturday, the Wateree AIDS Task Force will stage its sixth annual AIDS Walk-a-Thon in Sumter. Registration begins at 8 a.m. at the group s headquarters, 108-B E. Liberty St., and the walk commences at 9 a.m. Ramelle Coker, vice chair of WATF s board, said she hopes the walk will help publicize the organization s ser


LAOS: Laos Reports 3,395 Cases of HIV/AIDS, 960 Deaths
Deutsche Presse-Agentur (10.23.09) - Thursday, October 29, 2009
According to new statistics from the Center for HIV/AIDS/Sexually Transmitted Infections, Laos in recent years has recorded 3,395 HIV cases, of whom 2,180 have progressed to AIDS and 960 have died. Estimates suggest there are actually 8,000 HIV cases in the nation. The center also said that while the number of opium ad


EUROPEAN UNION: Nearly One in Three People with HIV Do Not Know: EU
Agence France Presse (10.26.09) - Thursday, October 29, 2009
In a call for Europe to continue fighting AIDS, the European Commission warned on Monday that almost one in three people with HIV do not know they are infected. Commission figures indicate that the number of people living with HIV in the 27 EU nations and neighboring countries rose from 1.5 million in 2001 to 2.2 milli


NORTH CAROLINA: Metrolina AIDS Project Closing
Charlotte Observer (10.24.09) - Thursday, October 29, 2009
Cleve R. Wootson Jr.
The poor economy and management struggles have closed a 25- year-old AIDS service organization in Charlotte. In announcing the shutdown, Metrolina AIDS Project officials did not give a timetable for the closure, or say how clients will be served beyond that point. Key contributors to MAP s estimated $2.6 million budget


UNITED STATES: Feelings of Stigmatization May Discourage HIV Patients from Proper Care
Science Daily (10.22.09) - Thursday, October 29, 2009
HIV patients who experience or perceive disease-related stigma were four times as likely as those who did not to report poor access to medical care in a recent study. Individuals who felt internalized stigma were also three times as likely to report suboptimal treatment adherence, though mental health mediated the rela


SOUTH AFRICA: TB Crisis Deepens as Case Load Soars
Weekend Post (Port Elizabeth) (10.27.09) - Thursday, October 29, 2009
Rochelle de Kock
The Eastern Cape Health Department saw 60,000 new TB cases last year, and at least 70 percent were HIV coinfected, according to health officials. Overcrowding has forced the province to let patients with drug-resistant TB, who are normally quarantined during treatment at Jose Pearson TB Hospital, visit their families o


RUSSIA: AIDS Experts Say Russia Needs New HIV Strategy
Associated Press (10.29.09) - Thursday, October 29, 2009
Douglas Birch
Russia s abstinence-based approach to injection drug use is not working to curb HIV, AIDS experts said on Wednesday during the Eastern Europe and Central Asia AIDS Conference in Moscow. HIV infections have doubled in Russia in the past eight years, and there is evidence that HIV s route of transmission there is shiftin


FLORIDA: University of South Florida Studies Flu Vaccine, HIV
St. Petersburg Times (10.27.09) - Thursday, October 29, 2009
Richard Martin
At several dozen sites across the nation, researchers will examine whether a higher dose of the 2009 H1N1 influenza vaccine elicits a protective immune response in pregnant women, children, and young adults with HIV. The University of South Florida (USF) will be enrolling participants through its division of pediatric


UNITED STATES: San Francisco AIDS Meeting Has Real-World Focus
San Francisco Chronicle (10.29.09) - Thursday, October 29, 2009
Erin Allday
The US Conference on AIDS got underway Wednesday night in San Francisco, and more than 3,000 people are expected to take part between now and Saturday. The conference is sponsored by the National Minority AIDS Council, whose director of government relations, Ravinia Hayes-Cozier, described it as a blend of science and


FLORIDA: HIV Patients Sought for Study
Pensacola News Journal (10.25.09) - Wednesday, October 28, 2009
Pensacola area HIV patients are being recruited for a study of an investigational drug therapy for persons whose treatment regimen is losing its effectiveness. The study s drug candidate is a member of the non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor drug class. Persons chosen to participate will have access to certa


AFRICA: Germany Provides 23 Million euros to Fight AIDS in Africa
Agence France Presse (10.27.09) - Wednesday, October 28, 2009
The five-nation Organization for the Coordination of the Struggle Against Epidemics in Central Africa announced on Tuesday that Germany is providing 23 million euros (US $34 million) to combat AIDS in the region. The new funds, which follow upon a German grant of 10 million euros (US $14.7 million) in 2007, will be dis


GLOBAL: Bill Gates Urges More Spending on Global Health
Associated Press (10.27.09) - Wednesday, October 28, 2009
Jennifer C. Kerr
In Washington on Tuesday, Microsoft founder Bill Gates and his wife Melinda introduced their new Living Proof Project touting the huge returns that result from investments in global health initiatives. Global health money improves lives more effectively than any other spending, Bill Gates said. The pair s new project w


TEXAS: HIV Cases Triple in County
Avalanche-Journal (Lubbock) (10.27.09) - Wednesday, October 28, 2009
Sarah Nightingale
Lubbock health officials became alarmed about local HIV transmissions when they saw an increase in syphilis cases last year. Already this year, Lubbock County has recorded 31 new HIV diagnoses, up from 10 each in 2008 and 2007. More than 30 syphilis cases have been diagnosed in the first nine months of 2009. Syphilis i


NETHERLANDS: Regular Pap Smear Is as Effective as ThinPrep
USA Today (10.28.09) - Wednesday, October 28, 2009
Rita Rubin
The liquid-based cytology test ThinPrep now represents 70 percent of the US cervical cancer screening market, but a new report finds it no more effective than the conventional Pap smear at detecting precancerous cells. In the study, 89,784 Dutch women were randomized to be screened either with ThinPrep or a conventiona


UGANDA: Uganda Member of Parliament Urges Death for Gay Sex
BBC (10.16.09) - Wednesday, October 28, 2009
A lawmaker from Uganda s ruling party has proposed a bill to create new capital offences for homosexuality, which is already illegal in the country. Under Member of Parliament (MP) David Bahati s measure, HIV-positive gays who have sex would be guilty of aggravated homosexuality, which would be punishable by death. In


RUSSIA: Russia Rejects Methadone to Stem HIV Epidemic
Agence France Presse (10.28.09) - Wednesday, October 28, 2009
More than 60 percent of people with HIV in Eastern Europe and Central Asia acquired the virus through injection drug use, Russia s chief medical official said Wednesday. However, Russia will not be embracing methadone maintenance treatment for injection drug users (IDUs), Gennady Onishchenko told the Eastern Europe and


UNITED KINGDOM: HPV Jab Girls Are 'Sex Cautious'
BBC (10.27.09) - Wednesday, October 28, 2009
Young Manchester girls who received the human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine said the shots made them more aware about the risks of sex, according to a new survey. The findings might serve as a rebuttal to critics who believe HPV vaccination would make girls more sexually promiscuous, experts said. A University of Manche


NEW YORK: Despite Approval, Evident Roadblocks to HPV Vaccine for Males Continue
NY1.com (10.26.09) - Wednesday, October 28, 2009
Although Merck & Co. s Gardasil human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine received US regulatory approval recently for use in males ages 9-26 to prevent genital warts, males still face barriers to receiving the shots. Gay and bisexual men are 17 times more likely to develop HPV-related anal cancer than heterosexual men, a


CHINA: Survey: 30 Percent of China's Hepatitis B Patients Cannot Afford Long-Term Treatment
Xinhua News Agency (10.24.09) - Tuesday, October 27, 2009
A new survey reveals that almost 30 percent of hepatitis B patients in China fail to adhere to long-term treatment due to their inability to pay for it. Financial concerns, the survey said, led these patients to switch drugs randomly, substitute cheaper drugs, or stop treatment entirely. Zhuang Hui, an epidemiologist a


CARIBBEAN: Caribbean Sees Drop in HIV, AIDS Cases
Agence France Presse (10.26.09) - Tuesday, October 27, 2009
Ahead of the ninth annual general meeting of the Pan Caribbean Partnership Against HIV/AIDS (PANCAP), its director noted that the number of infected people in the region is on the decline. However, The figures are still very high for such a small region, said Carl Browne. According to PANCAP, the Caribbean last year re


DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA: D.C. Students Say Schools' Sex Education Is Antiquated
Washington Post (10.22.09) - Tuesday, October 27, 2009
Darryl Fears
Many high school students in the District of Columbia are not impressed with its sex education curriculum and see school nurses as untrustworthy, suggests a recently concluded survey. The city-funded Youth Sexual Health Project conducted 10 focus groups with about 250 D.C. high school students between April and October


CANADA: Canada Study Finds Link Between Smoking Crack, HIV
Reuters (10.19.09) - Tuesday, October 27, 2009
Allan Dowd
Daily smoking of crack cocaine is an independent risk factor for HIV infection, according to a nine-year study involving 1,048 injection drug users (IDUs) in Vancouver s Downtown Eastside. When the study began in 1996, only 11.6 percent of the IDUs smoked crack daily, and researchers saw no evidence that smoking the dr


SOUTH AFRICA: South African Muslims Urged to Fight AIDS
IslamOnline.net (10.23.09) - Tuesday, October 27, 2009
Hassan Isilow
The director of Positive Muslims, an organization that aims to support those living with HIV, is calling on South African Muslims to break the silence that often surrounds AIDS. For a long time, our Muslim community has preferred to ignore the problem of HIV/AIDS, said Raoul Ridwaan Swart. Others think HIV/AIDS does no


CANADA: Saskatchewan Government Starts Fall Session with Plan to Cut Surgery Waits
Canadian Press (10.21.09) - Tuesday, October 27, 2009
Jennifer Graham
During his speech at the opening of the fall session of the Saskatchewan Legislature, Premier Brad Wall introduced a number of goals for improving health care in the province. Among other issues, Wall said the government will act to limit the proliferation of needles distributed by its needle-exchange program. The gove


UNITED KINGDOM: National Health Service Ban on 'High-Risk' Gay Men Donating Blood to Be Reviewed
Times (London) (10.27.09) - Tuesday, October 27, 2009
David Rose
Britain s longstanding lifetime ban on blood donations by men who have sex with men (MSM), a policy condemned as irrational by advocates, will be reviewed today in a meeting of the Advisory Committee on the Safety of Blood, Tissues and Organs. The ban bars blood donations by any man who has ever had sex with another ma


WISCONSIN: Bill Would Rewrite Rules for Public Sex Education
Wisconsin State Journal (Madison) (10.26.09) - Tuesday, October 27, 2009
Samara Kalk Derby
On Tuesday, the state Assembly Committee on Education will vote on a bill that would require school districts offering sex education to provide a comprehensive curriculum, including information about contraceptives. The measure specifies the curriculum must be medically accurate and age-appropriate. The bill will be he


CANADA: Tattoo Shop Owner Faces 21 Health Charges
Edmonton Journal (10.23.09) - Monday, October 26, 2009
Jodie Sinnema
Eric Anderson, who ran the now-closed Zipp s Tattoo and Museum Shoppe on Whyte Avenue in Edmonton, faces 21 charges relating to health code violations and obstruction of justice. The health charges include keeping improper records of customers, improperly discarding used needles, and reusing tattoo and piercing equipme


AFRICA: Africa Should Protect Children from AIDS - Machel
Reuters (10.22.09) - Monday, October 26, 2009
Peroshni Govender
More must be done to protect Africa s children from HIV, and the continent s leaders should change their priorities regarding national budgets, according to the wife of former South African President Nelson Mandela. I am not really convinced that some of the budgets we have for defense are absolutely necessary, Graca M


MASSACHUSETTS: Symposium Explores HIV Denial, Conspiracy Theories
Harvard Gazette (Harvard University) (10.20.09) - Monday, October 26, 2009
Alvin Powell
AIDS denialism - the belief that HIV is not the causative agent of AIDS or that the AIDS pandemic is the result of a conspiracy - is widespread and destructive, said researchers at a recent Harvard University symposium. Challenging the role of HIV infection in AIDS, for example, discourages both testing and treatment,


CALIFORNIA: Project Inform Forum Focuses on HIV and Aging
Bay Area Reporter (San Francisco) (10.22.09) - Monday, October 26, 2009
Liz Highleyman
Effective antiretroviral therapy has helped make age-related concerns come into focus among HIV patients and health care providers. About 15 percent of newly HIV-infected people are over age 50, and by 2015 nearly half of HIV-positive people in the United States will be over 50. The proportion is already 40 percent in


CALIFORNIA: Nonprofit Using Young Faces for HIV/AIDS Awareness
Desert Sun (Palm Springs) (10.20.09) - Monday, October 26, 2009
Victor Morales
A new HIV/AIDS awareness campaign in Palm Springs directly tackles youths mistaken belief that they can identify people with HIV by sight. In posters placed in 40 public buses, young, attractive Latino models are juxtaposed against the warning: You can t tell if someone has HIV/AIDS by just looking at them. Protect you


UNITED STATES: A Few Coffees a Day Keep Liver Disease at Bay: Study
Agence France Presse (10.21.09) - Monday, October 26, 2009
In population studies, higher coffee consumption has been inversely associated with chronic liver disease incidence. Now a new study has found that a few cups of coffee a day seem to help prevent the progression of hepatitis C-related liver disease. The study involved 766 participants in the Hepatitis C Antiviral Long-


UNITED KINGDOM: How Condoms Became as Popular as Pill Among Younger Women
Daily Mail (London) (10.21.09) - Monday, October 26, 2009
Jenny Hope
In 2008-09, for the first time since such statistics have been collected, the proportion of women in Britain using the birth- control pill was the same as the proportion using condoms, according to a new Office of National Statistics survey. Three out four women under 50 reported the use of some type of contraceptive.


UTAH: Lawmakers Consider Sex Education Changes
Deseret Morning News (Salt Lake City) (10.22.09) - Monday, October 26, 2009
Amy K. Stewart
A state legislative committee on Wednesday heard two hours of public testimony about whether to change Utah s sex education curriculum. At present, teachers may discuss contraception options with parental consent but are prohibited from advocacy or encouragement of the use of contraceptive methods or devices. Critics s


UNITED KINGDOM: How Many People Have You Slept With, 2.8 Million?
Agence France Presse (09.23.09) - Friday, October 23, 2009
To call attention to the risk of STDs, British drug chain Lloyd s Pharmacy has launched an online calculator to give site visitors a better sense of their exposure to the infections. Sex Degrees of Separation asks users to enter their number of lifetime sexual partners, together with other data; then it calculates the


BRAZIL: Catholic Church Urges AIDS Testing in Brazil
Agence France Presse (10.22.09) - Friday, October 23, 2009
In Brazil , home to the world s largest population of Catholics, the Church on Thursday announced a campaign to promote early testing for HIV, followed by treatment if necessary. Based on an initiative already underway in five cities, the national campaign includes syphilis testing and will be launched jointly by the B


UNITED STATES: Obama Urged to Sign HIV/AIDS Care Bill
United Press International (10.22.09) - Friday, October 23, 2009
Now that the Ryan White HIV/AIDS Treatment Extension Act of 2009 has won overwhelming support in both chambers of Congress, the HIV Medicine Association has called on President Obama to sign it at once. We call on the president to quickly sign this legislation to ensure that our patients have access to the care they ne


CALIFORNIA: Minorities, Housing Must Be Part of AIDS Strategy, White House Told
Bay Area Reporter (San Francisco) (10.22.09) - Friday, October 23, 2009
Seth Hemmelgarn
The federal government must address housing, funding, and similar issues in its new national AIDS policy, San Francisco activists recently told President Barack Obama s top AIDS adviser. Housing is prevention, housing is care, Supervisor Bevan Dufty told the group of about 150 people at a meeting at the University of C


UNITED STATES: Research Shows Treating HIV/AIDS with Interleukin-2 Is Ineffective
Science Daily (10.15.09) - Friday, October 23, 2009
Although interleukin-2 ( IL-2 ) in combination with antiretroviral drugs (ARVs) raises CD4+ cell counts more than ARVs alone, it is not clinically beneficial to HIV patients, according to a recently published study. Scientists had theorized that IL-2 would help regenerate CD4+ immune cells, building a patient s natural


UNITED STATES: Brief Shocks May Deliver AIDS Vaccines Better - Study
Reuters (10.22.09) - Friday, October 23, 2009
Tan Ee Lyn
Delivering electrical pulses along with an experimental AIDS vaccine elicited a better immune response in volunteers than administering the injection alone, researchers said Thursday at the AIDS Vaccine 2009 conference in Paris. Employing a technique called electroporation, US researchers used a device that looks like


AUSTRALIA: Call to Expand Needle-Exchange Programs
Australian Associated Press (10.22.09) - Friday, October 23, 2009
Danny Rose
Australia s liberal needle-exchange program over the past 10 years has helped to prevent 32,000 new HIV infections and almost 100,000 new cases of hepatitis C, says a new report from the National Center in HIV Epidemiology and Clinical Research (NCHECR). This study provides strong evidence to suggest that increased spe


ARKANSAS: Funding Cuts Limit Access to HIV, AIDS Treatments
Arkansas Democrat-Gazette (Little Rock) (10.19.09) - Friday, October 23, 2009
Tracie Dungan
Funding cuts are forcing Arkansas officials to curtail some services and medications for residents with HIV/AIDS. State officials administering the federally funded $7.42 million Ryan White Part B program are furloughing some program participants from the rolls, at least temporarily, and establishing a waiting list for


COLORADO: Audubon: No Hepatitis C Cases Linked to Surgery Tech
Associated Press (10.20.09) - Thursday, October 22, 2009
There is no evidence that any patients at Audubon Surgery Center in Colorado Springs contracted hepatitis C from a surgery technician who stole drug-filled syringes and replaced them with used ones containing saline solution, according to officials of the facility. When the actions of Kristen Diane Parker came to light


OHIO: Legislative Floor Action
Associated Press (10.20.09) - Thursday, October 22, 2009
HB 316, a bill submitted to the state House of Representatives, would establish statutory standards for comprehensive sex education and HIV/AIDS prevention instruction in public schools. It would also designate section 3313.6011 of the Revised Code as the Act for Our Children s Future. After it was introduced, the bill


UNITED STATES: Pelosi's Bid for San Francisco Fails
San Francisco Chronicle (10.22.09) - Thursday, October 22, 2009
Drew Joseph
US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) was unsuccessful in her attempt to add a provision to the Ryan White Extension Act that would have permanently protected San Francisco s federal HIV/AIDS funding. The city has lost AIDS money since 2006, when the reauthorized act shifted dollars toward rural areas and other loca


GLOBAL: Experts Study Thriving HIV 'Controllers' in Vaccine Search
Reuters (10.21.09) - Thursday, October 22, 2009
Tan Ee Lyn
Studies of elite controllers, HIV-positive persons whose own immune systems somehow naturally thwart the virus, have so far been concentrated in North America. However, scientists at the AIDS Vaccine 2009 conference now underway in Paris have been told of plans to expand the studies to include controllers in Asia, Afri


INDIA: Often-Inaccessible Screening Could Cut Deaths
Courier Journal (Louisville) (10.18.09) - Thursday, October 22, 2009
Laura Ungar
Awareness about cervical cancer in India has grown since the introduction last year of the Gardasil human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine. However, its cost and the inaccessibility of cervical cancer screening in India prevent turning that awareness into prevention, said Dr. Partha Basu, an oncologist at the government-ru


AUSTRALIA: Cancer Funding Snub Under Fire
Sydney Morning Herald (10.16.09) - Thursday, October 22, 2009
Julie Robotham
Australia s Medical Services Advisory Committee (MSAC) ruled recently that liquid-based cytology and computer-assisted LBC for cervical cancer screening are not cost-effective at current prices, and they should not be supported by public funding. LBC preserves cells in a liquid sample for screening instead of the sampl


UNITED STATES: Merck Cancer Vaccine Fails to Win Routine Use in Boys
Bloomberg News (10.21.09) - Thursday, October 22, 2009
Tom Randall; Shannon Pettypiece
On Wednesday, a CDC advisory committee recommended that the vaccination of boys against genital warts be left to the discretion of physicians, rather than routinely offered as part of the approved vaccine schedule. The Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) found that the benefit of Merck & Co. s human


UNITED STATES: Panel Backs Vaccine as Cervical Cancer Alternative
Associated Press (10.21.09) - Thursday, October 22, 2009
Mike Stobbe
CDC s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices voted on Wednesday to recommend adding GlaxoSmithKline s human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine Cervarix to the schedule of recommended immunizations for girls and young women. ACIP s endorsement would make Cervarix the second HPV vaccine supported by CDC if CDC adopts the


UNITED STATES: AIDS Funding Bill Sails Through the House
New York Times (10.21.09) - Thursday, October 22, 2009
Bernie Becker
The US House of Representatives on Wednesday voted 408-9 in favor of reauthorizing the Ryan White Care Act. The bill, which the Senate had already passed by unanimous consent, now moves to the desk of President Obama, whose administration has signaled strong support for it. Congress last reauthorized the act in 2006. I


NEW YORK: Portion of AIDS Quilt to Go on Display at Rockland Community College this Week
Journal News (White Plains) (10.20.09) - Wednesday, October 21, 2009
Khurram Saeed
A portion of the Names Project AIDS Memorial Quilt will be on view this week at Rockland Community College. Comprising 1,920 panels bearing the names of 4,500 persons lost to AIDS, the quilt display will be the largest to take place in the Northeast in a decade, said Robert Maher, executive director of Together Our Uni


NEBRASKA: HIV Researcher to Give Lincoln, Neb., Lecture
Associated Press (10.17.09) - Wednesday, October 21, 2009
Dr. Robert Gallo, the co-discoverer of HIV, will lecture Thursday night at Nebraska Wesleyan University. Gallo will deliver his talk, Viruses, Epidemics and the Prospects for Their Control with Emphasis on HIV/AIDS, at 7 p.m. in the O Donnell Auditorium. The event is open to the public.


OHIO: Missed Deadline on Health Care Grant Won't Cost Cuyahoga Taxpayers
Plain Dealer (Cleveland, OH) (10.19.09) - Wednesday, October 21, 2009
Laura Johnston
In an e-mail sent Friday, the federal Health Resources and Services Administration said it will forgive an administrative error that might have cost Cuyahoga County taxpayers $400,000. HRSA, which awards grants to assist uninsured HIV/AIDS patients, made the decision even though the county missed the deadline for three


DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA: D.C. Officials to Scrutinize Spending by AIDS Groups
Washington Post (10.20.09) - Wednesday, October 21, 2009
Debbie Cenziper; Nikita Stewart
Reacting to a series of Washington Post reports published on Sunday and Monday, District of Columbia officials said they will investigate questionable city AIDS grant spending, among other problems. The 10-month Post investigation focused on the spending, services, and finances of every specialized nonprofit AIDS organ


UNITED STATES: Types of Cancer Vary in HIV Patients
United Press International (09.29.09) - Wednesday, October 21, 2009
The types of cancers diagnosed among HIV-infected patients have shifted in the era of antiretroviral (ARV) therapy, a new study has found. The incidence rates of non-AIDS-defining malignancies (non-ADMs) have grown among HIV-infected patients compared with non-infected patients since ARVs became available, wrote Dr. Ro


GLOBAL: Scientists Glean Lessons from Stalled AIDS Vaccine
Reuters (10.20.09) - Wednesday, October 21, 2009
Tan Ee Lyn
Further analysis has found that Merck & Co. s failed AIDS vaccine MRKAd5 did not actually enhance volunteers risk of HIV infection as was reported when the trial was halted in 2007, researchers announced Tuesday. Initial findings suggested that some vaccinated participants in the STEP study, such as uncircumcised m


AUSTRALIA: Law Harming HIV Prevention
Sydney Star Observer (10.20.09) - Wednesday, October 21, 2009
Andie Noonan
The criminal prosecution of persons who have transmitted HIV is hurting AIDS prevention efforts, according to a new monograph from the National Association of People Living with AIDS (NAPWA). Since 1993, 22 criminal cases have been brought on grounds of HIV/AIDS exposure. Almost half of these have occurred in the past


UNITED STATES: New Life-Saver for HIV Patients: Transplants
Wisconsin State Journal (Madison) (10.07.09) - Wednesday, October 21, 2009
David Wahlberg
HIV infection is no longer an automatic reason for denying organ transplantation to patients who are otherwise candidates for the surgery. Since 1989, more than 500 transplants have been performed in patients known to have HIV, according to the United Network for Organ Sharing, the Richmond, Va.-based organization that


PENNSYLVANIA: Thousands Brave the Cold for AIDS Awareness
Philadelphia Inquirer (10.19.09) - Tuesday, October 20, 2009
Maya Rao
On Sunday, about 15,000 people turned out for the 23rd annual AIDS Walk Philly, despite rain and bitter chill. The participants had raised $350,000 by the time of the event, said Cari Bender, a spokesperson for the AIDS Fund. The fund supports 30 HIV/AIDS education, prevention and service organizations in the Delaware


ESTONIA: Estonia Has to Step Up Efforts to Combat HIV - Survey
Baltic News Service (10.13.09) - Tuesday, October 20, 2009
The treatment and quality of life of Estonian HIV/AIDS patients is fairly good but could be improved, according to the Euro Index Project of 29 European states. The country needs to address injection drug users, since most Estonians infected are either IDUs or their partners, the EU project said. The report also noted


OHIO: Grant to Planned Parenthood; Abortion, Sex Education Spark Debate
Columbus Dispatch (10.14.09) - Tuesday, October 20, 2009
Barbara Carmen
The Franklin County Board of Commissioners gave Planned Parenthood $50,000 to provide sex education in 19 area middle and high schools - but only after extracting a promise that the grant funds would not be used for abortion. This money is to prevent the need for abortions, said Lisa Perks, CEO of Planned Parenthood of


CALIFORNIA: San Luis Obispo AIDS Support Wanes with State Funds
San Luis Obispo Tribune (10.11.09) - Tuesday, October 20, 2009
Julie Lynem
In the wake of California s struggle to overcome a huge budget shortfall, San Luis Obispo County has eliminated its AIDS program. That leaves much of the work of caring for the county s estimated 200 HIV/AIDS patients in the hands of the nonprofit San Luis Obispo County AIDS Support Network. But SLOCASN has its own fun


THAILAND: AIDS Vaccine Is of Modest Help, Fuller Research Says
Wall Street Journal (10.20.09) - Tuesday, October 20, 2009
Gautam Naik
A more extensive analysis of data from a Thailand-based trial indicates that an experimental AIDS vaccine may have been less effective than originally thought. In September, researchers announced that the vaccinations - which combined two vaccines previously shown to be ineffective when given separately - had lowered H


SOUTH AFRICA: Little Progress in TB Fight: Minister
Independent Online (Johannesburg) (10.12.09) - Tuesday, October 20, 2009
South Africa Press Association
The prevalence of tuberculosis has increased threefold in South Africa during the last decade and the country has made little progress in combating its spread, the deputy health minister told participants at a recent international meeting in Cape Town. We need a change of mind-set and more sense of urgency to confront


GLOBAL: Don't Flag on Support, AIDS Chiefs Say at Vaccine Conference
Agence France Presse (10.19.09) - Tuesday, October 20, 2009
Richard Ingham
The financial crisis is constraining aid spending among donor countries, but scaling back international AIDS efforts now would be penny-wise and pound-foolish, experts say. The financial crisis is of course affecting, and clearly affecting, the capacity of donors to fund international programs on AIDS, said Michel Kaza


UNITED STATES: Boys' Use of Gardasil Is Approved
Wall Street Journal (10.17.09) - Tuesday, October 20, 2009
Jonathan D. Rockoff
On Friday, the Food and Drug Administration approved Merck & Co. s human papillomavirus vaccine Gardasil as safe and effective at protecting males from genital warts caused by HPV types 6 and 11. FDA approved the vaccine s use by males ages 9-26. Gardasil is already approved for use by females ages 9- 26 to prevent


CALIFORNIA: AIDS Walk Is 25
Los Angeles Times (10.19.09) - Monday, October 19, 2009
Gerrick D. Kennedy
Sunday s 25th annual AIDS Walk Los Angeles drew some 30,000 people who walked a 6.2-mile route in West Hollywood and raised $3,146,206 for AIDS Project Los Angeles and other AIDS service organizations. Craig E. Thompson, APLA s executive director, said the funds are especially needed this year because the organization


CALIFORNIA: AIDS Health Project Body Image Workshop
Bay Area Reporter (San Francisco) (10.15.09) - Monday, October 19, 2009
On Friday, Oct. 23, at 6:30 p.m., the University of California-San Francisco s AIDS Health Project will present Body Image: A Workshop for Gay Men. Noting that body image can impact relationships, sex and HIV risk, the forum s organizers say it will discuss how to feel better about one s body and less concerned about o


ASIA-PACIFIC: Conference Urges Sexual Health Service for Asia- Pacific Youth
Xinhua News Agency (10.18.09) - Monday, October 19, 2009
The Fifth Asia Pacific Conference on Reproductive and Sexual Health and Rights, now underway in Beijing, has issued a call for better sexual health services for young people. Few young people receive adequate preparation for their sexual lives. This leaves them potentially vulnerable to coercion, abuse and exploitation


GEORGIA: Students Get Tested for TB Exposure
Atlanta Journal-Constitution (10.17.09) - Monday, October 19, 2009
D. Aileen Dodd
Approximately 200 students may have been exposed to TB at Norcross High School, according to Gwinnett County Public Schools officials. The health of your child and other children is of the highest concern to us, Principal Jonathan Patterson wrote in a letter about the situation sent to parents. The Gwinnett County Heal


UGANDA: The Role of HIV Testing, Counseling and Treatment in Coping with HIV/AIDS in Uganda: A Qualitative Analysis
AIDS Care Vol. 21; No. 7: P. 903-908 (07.01.09) - Monday, October 19, 2009
Barbara Nyanzi-Wakholi; Antonieta Medina Lara; Christine Watera; Paula Munderi; Charles Gilks; Heiner Grosskurth
The current qualitative study explores the role of HIV voluntary counseling and testing (VCT) and treatment in helping HIV-positive Ugandans cope with the disease. The researchers conducted 12 predetermined focus group discussions (FGDs), six with men and six with women. Half the men s and women s groups were receiving


ZIMBABWE: Zimbabwe Women Combat HIV Stigma
BBC Sport (10.13.09) - Monday, October 19, 2009
Steve Vickers
HIV-positive women in Zimbabwe are taking to the soccer pitch to fight misconceptions and stigma about HIV/AIDS. The project began in December, and enough women have joined to organize competitions among 16 teams. An attempt to organize a similar league for men has not yet succeeded, as there were not enough players to


CANADA: Pap Smear Guidelines May Bring Relief
Edmonton Journal (10.17.09) - Monday, October 19, 2009
Jodie Sinnema
Under new clinical guidance, Alberta now advises most women who are at low risk for cervical cancer to have a Pap smear every three years rather than annually. Alberta is the last province to switch to the three-year testing recommendation, acting upon the advice of an expert committee that found no increased cervical


UNITED STATES: US OKs Glaxo's Cervical Cancer Shot
Reuters (10.16.09) - Monday, October 19, 2009
Lisa Richwine
GlaxoSmithKline announced Friday that the Food and Drug Administration has approved its Cervarix vaccine for US females ages 10 to 25. Cervarix fights two strains of the STD human papillomavirus (HPV) linked to about 70 percent of cervical cancers. In company studies, it was 93 percent effective in preventing a pre-c


GEORGIA: AIDS Walk Atlanta Features US Rep. John Lewis, Mayor Shirley Franklin
Southern Voice (Atlanta) (10.16.09) - Friday, October 16, 2009
Matt Schaffer
AIDS Walk Atlanta & 5K Run organizers are hoping to have 15,000-20,000 participants and raise $1 million at the annual event, which is being held on Sunday Oct. 18 at Piedmont Park. This will be the 19th year of the fundraiser and awareness walk. Benefiting organizations include AID Atlanta, AID Gwinnett, AIDS Rese


CALIFORNIA: AIDS Walk Turned 25
WeHo News (West Hollywood) (10.15.09) - Friday, October 16, 2009
On Sunday, the 25th annual AIDS Walk Los Angeles is expected to draw more than 27,000 participants. Last year, the walk raised $3.9 million and attracted 30,000 people. Since 1985, the event has helped raise more than $63 million for HIV/AIDS programs across the county. This year s beneficiaries are AIDS Project Los An


UNITED STATES: House Energy and Commerce Panel OKs Bill Helping HIV Patients
Dow Jones Newswires (10.15.09) - Friday, October 16, 2009
Jared. A. Favole
Renewal of the Ryan White CARE Act moved a step forward on Thursday when the House Energy and Commerce Committee sent to the House floor a proposed bill that would fund the act through fiscal 2013. Under the legislation, the government would spend roughly $2.5 billion annually to help low-income HIV/AIDS patients acces


DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA: Getting His Message Out by Hook or by Crook
Washington Post (10.12.09) - Friday, October 16, 2009
John Kelly
No one will ever mistake Dwyane Lawson-Brown for just another AIDS educator. He is the after-school coordinator for Metro TeenAIDS in Washington, D.C., yes, but there is also his dreadlocks and after-hours careers in break-dancing and poetry reading. And then there is the hobby that consumes him, his self- proclaimed


ILLINOIS: Trinity Pays Rock Island County $80,000 Stemming from Hepatitis A Outbreak
Quad-City Times (Davenport, Iowa) (10.14.09) - Friday, October 16, 2009
Deirdre Cox Baker
Trinity Regional Health System, tardy in reporting hepatitis A cases this summer to the Rock Island County Health Department, has reimbursed the local government $80,000 for expenses managing an outbreak of the disease. The Rock Island County Sheriff s Department concluded that the health system and the Metropolitan Me


UNITED STATES: History of Childhood Sexual Abuse and Unsafe Anal Intercourse in a Six-City Study of HIV-Positive Men Who Have Sex with Men
American Journal of Public Health Vol. 99; No. 6: P. 1079-1086 (06.01.09) - Friday, October 16, 2009
Seth L. Welles, ScD, PhD; A. Cornelius Baker, BA; Michael H. Miner, PhD; David J. Brennan, PhD; Scott Jacoby, MA; B.R. Simon Rosser, PhD, MPH
Among a population of HIV-positive men who reported unsafe anal intercourse with other men in the preceding year, the authors assessed rates of childhood sexual abuse and its demographic and mental health correlates. The researchers conducted a cross-sectional analysis of baseline data from 593 HIV-positive men who hav


UNITED STATES: Increases in Gonorrhea Among High School Students Following Hurricane Katrina
Sexually Transmitted Infections Vol. 85; P. 194-198 (06.01.09) - Friday, October 16, 2009
M.J. Nsuami; S.N. Taylor; B.S. Smith; D.H. Martin
In the current study, the researchers assessed the prevalence of Neisseria gonorrhoeae in a population of students before and after their neighborhoods were devastated by Hurricane Katrina (Aug. 29, 2005). In a public high school in New Orleans, students were offered urine screening for N. gonorrhoeae and Chlamydia tra


AUSTRALIA: Sex Education Turns Up Some Surprises
Sydney Morning Herald (10.10.09) - Friday, October 16, 2009
Melinda Ham
The profile of female sex worker clients is not a stereotypical dirty old man, but rather the well-educated, married male between the ages of 30-50 who has a good job and travels extensively, according to research from a scientist at the University of New South Wales (UNSW). Philip Burch, a criminology lecturer at UNSW


CALIFORNIA: A Renewed Focus on HIV/AIDS; Advocates Hope that Sunday's Town Hall in Hollywood Will Result in More Funding and Greater Diversity
Los Angeles Times (10.16.09) - Friday, October 16, 2009
Molly Hennessey-Fiske
In preparation for drafting the first-ever National HIV/AIDS Strategy, the Office of National AIDS Policy is conducting town hall meetings across the country and gathering public input online. The effort is expected to help guide federal funding for HIV/AIDS programs and research. On Sunday, ONAP will host a public for


GLOBAL: Cell Phone Texting Makes Giving as Easy as 1-2-3
USA Today (10.13.09) - Thursday, October 15, 2009
Jessica Durando
Cell phones have become an important fundraising tool, allowing as many as 500 charities to raise more than $1 million, said Jim Manis, president of the Mobile Giving Foundation. Texting campaigns are increasing in popularity at concerts, sporting events, workplaces and online, said Manis. The importance for the consum


PENNSYLVANIA: Walkers, Runners to Hit the Path for HIV/AIDS
Philadelphia Gay News (10.01.09) - Thursday, October 15, 2009
Jen Colletta
To raise awareness about HIV/AIDS and funds for AIDS services in the Delaware Valley, the 23rd annual AIDS Walk/Run Philly will be held on Sunday, Oct. 18. The event benefits the AIDS Fund, which provides financial backing to 30 regional agencies that offer HIV/AIDS prevention and support services. Last year s walk dre


UNITED STATES: Intent to Accept and Acceptance of Herpes Testing in Adolescents and Young Adults
Sexually Transmitted Infections Vol. 85: P. 296-299 (08.01.09) - Thursday, October 15, 2009
N.C. Kelly; G.D. Zimet; M.C. Aalsma; D.I. Bernstein; J.D. Fortenberry; S.L. Rosenthal
The current study aims to understand the attitudinal, symptomatic and historical precursors to intent to accept, and acceptance of, HSV-2 [herpes simplex virus-2] testing. Nine hundred individuals were recruited from four sites in two US cities and completed self-report questionnaires. Expressed intent to consent to HS


UNITED STATES: Effect of a Hepatitis C Virus Educational Intervention or a Motivational Intervention on Alcohol Use, Injection Drug Use and Sexual Risk Behaviors Among Injection Drug Users
American Journal of Public Health Vol. 99; No. S1: P. S180- S186 (04.01.09) - Thursday, October 15, 2009
William A. Zule, DrPH; Elizabeth C. Costenbader, PhD; Curtis M. Coomes, JD; Wendee M. Wechsberg, PhD
Researchers in the current study compared the effects of two interventions on alcohol use: using a new syringe at last injection, and using a condom at last sexual encounter in a community sample of injection drug users (IDUs). Street outreach was used to recruit 851 out-of-treatment IDUs in two North Carolina cities -


INDIA: Discreet Sex Education Breaks Indian Taboo
Agence France Presse (10.12.09) - Thursday, October 15, 2009
Rupam Jain Nair
Many private schools across India are now offering lessons on sexual health - lessons that traditionalists say violate Hindu culture. While such lessons are offered to these pupils discretely, millions of students in government schools will receive no sex education, and political controversy has made some state governm


UNITED STATES: Official Says 'Down Low' Men Not Responsible for High HIV Rates Among Black Women
NNPA (10.07.09) - Thursday, October 15, 2009
George E. Curry
Heterosexual black men with multiple sex partners - not bisexual men who secretly have sex with men - are responsible for high rates of HIV among black women, according to a senior CDC official. We have looked to see what proportion of infections is coming from male partners who are bisexual and found there are actuall


MASSACHUSETTS: Proposed Legislation to End Written Consent for HIV Testing in Massachusetts Sparks Controversy
The Edge (Boston) (10.14.09) - Thursday, October 15, 2009
Peter Cassels
Massachusetts still requires written consent before a patient can be tested for HIV. Now, two bills before the Senate there would require health care providers to verbally discuss the test; outline treatment options if it comes back positive; recommend that negative but at-risk individuals undergo periodic testing; and


PUERTO RICO: Puerto Rico Group Tests Syringe Vending Machine for Users
Associated Press (10.13.09) - Wednesday, October 14, 2009
Puerto Rico s only needle-exchange group, the Community Initiative, is pilot testing a vending machine that offers intravenous drug users clean syringes, cotton filters, gauze, and sterile water. The after-hours program aims to prevent HIV and hepatitis infections transmitted among IDUs through needle sharing. The mach


SOUTH AFRICA: Health Department Backtracks on HIV Figures
Business Day (South Africa) (10.06.09) - Wednesday, October 14, 2009
Tamar Kahn
The Department of Health recently revised its 2007 figure for HIV infections among pregnant women attending state clinics. The initial figure was released in an annual report under the controversial former health minister, Manto Tshabalala- Msimang, and it emphasized a drop in HIV prevalence among pregnant women ages 1


UNITED STATES: Health Care Access and Sexually Transmitted Infection Screening Frequency Among At-Risk Massachusetts Men Who Have Sex with Men
American Journal of Public Health Vol. 99; No. S1: S187-S192 (04.01.09) - Wednesday, October 14, 2009
Carey V. Johnson, MS; Matthew J. Mimiaga, ScD, MPH; Sari L. Reisner, MA; Ashley M. Tetu, BS; Kevin Cranston, MDiv; Thomas Bertrand, MPH; David S. Novak, MSW; Kenneth H. Mayer, MD
Among a population of Massachusetts men who have sex with men (MSM), the researchers set out to assess risk exposures, access to health care, and screening rates for HIV and sexually transmitted infections (STIs). A modified respondent- driven sampling method was used to collect data between March 2006 and May 2007.


UNITED STATES: Reported Care Quality in Federal Ryan White HIV/AIDS Program Supported Networks of HIV/AIDS Care
AIDS Care Vol. 21; No. 6: P. 799-807 (06.01.09) - Wednesday, October 14, 2009
Lisa R. Hirschhorn; Stewart Landers; D. Keith Mcinnes; Faye Malitz; Lin Ding; Rebecca Joyce; Paul D. Cleary
The US government has, since 1991, funded medical and support services for people living with HIV/AIDS through the Ryan White HIV/AIDS Program. The program supports care networks for patients in 51 Eligible Metropolitan Areas (EMAs). The 2000 reauthorization of Ryan White mandated quality management programs for all si


MALAWI: Police Force HIV Tests for Sex Workers
Inter Press Service (Johannesburg) (10.10.09) - Wednesday, October 14, 2009
Charles Mpaka
Malawian police on a routine sweep for criminals in Mwanza earlier this month arrested 14 women deemed sex workers and allegedly forced them to undergo HIV tests, rights workers say. The women were subsequently charged for deliberately trading in sex while having a sexually transmitted disease. There is no law specific


THAILAND: Success of AIDS Vaccine Trial Is at Issue
New York Times (10.11.09) - Wednesday, October 14, 2009
Donald G. McNeil Jr.
The AIDS vaccine tested in a recent trial in Thailand is not as promising as it appears at first blush, according to reports in the Wall Street Journal and on the Web site of the journal Science. The second look is based on reports by anonymous AIDS researchers who were given confidential briefings on the study before


MINNESOTA: Early Testing Urged on Latino AIDS Awareness Day
Associated Press (10.12.09) - Wednesday, October 14, 2009
On Thursday, Minnesota joins the rest of the nation in marking National Latino AIDS Awareness Day (NLAAD). Since 1982, 610 Latinos have been diagnosed with HIV in Minnesota, including 129 who have died, according to the state Department of Health. In the state, Latinos have an infection rate five times greater than amo


CALIFORNIA: Politicians Urged to Include People with AIDS in Health Care Reform
Bay Area Reporter (San Francisco) (10.08.09) - Wednesday, October 14, 2009
Seth Hemmelgarn
As various proposals make their way through Congress, AIDS advocates have crafted their own agenda for health care reform. In a Sept. 24 letter to President Barack Obama, a coalition of 84 AIDS service organizations known as the HIV Health Care Access Working Group spell out their goals for a revamping of the health ca


CALIFORNIA: Talking About HIV with the White House
Bay Area Reporter (San Francisco) (10.16.09) - Tuesday, October 13, 2009
Randy Allgaier
Northern California residents will have two opportunities soon to meet with the White House Office of National AIDS Policy to discuss ideas for a national HIV/AIDS strategy. ONAP will hold a community discussion on Oct. 16 in San Francisco and on Nov. 1 in Oakland. ONAP also is asking for online feedback, including rec


MASSACHUSETTS: Exhibition of AIDS Activism in Visual Media Coming to Harvard
Bay Windows (Boston) (10.08.09) - Tuesday, October 13, 2009
Hannah Clay Wareham
The art of AIDS activism - at one time restricted to the sides of buses and subway stations - is the subject of a new exhibition at the Harvard Art Museum s Carpenter Center for the Visual Arts. The show explores AIDS activism in New York City from 1987 to 1993, with a particular emphasis on the work of advocacy organi


UNITED STATES: HIV Risk Associated with Gay Bathhouses and Sex Clubs: Findings from Two Seattle Surveys of Factors Related to HIV and Sexually Transmitted Infections
American Journal of Public Health Vol. 99; No. S1: P. S165- S172 (04.01.09) - Tuesday, October 13, 2009
William J. Reidy, PhD; Freya Spielberg, MD, MPH; Robert Wood, MD; Diane Binson, PhD; William J. Woods, PhD; Gary M. Goldbaum, MD, MPH
In the current research, the authors studied the HIV risk behaviors of patrons of the three commercial sex establishments for men in Seattle. They conducted cross- sectional, observational surveys in 2004 and 2006 by use of time-venue cluster sampling with probability proportional to size. The surveys were anonymous an


CHINA: China to End Required Testing for Hepatitis B
New York Times (10.13.09) - Tuesday, October 13, 2009
Andrew Jacobs
China will stop mandatory screening for hepatitis B during physical exams for students entering college and for prospective factory workers and government employees, an official from the Health Ministry said on Saturday. Guidance on the cancellation is being drafted. It will effectively mean people infected with hepa


NEW MEXICO: Preventing AIDS, Which May Be Rising Among Boomers, Requires a Little Re-Education
Albuquerque Journal (09.27.09) - Tuesday, October 13, 2009
Richard S. Dargan
New HIV/AIDS cases among people age 50 and older are increasing in New Mexico, according to state Department of Health data. Among 165 new cases in New Mexico in 2007, 21 percent were in people ages 50-plus, the only group besides those ages 20-29 to have an increase in diagnoses since 2005. The numbers certainly sugge


UNITED STATES: H1N1 Vaccine Trials in HIV-Infected People
United Press International (10.12.09) - Tuesday, October 13, 2009
Clinical trials of the 2009 H1N1 influenza vaccine have begun among HIV-positive pregnant women to determine if the product safely elicits a protective immune response, the National Institutes of Health announced Friday. Another trial of the same test begins this week among HIV-infected children and youth, said Dr. Ant


ILLINOIS: Giving Gardasil to Boys Not Cost Effective: Study
Reuters (10.08.09) - Tuesday, October 13, 2009
Julie Steenhuysen
Assuming most girls are vaccinated against the virus that causes cervical cancer, encouraging boys to get the vaccine is not cost-effective, concludes a recent report. There may be better uses and other health interventions that would increase health gains in the population, said Harvard School of Public Health researc


AUSTRALIA: Chief Health Officer Issues Hepatitis A Warning
Australian Associated Press (10.09.09) - Friday, October 09, 2009
Semi-dried tomatoes have been linked to several hepatitis A diagnoses in Victoria this week and should not be eaten unless thoroughly cooked, the state s chief health officer said on Friday. While Dr. John Carnie noted that the reason for the spike in cases remains unclear, the Department of Health and Human Services s


IRELAND: Irish Heroin Use 'National Crisis:' Charity
Agence France Presse (09.29.09) - Friday, October 09, 2009
The drug addiction charity Merchants Quay Ireland announced recently that heroin use is on the rise, and it called for increased treatment and support services to help prevent the spread of HIV and hepatitis C through needle sharing. Last year, the group provided syringe-exchange services to more than 5,280 people, of


BAHAMAS: Number of New AIDS Cases Reported Last Year Declines
Freeport News (10.07.09) - Friday, October 09, 2009
Jasmin Bonimy
The number of reported HIV/AIDS cases and deaths declined last year in the Bahamas , health officials said. In 2008, 263 new HIV cases were reported, down slightly from 287 cases reported in 2007, said Dr. Perry Gomez, director of the national AIDS program. There were 185 AIDS cases in 2008, a drop from 221 cases the p


ARIZONA: AIDS Group Suspends Alternative-Care Service
Arizona Daily Star (Tucson) (10.08.09) - Friday, October 09, 2009
Jamar Younger
The Southern Arizona AIDS Foundation in Tucson has temporarily suspended its complementary therapies and alternative health care program due to a funding shortfall. SAAF offered the services to low-income people fighting the side effects of HIV/AIDS and antiretroviral therapy, said Michele Bart, the foundation s direct


CALIFORNIA: County AIDS Funding Partially Restored
Daily Democrat (Woodland) (10.09.09) - Friday, October 09, 2009
Melody Stone
Yolo County received no state funding for HIV testing, education, and prevention after state budget cuts earlier this year hit such programs particularly hard. However, the county did retain funding for surveillance and charting physician reports of HIV infection, said Sheila Allen, its HIV program coordinator. Using t


INDIA: A Study Comparing Sexually Transmitted Infections and HIV Among Ex-Red-Light District and Non-Red-Light District Sex Workers After the Demolition of Baina Red-Light District
JAIDS Vol. 52; No. 2: P. 253-257 (10.09.09) - Friday, October 09, 2009
Maryam Shahmanesh, MA, MSc, MRCP; Sonali Wayal, MA, MSc; Andrew Copas, MSc, PhD; Vikram Patel, MD, PhD; David Mabey, DM, FRCP; Frances Cowan, MD, MSc, FRCP
Goa s red-light district was demolished in 2004. In the current study, the researchers compared HIV and sexually transmitted infections (STIs) between sex workers who had been based in the Baina red-light district (ex-RLD-SWs) with those who had never worked in Baina (non-RLD-SWs). Using respondent-driven sampling, the


GLOBAL: Rocker Travis McCoy Raising Voice for AIDS Awareness
Miami Herald (10.07.09) - Friday, October 09, 2009
Jordan Levin
Travis McCoy, lead singer of the hip-hop/rock band Gym Class Heroes, is this year s special ambassador for MTV s Staying Alive Foundation (SAF), a youth-focused HIV/AIDS prevention campaign. The disease has touched him personally, having lost someone he loved to AIDS more than 15 years ago. At the time, McCoy was 11 or


ALABAMA: University of Alabama-Birmingham, Partners to Share Cervical Cancer Grant
Birmingham News (10.05.09) - Friday, October 09, 2009
Jeff Hansen
The University of Alabama-Birmingham s Comprehensive Cancer Center (UABCCC) recently received a five-year, $11.5 million grant from the National Institutes of Health for research in preventing human papillomavirus (HPV) infection and cervical cancer. Four experimental vaccines will be tested under the grant. The bulk o


UNITED STATES: US FDA Panel Backs Wider Use of Pfizer HIV Drug
Reuters (10.08.09) - Friday, October 09, 2009
Susan Heavey
Although some of its members expressed ambivalence and doubt, an advisory panel to the Food and Drug Administration on Thursday voted 10-4 to endorse expanded use of Pfizer Inc. s HIV drug Selzentry (maraviroc). Selzentry is already approved for use, along with other HIV drugs, by adult patients who have been treated w


NORTH CAROLINA: Guilford Holds First HPV Clinics for Middle School Girls
MyFox8.com (Greensboro) (10.06.09) - Thursday, October 08, 2009
Two Guilford County middle schools - Brown Summit Middle School and Lincoln Academy - on Tuesday held the first of several grant-funded clinics to administer the human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine Gardasil to girls in the sixth, seventh and eighth grades. Additional clinics were announced for Guilford Middle School and


MASSACHUSETTS: GLAD Opposes Elimination of Written Consent for HIV Testing in Massachusetts
Bay Windows (Boston) (10.07.09) - Thursday, October 08, 2009
Hannah Clay Wareham
Gay & Lesbian Advocates & Defenders (GLAD) has declared its opposition to the state Senate bill that would end the requirement that medical personnel obtain a patient s informed written consent prior to administering an HIV test. Testifying on Oct. 6 before the Joint Committee on Public Health, GLAD AIDS Projec


CALIFORNIA: Mallalieu's on a Mission to Teach Youth About Reality of HIV/AIDS
Desert Sun (Palm Springs) (10.02.09) - Thursday, October 08, 2009
Victor Morales
Frank Mallalieu hit a low point in 1996 when he was diagnosed with fully developed AIDS, after years of volunteering for AIDS service organizations and taking the high road most of his life. I was despondent, he said. At one point I remember thinking how during my whole life I did good things for other people and every


CALIFORNIA: Trans Latina Group Loses Funding
Bay Area Reporter (San Francisco) (10.01.09) - Thursday, October 08, 2009
Seth Hemmelgarn
San Francisco s Department of Public Health recently awarded an HIV prevention and services grant to Instituto Familiar de la Raza, or the Latina Family Institute, to target transgender Latinas. The El/La Transgender Latina HIV Prevention Program (El/La) had previously held the city contract, but a change of its fiscal


CALIFORNIA: Contra Costa County AIDS Programs Reeling from Budget Cuts
Contra Costa Times (10.07.09) - Thursday, October 08, 2009
Rick Radin
Contra Costa supervisors on Sept. 15 passed along nearly $1 million in state cuts to the county s AIDS program, and as a result seven staff members have been transferred out of the department. Due to the staff reduction, Patrick O Leary, who was diagnosed with AIDS in 1985, said he has lost the support he had in mainta


FRANCE: Low CD4 Cell Count Elevates Cancer Risk in Patients with HIV
Reuters Health Medical News (10.07.09) - Thursday, October 08, 2009
Having a more compromised immune system is the biggest risk factor for both AIDS-defining and non-AIDS-defining cancers in HIV patients, a new study by French researchers finds. Noting that the relative roles of immunodeficiency, HIV viral load and cART [combination antiretroviral therapy] in the onset of individual ca


SOUTH AFRICA: Cervical Cancer Strikes Poor Women Hardest
Inter Press Service (10.02.09) - Thursday, October 08, 2009
Miriam Mannak
Each year, 7,000 South African women develop cervical cancer, highlighting the need for better education, screening, and treatment. A key obstacle is the lack of knowledge about human papillomavirus (HPV) and its link to cervical cancer. There is little awareness, said Linda Gail-Bekker of the Institute of Infectious D


UNITED STATES: Female Health's Condom Available, No US Retail Yet
Reuters (10.01.09) - Thursday, October 08, 2009
Susan Heavey
Though it was approved by the Food and Drug Administration in March, a new female condom has yet to gain a foothold in the retail market. FC2, made by Female Health, is available to state health agencies and nonprofit organizations but is not widely available in stores. Mary Ann Leeper, the company s senior strategic a


GEORGIA: AIDS Walk Seeks to Double Participants
Southern Voice (Atlanta) (10.02.09) - Wednesday, October 07, 2009
Matt Schafer
Organizers of the 19th annual AIDS Walk Atlanta hope this year to double the number of walkers to 15,000-20,000 and to raise $1 million. We aren t comparing ourselves to last year because we didn t want to compare ourselves to a bad year, said Tracy Elliott, executive director of AID Atlanta. We re comparing ourselves


AUSTRALIA: Australian Prisoners in Need of Syringe Programs
Australian Associated Press (10.02.09) - Wednesday, October 07, 2009
Delegates to the Anex 09 Australian Drugs Conference in Melbourne on Friday urged government health and corrections officials to adopt harm-reduction programs in prisons. There are some reports of needles being shared by as many as 100 prisoners, said John Ryan, CEO of Anex, an organization that promotes harm reduction


UNITED STATES: AIDS Study Flushes Out Hidden Virus, Pointing to Possible Cure
Bloomberg News (10.02.09) - Wednesday, October 07, 2009
Simeon Bennett
Current HIV/AIDS drugs work by reducing the virus to undetectable levels but cannot eradicate it. Instead, HIV lies dormant in immune-system cells unreachable by medicines. Now, researchers from Johns Hopkins University and Howard Hughes Medical Institute say they have developed a way to lure out these latent reservoir


AUSTRALIA: Music Festival Fans Hear Safe Sex Message
Australian Associated Press (10.07.09) - Wednesday, October 07, 2009
The proportion of youths and young adults testing for STDs and using condoms is increasing, according to a multi-year survey of music festival attendees in Melbourne. Dr. Margaret Hellard of the Burnet Institute in Melbourne and colleagues surveyed more than 5,000 people ages 16-29 at four Big Day Out music festivals s


AUSTRALIA: Needle Program a Success
The Age (Melbourne) (10.06.09) - Wednesday, October 07, 2009
Julia Medew
St. Kilda s needle and syringe access program began operating 24 hours a day in late 2007. Since then, the Grey Street outreach remains the only one of its kind open every night in Victoria. Thanks to the additional hours, 1,000 more clients each month have access to sterile injection supplies, said Sue White, manager


CANADA: Cervical Cancer Program Deemed Successful
Waterloo Region Record (10.01.09) - Wednesday, October 07, 2009
Johanna Weidner
Local efforts to vaccinate girls against human papillomavirus (HPV), the STD that causes cervical cancer, are going very well, said Lesley Rintche, manager of vaccine programs at Region of Waterloo Public Health. The provincial and regional vaccination program is now in its third year. Forty-nine percent of eighth-grad


UGANDA: New Bill to Protect People with HIV
New Vision (Kampala) (10.04.09) - Wednesday, October 07, 2009
Madinah Tebajjukira
Uganda s Parliamentary committee on HIV/AIDS is working on the HIV/AIDS Prevention and Control Bill, which would provide workplace and civil liberties protections for infected persons. The committee is discussing the measure with stakeholders in regional and national consultations, after which it will be presented to P


UNITED STATES: Pfizer HIV Drug Seems Safe for New Use - FDA Staff
Reuters (10.06.09) - Wednesday, October 07, 2009
Susan Heavey
On Tuesday, the Food and Drug Administration said Pfizer s HIV drug Selzentry appears to be well tolerated in patients with a certain variation of HIV-1 who have not yet begun taking medications. Selzentry, also known by its generic name maraviroc, is already approved for use in combination with other drugs by treatmen


ARIZONA: AIDS Walk Takes Over Downtown Phonenix
ABC15.com (Phoenix) (10.04.09) - Tuesday, October 06, 2009
Imani Randolph
Sunday s 5K AIDS Walk drew thousands of people to downtown Phonenix, who together raised more than $300,000 to be shared among 16 local AIDS service organizations. This year s AIDS Walk is extremely important in light of the economic struggles faced by many of our friends in the nonprofit field that are the main servic


CANADA: Hepatitis C 'Silent Epidemic': Doctor
Ottawa Citizen (10.06.09) - Tuesday, October 06, 2009
Canwest News Service
Between 2006 and 2008, hepatitis C rates rose by 114 percent among Canadian women and by 76.6 percent among men. Dr. Didi Emokpare of Regina called the figures staggering and said little attention has been paid to the potentially deadly virus. Because hepatitis C infection is under-diagnosed, the actual number of cases


SOUTH AFRICA: South Africa HIV Caseload Stable, Still Too High: Health Minister
Agence France Presse (10.05.09) - Tuesday, October 06, 2009
Commenting on the release of a 2008 HIV prevalence study in which almost 40,000 women took part, Health Minister Aaron Motsoaledi said, We seem to be losing the battle, but not yet the war. The prevalence among women aged 25 years and above has stabilized at high and unacceptable levels. The research, which was conduct


ALASKA: City's Lone Clinic for Heroin Addicts Halts Admissions
Anchorage Daily News (10.01.09) - Tuesday, October 06, 2009
James Halpin
Anchorage s only methadone maintenance program is operating over its capacity and cannot absorb any new patients for treatment, say officials of the downtown Narcotic Drug Treatment Center. Until late September, NDTC was still accepting pregnant women wanting treatment on a priority basis. Most NDTC patients were using


FLORIDA: More than 1,800 Broward General Patients May Have Been Exposed to Blood-Borne Infection
South Florida Sun-Sentinel (10.06.09) - Tuesday, October 06, 2009
Robert Nolin; Jaclyn Giovis
Broward General Medical Center officials are warning 1,851 patients who underwent cardiac stress tests from January 2004 until this September that they may have been exposed to HIV, hepatitis B or hepatitis C following the discovery that a nurse reused medical equipment intended for one-time use. In early September, a


UNITED STATES: Study Highlights HIV/AIDS Challenge in American Prison System
Science Daily (09.30.09) - Tuesday, October 06, 2009
HIV/AIDS is nearly five times more prevalent in US prisons than in the general population. Though adherence to antiretroviral treatment (ART) can be strictly monitored in correctional settings, clinical monitoring becomes problematic upon prisoners release. Over a nine-year period, Dr. Nitika Pant Pai of the Research I


KENYA: New Visual Test Screens for Cervical Cancer
Inter Press Service (10.01.09) - Tuesday, October 06, 2009
Susan Anyangu
In a bid to combat the increasing number of cervical cancer cases, government hospitals in Kenya are encouraging women to undergo an innovative free exam to detect precancerous lesions of the cervix. The low-cost method involves dilating the vaginal walls; applying a vinegar-based acetic acid; and performing a visual i


CANADA: Ban on Gay Blood Donors Is Unconstitutional, Man Argues in Counter-Suit
Canadian Press (10.05.09) - Tuesday, October 06, 2009
Ottawa Sun
A man who lied about having sex with men so he could donate his blood had syphilis, an attorney representing the Canadian Blood Services told an Ontario Superior Court judge Monday. CBS is suing Kyle Freeman for lying during the donor screening process and donating blood 18 times. Freeman is counter-suing CBS, saying t


UNITED STATES: New Trial of HIV Vaccine in Gay Men Begins
Bay Area Reporter (San Francisco) (10.01.09) - Tuesday, October 06, 2009
Matthew S. Bajko
An AIDS vaccine trial has begun enrolling men who have sex with men (MSM) in 12 US cities. The HVTN 505 study is designed to see whether a two-part vaccine regimen decreases viral loads among participants who later become infected with HIV. It is designed to find cells already infected and reduce the amount of virus in


DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA: Stepping Up for Clinic by Raising $800,000
Washington Post (10.04.09) - Monday, October 05, 2009
N.C. Aizenman
Sunday s 23rd annual AIDS Walk Washington drew a crowd of more than 7,000 people who together raised almost $800,000 to benefit the HIV/AIDS prevention and treatment work of the Whitman-Walker Clinic. I really do feel that although our challenges are tough, the city has never been more energized and more mobilized, May


KENTUCKY: Sex Week: UK Campus Abuzz About Birds and Bees
Lexington Herald-Leader (10.02.09) - Monday, October 05, 2009
Ryan Alessi
Lectures, panel discussions, explanations of sex toys, even a mile-long march by men in high heels to protest violence against women: They are all part of Sex Week at the University of Kentucky. Jason Hans, assistant professor of family studies and faculty adviser to Sex Week, said fun activities like sex toy presentat


ALABAMA: AIDS Alabama Gets $1 Million from Stimulus
Associated Press (10.05.09) - Monday, October 05, 2009
AIDS Alabama is receiving $1 million in federal stimulus funds to provide housing for HIV-positive Alabamians. Housing- related services - including rental assistance, back rent, moving expenses, utility payments, and emergency hotel vouchers - will be made available to persons living with HIV and in need of help to av


MICHIGAN: Tests: 1 in 10 Students Suffering from STD
Muskegon Chronicle (10.04.09) - Monday, October 05, 2009
Lynn Moore
During a recent screening initiative, 10 percent of local residents mostly ages 15-24 were found to have chlamydia, Public Health-Muskegon County officials said. PHMC received a state grant to administer the tests, and the campaign exceeded health officials expectations of screening 150 people. Of 202 young residents s


ITALY: Risk of Developing Specific AIDS-Defining Illnesses in Patients Co-infected with HIV and Hepatitis C Virus With or Without Liver Cirrhosis
Clinical Infectious Diseases Vol. 49; P. 612-622 (08.15.09) - Monday, October 05, 2009
Antonella d'Arminio Monforte and others
The authors wrote that with the exception of lymphoma, there are few data concerning the risk of specific opportunistic diseases in patients with and without hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection. In the current study, they evaluated the correlation between the occurrence of different AIDS-defining illnesses (ADIs) and chr


CANADA: Drop-In Program Aims to Help Sex-Trade Workers
Daily Herald-Tribune (Grande Prairie) (09.24.09) - Monday, October 05, 2009
Crystal Rhyno
Opened a year ago, the HIV North Sex-Trade Women s Drop-In has provided a supportive space for about 70 female sex workers in the community. While the sex trade may not be very visible in Grande Prairie, it does exist and the women need support, said Brenda Yamkowy, executive director of the HIV North Society. The majo


CANADA: All-Party Support Sought for Life-Saving Cheap Drug Initiatives
Toronto Star (10.05.09) - Monday, October 05, 2009
Tanya Talaga
Two bills that would ease poor countries access to medicine for AIDS, malaria and other deadly diseases are now working their way through Canada s Parliament. On Friday, Sen. Sharon Carstairs (Liberal) and Member of Parliament Judy Wasylycia- Leis (NDP) held a joint news conference in Winnipeg, saying all-party support


UNITED STATES: 7,000 Gay Men Help Study AIDS
Washington Post (09.29.09) - Monday, October 05, 2009
Lori Aratani
Launched in 1984 before there was a test for HIV, the Multicenter AIDS Study (MACS) began seeking gay men to participate in a study of this new disease. Since then, more than 7,000 men who have sex with men (MSM) recruited from four MACS cities have participated in the study, undergoing physicals twice a year and answe


DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA: AIDS Walk Washington Set for Oct. 3
Washington Blade (09.25.09) - Friday, October 02, 2009
Joshua Lynsen
Mayor Adrian Fenty will take part in Saturday s AIDS Walk Washington both as a speaker and as a walker. The 5K event, which benefits Whitman-Walker Clinic, begins and ends at Freedom Plaza in downtown Washington. For registration information, visit www.aidswalkwashington.org.


NEW YORK: HIV/AIDS Rent Cap Urged in New York City
Advocate (10.01.09) - Friday, October 02, 2009
Julie Bolcer
The New York City Council on Wednesday gave its unanimous backing to a state bill that would cap the percentage of income that poor people with HIV/AIDS must contribute to their rent. Under the proposal, clients of New York City s HIV/AIDS Services Administration would not have to spend more than 30 percent of their in


ZIMBABWE: HIV Rate in Zimbabwe Falling - but National AIDS Council Gets Scant Credit
Voice of America News (09.29.09) - Friday, October 02, 2009
Sandra Nyaira
HIV prevalence in Zimbabwe has dropped from almost 25 percent in 2003 to 13.7 percent at present, but critics say the National AIDS Council should not get credit for the improvement. They charge that too much of NAC s budget goes for executive salaries and vehicles and too little to HIV/AIDS prevention and treatment. N


MASSACHUSETTS: Condoms Remain a Vital Tool in Preventing the Spread of HIV
Bay Windows (Boston) (09.28.09) - Friday, October 02, 2009
Kenneth H. Mayer, MD
As someone who has cared for people living with HIV for almost 30 years, I have seen both the ravages of the epidemic and the successes of major improvements in HIV prevention and therapy. However, until we create a biomedical intervention that is 100 percent effective at stopping HIV transmission, using condoms durin


TEXAS: High STD Cases Prompt Local Group to Focus on Students
Newschannel10.com (Amarillo) (09.28.09) - Friday, October 02, 2009
Sarah Synder
The director of the Midland Area AIDS Support organization said it will expand its services to include educating parents about HIV/AIDS, as young people in the Permian Basin are increasingly being diagnosed with the disease. Judy Warren said of the roughly 176 clients MAAS assists, half are ages 15-24. [Parents] don t


SOUTH AFRICA: Lower Risk of HIV Infection Among Circumcised MSM: Results from the Soweto Men's Study
IAS Conf on HIV Path, Treatment & Prevention 2009 (07.20.09) - Friday, October 02, 2009
T. Lane; H.F. Raymond; S. Dladla; J. Rasenthe; H. Struthers; W. McFarland; J. McIntyre
Male circumcision has been found to reduce female-to-male HIV transmission through vaginal sex in randomized controlled trials. However, one recent meta-analysis of observational data found insufficient evidence of a protective effect with men who have sex with men (MSM), while noting the lack of data from high-prevale


UNITED KINGDOM: Cervical Cancer Jab Girl Died from Large Chest Tumor
Times (London) (10.01.09) - Friday, October 02, 2009
David Rose
The 14-year-old girl who collapsed and died Monday shortly after receiving an injection of the human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine Cervarix was suffering from cancer, according to information presented Thursday during an inquest at Coventry Magistrate s Court. The pathologist has confirmed today at the opening of the in


THAILAND: Volunteers Key to Success of Thai Vaccine Trials
Associated Press (09.27.09) - Friday, October 02, 2009
Ambika Ahuja; Michael Casey
For six years, nearly 16,000 Thai housewives, factory workers, and laborers, among others, put aside their initial doubts and fears to participate in trials of an experimental AIDS vaccine. Their dedication paid off when American and Thai researchers announced the vaccine cut the risk of HIV infection by more than 31 p


NORTH CAROLINA: New Tool to Fight Syphilis? Walmart Gift Cards
MSNBC.com (09.14.09) - Friday, October 02, 2009
Brian Alexander
Forsyth County, N.C., has already recorded 140 syphilis cases this year, more than triple the number for 2008, and the poor economy may be partly to blame, say officials there. However, the economy also motivated many residents to get screened for the disease when the county Department of Public Health offered $10 Walm


CALIFORNIA: HIV Programs Cut Under New San Mateo County Budget
San Mateo County Times (09.30.09) - Thursday, October 01, 2009
Shaun Bishop
San Mateo County Supervisors on Tuesday unanimously approved budget cuts totaling $16 million from county programs, including HIV prevention and education. The county health system s HIV education program in July received a $1.1 million cut under the state budget instead of an expected $1.6 million in funding. Under th


NEW MEXICO: Study Finds High Rate of Hepatitis Among Truckers
Associated Press (09.30.09) - Thursday, October 01, 2009
New Mexico truck drivers were found to have a high rate of hepatitis C infection in a recent collaborative study conducted by the state Department of Health, CDC, and the Association for Prevention Teaching and Research. Among 652 long-distance truck drivers enrolled from 11 truck stops between 2004 and 2006, 14 percen


NEW YORK: Healthy Sexuality Focus of Campaign
Post-Standard (Syracuse) (09.30.09) - Thursday, October 01, 2009
Maureen Nolan
A three-year, $200,000 Allyn Foundation grant aims to help Syracuse- and Rochester-area parents educate their children about sex. The effort, Real Life. Real Talk, has also been rolled out in five other communities nationwide. On Tuesday, a 35-member coalition representing community agencies, parents, teens, faith-base


PENNSYLVANIA: Pittsburgh AIDS Task Force Develops Innovative Program to Reach Key Audiences
Pittsburgh Tribune-Review (09.27.09) - Thursday, October 01, 2009
Jessica Turnbull
Pittsburgh AIDS Task Force s Girlfriends Project (GP) has received national attention, thanks to its innovative programming having been presented at CDC s recent 2009 National HIV Prevention Conference in Atlanta. In a prevention-oriented take on the traditional Tupperware party, a host invites friends and family to he


UNITED STATES: Gonococcal, Chlamydia and Syphilis Infection Positivity Among MSM Attending a Large Primary Care Clinic, Boston, 2003-2004
Sexually Transmitted Diseases Vol. 36; No. 8: P. 507-511 (08..09) - Thursday, October 01, 2009
Matthew J. Mimiaga; Donna J. Helms; Sari L. Reisner; Chris Grasso; Thomas Bertrand; Debra J. Mosure; Hillard Weinstock; Catherine McLean; Kenneth H. Mayer
Increases in syphilis and rectal gonorrhea have been reported in the past decade among US men who have sex with men (MSM), the authors noted; however, limited [STD] positivity data are available on MSM who receive their health care from primary care or general medical clinics. In the current study, the researchers set


SOUTH AFRICA: Challenge to South Africa's Policies on HIV- Infected
Business Day (South Africa) (09.28.09) - Thursday, October 01, 2009
Wilson Johwa
A new report urges South Africa to reconsider its policy of deporting migrants infected with HIV and other life- threatening illnesses. In Returned to Risk: Deportation of HIV-Positive Migrants, Human Rights Watch, Deutsche AIDS-Life, the European AIDS Treatment Group, and the African HIV Policy Network document the e


OHIO: Groups Call for More Sex Education
Dayton Daily News (09.28.09) - Thursday, October 01, 2009
Laura A. Bischoff
A coalition of 31 women s groups and health organizations is backing legislation that would require Ohio schools to embrace comprehensive sex education, among other items. State Sens. Teresa Fedor (D-Toledo) and Sue Morano (D-Lorain) plan to introduce the Prevention First Act in October. It marks the third time Fedor,


UNITED STATES: San Francisco Could Lose Millions in AIDS Funding
San Francisco Chronicle (10.01.09) - Thursday, October 01, 2009
Drew Joseph
The Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee on Wednesday voted unanimously for a four-year extension of the funding provided under the Ryan White CARE Act of 1990. However, according to aides to Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.), San Francisco could lose up to $5.3 million for HIV/AIDS care an


KENYA: Kenya Seeks to Restore Public Confidence in Condoms
Agence France Presse (09.29.09) - Wednesday, September 30, 2009
The head of Kenya s National Quality Control Laboratory is seeking to reassure the public that condoms are safe and effective after a faulty brand was withdrawn from the market. Hezekiah Chepkwony said Tuesday a condom-testing machine from Australia had been purchased by the UN Population Fund to ensure quality control


UNITED STATES: Panel Votes to Restore Abstinence Education Money
Associated Press (09.30.09) - Wednesday, September 30, 2009
On Tuesday evening, the Senate Finance Committee voted 12-11 to restore $50 million in annual federal abstinence-only funds. The vote came despite objections from committee chair Sen. Max Baucus (D-Montana) and a push by President Barack Obama to direct abstinence money to broader teen pregnancy- reduction programs. Tw


CHINA: Association Between Testing for Human Immunodeficiency Virus and Changes in Risk Behaviors Among Injecting Drug Users in Southern China
Sexually Transmitted Diseases Vol. 36; No. 8: P. 473-477 (08..09) - Wednesday, September 30, 2009
Xia Jin and others
In their introduction, the authors cite a growing need for research in China regarding post-test risk behavior differences among injecting drug users that explores the effect of various testing modes (non-voluntary vs. voluntary) and other related factors on changes in post-test risk behaviors. The subjects of the


KENYA: Anti-AIDS Campaigners Now Turn to Positive Advertising
Business Daily Africa (Nairobi) (09.23.09) - Wednesday, September 30, 2009
Victor Juma
Informed by social marketing research, anti-AIDS campaigners in Kenya are turning away from fear-based ads in favor of more positive approaches. One well-known ad, once featured prominently in medical settings, used monsters to represent the AIDS virus. Another presented images of a man and woman, tracking them from th


JAMAICA: How AIDS Became a Caribbean Crisis
The Atlantic (09.22.09) - Wednesday, September 30, 2009
Micah Fink
The Caribbean has the highest rate of new HIV infections after sub-Saharan Africa, and AIDS is now its leading cause of death among adults. Part of the region s susceptibility to HIV/AIDS is pervasive homophobia, which drives the epidemic underground, helping to spread infections and make education and outreach more di


GLOBAL: HIV/AIDS Treatment for Poor Grows Tenfold in Five Years: UN
Agence France Presse (09.30.09) - Wednesday, September 30, 2009
By 2008, the number of HIV/AIDS patients in low- and middle- income countries who were receiving antiretroviral therapy (ARVs) had grown by 10-fold over five years, according to a UN report issued today. The largest increase, 39 percent, was in sub-Saharan Africa. In 2008, 4.03 million poor patients these countries wer


UNITED STATES: FDA Delays Ruling on Glaxo Cervical Cancer Vaccine
Associated Press (09.29.09) - Wednesday, September 30, 2009
Matthew Perrone
The Food and Drug Administration on Tuesday was expected to announce its decision on whether to allow GlaxoSmithKline s vaccine Cervarix to be marketed in the United States . A GSK spokesperson, however, said FDA decided instead to delay its decision and continue its review. Although the delay came one day after a


IOWA; NEBRASKA: Iowa, Other States Scramble to Meet HIV/AIDS Prescription Needs
Iowa Independent (Grinnell) (09.28.09) - Wednesday, September 30, 2009
Lynda Waddington
As Congress considers reauthorizing the federal Ryan White CARE Act, eight states have waiting lists for their AIDS Drug Assistance Programs. Iowa cleared an earlier backlog of more than 100 HIV/AIDS patients during 2004-2005 with a state appropriation, but since then its ADAP funding has remained level or been reduced


NEW YORK: AIDS Walk 2009
Times Union (Albany, N.Y.) (09.28.09) - Tuesday, September 29, 2009
Sunday s AIDS Walk 2009 drew about 1,000 people to Albany s Washington Park. Before the event, a new NAMES Project quilt panel was dedicated to the memory of 32 Albany Medical Center outpatients who have died of AIDS since last year s walk; it was created by AMC employees. For more information, visit www.aidswalk-capit


UNITED STATES: US House Approves Measure to Extend Ryan White Funding for 30 Days
Southern Voice (Atlanta) (09.25.09) - Tuesday, September 29, 2009
Laura Douglas-Brown
The continuing resolution passed by the US House on Friday extends funding to the legislative branch for 30 days, and it includes a provision to fund the Ryan White CARE Act. The act disburses $2.1 billion to HIV/AIDS service providers around the country; it was reauthorized in 2006 but includes a sunset provision endi


INDIANA: AIDS Remains Deadly Threat; Task Force to Raise Awareness with 25th Anniversary Events
Fort Wayne Journal Gazette (09.24.09) - Tuesday, September 29, 2009
Devon Haynie
From October through May, AIDS Task Force will celebrate its 25th anniversary with a series of events designed to remind people that HIV/AIDS is a serious disease that continues to take lives. Many people think AIDS is no longer a problem, said ATF Executive Director Gregory Manifold during a press conference. But the


CALIFORNIA: Hanford Clinic May End HIV Treatment
Fresno Bee (09.28.09) - Tuesday, September 29, 2009
Lewis Griswold
The HIV treatment program at the Hanford public health clinic is expected to shut down by the end of October. Kings County Department of Public Health Director Keith Winkler said the program s closure is not certain, but he acknowledged that its state funding had been cut and the county could save $89,000 a year by end


TAIWAN: Universal HBV Vaccination Protects Asian Children from Liver Cancer
Reuters Health Medical News (09.16.09) - Tuesday, September 29, 2009
Infection with hepatitis B virus is a major cause of hepatocellular carcinoma. Since 1984, when a universal childhood HBV vaccination program was instituted in Taiwan , the incidence of liver cancer among Taiwanese children has declined considerably. Researchers led by Mei-Hwei Chang of the National Taiwan University H


UNITED KINGDOM: UK Teenager 'Unlikely' to Have Died from Vaccine
Reuters (09.29.09) - Tuesday, September 29, 2009
Matthew Jones
Health experts say a British teenager who died on Monday shortly after receiving the human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine Cervarix at school likely did not die as a result of the drug. I think once we get into the investigation, we may discover there is another cause of her death, said Dr. Caron Grainger, joint director


AUSTRALIA: Poor Sex Education Creates a Generation of Vulnerable Women
Sunday Age (Melbourne) (09.27.09) - Tuesday, September 29, 2009
Mark Russell
In an online survey of more than 500 Australian women ages 20- 34, two-thirds reported having unprotected sex, putting them at risk for unplanned pregnancy and STDs. The findings of the survey by Sexual Health and Family Planning Australia (SHFPA) were released on Sept. 26 to mark World Contraception Day. Among all par


THAILAND: HIV Vaccine Success May Take Decade to Unravel Why It Works
Bloomberg News (09.28.09) - Tuesday, September 29, 2009
Tom Randall
Last week s startling good news from an HIV vaccine trial in Thailand raises many questions about why the shots reduced HIV infection risk by 31 percent compared with a placebo. [The details of the experiment were summarized in CDC Prevention News Update on Sept. 24]. The theory was that the Sanofi-Aventis experimenta


TEXAS: Some Texas Districts Change Tune on Abstinence-Only Sex Education
Austin American-Statesman (09.27.09) - Tuesday, September 29, 2009
Brenda Bell
As the Obama administration shifts federal funding away from abstinence-only programs in favor of other approaches proven to lower teen pregnancy rates, some Texas school districts are moving to adopt comprehensive sex education curricula. A Texas State University study released in February found that less than 5 perce


CALIFORNIA: HIV/AIDS Nonprofit Group Receives $10,000 Grant
Desert Sun (Palm Springs) (09.20.09) - Monday, September 28, 2009
Victor Morales
The Kaiser Foundation Hospital has awarded a grant of $10,000 to Working Wonders, the Cathedral City-based AIDS service organization announced recently. The nonprofit said it will use the funds for a program designed to increase knowledge of HIV/AIDS and STDs among at-risk youth.


VIETNAM: Vietnam Birth Trend May Fuel Sex Work, Trafficking: UN
Reuters (09.09.09) - Monday, September 28, 2009
John Ruwitch
The growing number of male babies born in Vietnam in recent years could lead to an increase in sex work and human trafficking, according to a report from the UN Population Fund. In 2000, 106.2 boys were born in Vietnam for every 100 girls; however, by 2008, the ratio had risen to 112.1 boys per 100 girls. If these tren


GLOBAL: Call to Eradicate Cervical Cancer
Press Association (United Kingdom) (09.24.09) - Monday, September 28, 2009
An expert from the Cancer Research UK Center for Epidemiology in London believes that the combination of vaccination and continued screenings could wipe out cervical cancer in five decades. Professor Jack Cuzick raised this hope in his address to the recent joint 15th Congress of the European Cancer Organization and 34


DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA: Newly Opened Clinic to Offer Hundreds Free HIV/AIDS Care
Washington Post (09.25.09) - Monday, September 28, 2009
Darryl Fears
On Thursday, the AIDS Healthcare Foundation opened a free HIV/AIDS treatment clinic at 2141 K St., Ste. 606. AHF, the country s largest nonprofit provider of HIV/AIDS care, came to the District because it is the epicenter of the US epidemic, said Director Michael Weinstein. The opening of the AHF Blair Underwood Health


CHINA: High HIV Prevalence Detected in 2006 and 2007 Among Men Who Have Sex with Men in China's Largest Municipality: An Alarming Epidemic in Chongqing, China
JAIDS (09..09):Vol. 52; No. 1: P. 79-85 - Monday, September 28, 2009
Liangui Feng, MD, MS; and others
In many large cities in China , HIV prevalence data among men who have sex with men (MSM) show striking increases in recent years. To help target HIV prevention in this population, the current study surveyed Chongqing MSM at community venues and cruising areas in three districts in 2006-07 and sought to determine HIV p


GLOBAL: HIV/AIDS Presents New and Different Security Threats, Says Report
Voice of America News (09.22.09) - Monday, September 28, 2009
Joe DeCapua
Nine years ago, the UN Security Council made HIV/AIDS a top priority, as the disease was beginning to be taken seriously as an international security risk. The alarmism of a decade ago has dissipated, said Alex de Waal, program director at the Social Science Research Council in New York. Armies are not imploding. State


COLORADO: Surgery Tech in Hepatitis C Cases Pleads Guilty
Associated Press (09.26.09) - Monday, September 28, 2009
Ivan Moreno
Avoiding a trial scheduled to start Monday, the surgery technician who infected some 16 patients with hepatitis C entered into a plea agreement on Friday that calls for a 20- year prison term. Kristen Diane Parker, 26, pled guilty to five counts of tampering with a consumer product and five counts of obtaining a contro


UNITED STATES: Inspector General: Improvements in VA Endoscopic Equipment Use
Associated Press (09.18.09) - Monday, September 28, 2009
Kimberly Hefling
In a newly released report, the Veterans Affairs inspector general (IG) said surprise visits to 128 VA medical facilities found all were following infection-control procedures for endoscopy equipment. All but one demonstrated that staff had been properly trained in using the devices, the report said. That hospital, Whi


UNITED STATES: Airline Tickets to Raise Cash for UN Health Effort
Associated Press (09.23.09) - Friday, September 25, 2009
Starting early next year, US travelers will have the chance to donate $2 or more to the Millennium Foundation, a Geneva-based group working with the UN to help fight AIDS and other health concerns in developing countries. The three major ticket distributors - Amadeus, Travelport, and Sabre Holdings Corp. - have agreed


MALAYSIA: Malaysia to Introduce Program Against Cervical Cancer
Xinhua News Agency (09.25.09) - Friday, September 25, 2009
Today in Kuala Lumpur, Health Minister Liow Tiong Lai announced a new human papillomavirus vaccination program for Malaysian girls. The effort has not been finalized, but it will likely be school-based and reach 300,000 girls, said Liow. The HPV vaccine protects against strains of the STD that cause the majority of cer


ZIMBABWE: Zimbabwe's HIV Rate Falls: Government
Agence France Presse (09.24.09) - Friday, September 25, 2009
Zimbabwe s estimated HIV infection rate has dropped to 13.7 percent in people ages 15-49, down from 14.1 percent last year, said Health Minister Henry Madzorera. However, concerted efforts are needed to push the rate down further, he said. We have to redouble our efforts and commitment and keep the sense of hope that i


DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA: HIV-Positive Blogger Aims to Inspire and Spread Hope
Washington Post (09.24.09) - Friday, September 25, 2009
Yamiche Alcindor
Shawn Decker was just 11 when he was diagnosed with HIV and told he had two years to live. But on Oct. 3, Decker, now 34, will receive the Whitman-Walker Clinic s Courage Award at the opening ceremonies of the 23rd annual AIDS Walk Washington. Decker has hemophilia and acquired HIV during a treatment for the condition.


MISSOURI: HPV Vaccine Free in Columbia until December
The Maneater (University of Missouri-Columbia) (09.22.09) - Friday, September 25, 2009
Kaylen Ralph
The human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine Gardasil continues to be offered for free at the Columbia/Boone County Health Clinic thanks to a grant from the Missouri Foundation for Health (MFFH). Any female age nine to 26 can receive the three-shot series. The Health Clinic administers the injections for the Family Health Ce


UNITED STATES: Findings May Explain Gap in Cancer Survival
New York Times (08.04.09) - Friday, September 25, 2009
Roni Caryn Rabin
University of Maryland researchers investigating throat cancer and squamous-cell cancers of the head and neck have made a discovery that may help explain why white cancer patients often outlive their black peers even when they have what appear to be the same cancers. Cases of throat and head and neck cancers have spike


AUSTRALIA: Backpackers Quizzed on Sex, Booze Habits
Australian Associated Press (09.09.09) - Friday, September 25, 2009
Danny Rose
In a survey of more than 430 backpackers in hostels across Sydney, researchers found many engaged in binge drinking and had multiple recent sexual partners. Participants were about equally men and women in number and ages 18-30, and about 40 percent were from the United Kingdom . There was significant alcohol use - 33


UTAH: 99 AIDS Patients to Lose Drug Subsidy
Salt Lake Tribune (09.24.09) - Friday, September 25, 2009
Sheena Mcfarland
Facing a $375,000 deficit, Utah s AIDS Drug Assistance Program is not accepting new applicants, and tighter income rules mean that around 100 patients receiving services will lose some form of the subsidy. State Department of Health projections for ADAP did not foresee a 45 percent increase in applications this year co


FLORIDA: Group Sponsoring Three-Day Conference on AIDS/HIV Awareness
South Florida Sun-Sentinel (09.23.09) - Thursday, September 24, 2009
C. Ron Allen
The Ujima Men s Collective, a support and HIV/AIDS education group for black men who have sex with men, holds its fifth annual conference in West Palm Beach this week. The three-day HIV/AIDS awareness conference will offer workshops and seminars on advocacy, leadership, health and wellness, spirituality, and relationsh


MALAWI: World Bank Gives Malawi $30 Million to Fight AIDS
Agence France Presse (09.22.09) - Thursday, September 24, 2009
On Tuesday, the World Bank announced it has given Malawi a $30 million grant to prevent HIV infections and rapidly expand access to antiretroviral drugs. A lot still needs to be done with the aim of slowing infection rates and bringing down the prevalence rate of HIV in Malawi, said Tim Gilbo, the bank s director to Ma


WISCONSIN: Wisconsin Center Gets AIDS Grant
Windy City Times (Chicago) (09.16.09) - Thursday, September 24, 2009
The National Institute of Mental Health recently awarded a five-year, $11.16 million grant to the Medical College of Wisconsin s Center for AIDS Intervention Research. CAIR, one of five such HIV behavioral research centers in the country, received the grant for its work on HIV prevention among high- risk populations, i


THAILAND: AIDS Vaccine Experiment Yields Unanticipated Positive Results
Washington Post (09.24.09) - Thursday, September 24, 2009
David Brown
Though its results were barely significant on statistical grounds, an experiment in Thailand has demonstrated, for the first time, a measurable protective effect of an AIDS vaccine. Administered as a series of six prime and booster shots, the vaccine reduced the risk of HIV infection by about one-third compared to a co


AUSTRALIA: Australian General Practitioners on New Front Line of Chlamydia Testing
Australian Associated Press (09.08.09) - Thursday, September 24, 2009
Danny Rose
To reduce a chlamydia infection rate that has risen over the past decade in Australia , more than 200 general practitioners in 70 clinics in Victoria will be routinely asking young adult patients to test for the STD. The University of Melbourne project, called the Australian Chlamydia Control Effectiveness Pilot (ACCEP


AFRICA: UN, Non-Governmental Organizations to Fight HIV Mother-to-Child Transmission in Africa
Agence France Presse (09.22.09) - Thursday, September 24, 2009
On Monday, as world leaders were gathering in New York City for the UN General Assembly session, UNAIDS announced the signing of a partnership deal designed to eliminate mother-to- child HIV transmission in Africa. The goal of the deal is to correct the glaring inequality faced by children in Africa, the epicenter of t


GLOBAL: Merck Gives $500 Million of Vaccine to Poorer Nations
Bloomberg News (09.23.09) - Thursday, September 24, 2009
Shannon Pettypiece
Merck & Co. announced Wednesday it will donate more than $500 million of its human papillomavirus Gardasil vaccine to the Clinton Global Initiative - enough to provide 1.7 million women the three-shot vaccination. Doses of the vaccine, which protects against HPV strains linked to 70 percent of cervical cancers, w


TENNESSEE: STDs on Rise for Tennessee Women
The Tennessean (Nashville) (09.22.09) - Thursday, September 24, 2009
A recent state health report card finds cases of chlamydia, gonorrhea, and syphilis increased among women - particularly black women - from 2002 to 2007. The reason for the rise is unclear, said Dr. Katherine Hartmann, director of women s health research at Vanderbilt University, noting that the 2009 Tennessee Women s


UNITED STATES: US Closer to Lifting HIV Travel Ban
Washington Blade (09.23.09) - Thursday, September 24, 2009
Chris Johnson
A new directive from the Obama administration may indicate that the United States is about to drop the longstanding policy prohibiting foreign nationals with HIV from entering the country. On Tuesday, US Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) issued a memo instructing its officers to place a hold on all green car


SOUTH AFRICA: Men, Boys Join Fight Against HIV
The Sowetan (09.08.09) - Wednesday, September 23, 2009
Zinhle Mapumulo
A new campaign, Brothers for Life, seeks to encourage males to actively fight the spread of HIV. The outreach tackles a range of issues, including the risks of having multiple, concurrent sex partners; men s limited involvement in parenthood; and low levels of HIV knowledge, testing, and serostatus disclosure. We are h


UNITED STATES: FDA OKs Second HIV Donor Screening Test
United Press International (09.21.09) - Wednesday, September 23, 2009
The Food and Drug Administration has approved a new test, the Abbott Prism HIV O Plus assay, that detects HIV antibodies in donated blood and organs. The test is one of five that run on Abbott s fully automated Prism System. FDA said the test identifies antibodies to HIV type 1, groups M and O, and to HIV type 2. It is


CALIFORNIA: San Diego HIV/AIDS Organizations to Lose More than $1 Million in Critical HIV Funding
Gay & Lesbian Times (San Diego) (09.17.09) - Wednesday, September 23, 2009
Corri Planck
California s nearly $83 million in state HIV/AIDS funding cuts are now being felt at the local level, which organizers say makes this year s AIDS Walk San Diego all the more important for more than two-dozen area agencies. We are still trying to understand the impact these budget cuts will have on San Diego s HIV/AIDS


CALIFORNIA: County's Social Services Slashed by Another $3 Million
Contra Costa Times (09.16.09) - Wednesday, September 23, 2009
Rick Radin
On Sept. 15, the Contra Costa County Board of Supervisors voted unanimously to slash more than $3 million from health programs, including those promoting HIV prevention and assisting AIDS patients. This latest cut is in addition to an earlier reduction of $20 million in the health department s budget this year. The red


ILLINOIS: Federal Grant Boosts HIV Research in Chicago
Chi-Town Daily News (Chicago) (09.09.09) - Wednesday, September 23, 2009
Alex Parker
In Chicago, the Developmental Center for AIDS Research won a five-year, $3.75 million grant from the National Institutes of Health, affiliates of the center recently announced. DCAR will integrate basic science, clinical studies, and research on HIV/AIDS with three concentrations: women, aging, and drug use. DCAR resea


TANZANIA: Low Maternal Vitamin D Increases the Risk of HIV Transmission to Offspring
Reuters Health Medical News (09.08.09) - Wednesday, September 23, 2009
A new study of HIV-positive pregnant women finds that low maternal vitamin D levels are linked with a higher risk of viral transmission and an increase in infant mortality. In Tanzania , 884 HIV-positive pregnant women participating in a trial of vitamin supplementation were monitored to assess pregnancy outcomes and c


CANADA: Hepatitis Myths Put Canadians at Risk, Survey Warns
Gazette (Montreal) (09.16.09) - Wednesday, September 23, 2009
Meagan Fitzpatrick, Canwest News Service
A new poll by the Canadian Liver Foundation (CLF) shows many Canadians underestimate their risk of hepatitis A or B infection. The survey found most respondents erroneously believe that where they eat and shop will help protect them from food-borne hepatitis A and that the liver diseases are primarily contracted outsid


PENNSYLVANIA: Restrictions Lifted on Sale of Needles
Intelligencer Journal/New Era (Lancaster) (09.18.09) - Wednesday, September 23, 2009
Jeff Hawkes
The Pennsylvania Board of Pharmacy has lifted its restriction on non-prescription sales of hypodermic needles, effective Sept. 12. The board changed the policy in an effort to reduce the risk of blood-borne infections spreading through needle- sharing among injection drug users (IDUs). Drug store customers can purchase


TENNESSEE: Fundraising Underway for Nashville CARES AIDS Walk
Out & About (Nashville) (08.27.09) - Tuesday, September 22, 2009
The nonprofit Nashville CARES, which provides HIV/AIDS education, advocacy, and support services in 17 counties of Middle Tennessee, is preparing to hold its largest annual fundraiser. The Nashville CARES AIDS Walk will take place Saturday, Sept. 26, from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m., at the Bicentennial Capitol Mall State Park i


IOWA: Iowa Releases Annual Disease Report
Associated Press (09.09.09) - Tuesday, September 22, 2009
According to new statistics from the state Department of Public Health, Iowa logged 109 hepatitis A cases in 2008, a 294 percent increase over the three-year average from 2005 to 2007. Despite an extensive investigation, no common source of infection was discovered. In line with national trends, the report noted a 15 p


AUSTRALIA: Neisseria Gonorrhoeae Infection in Urban Sydney Women: Prevalence and Predictors
Sexual Health Vol. 6; No. 3: P. 241-244 (08..09) - Tuesday, September 22, 2009
Paula McDonagh; Nathan Ryder; Anna M. McNulty; Eleanor Freedman
Urban Sydney has a very low female gonorrhea notification rate. With increasing use of nucleic acid amplification tests (NAAT), demonstrating a low prevalence of gonorrhea in women would have important implications for the reliability of positive results, the study authors noted. Thus, they sought to determine the prev


UNITED STATES: Alcohol Use and Antiretroviral Adherence: Review and Meta-Analysis
JAIDS doi:10.1097/QAI.0b013e3181b18b6e (08..09) - Tuesday, September 22, 2009
Christian S. Hendershot, PhD; Susan A. Stoner, PhD; David W. Pantalone, PhD; Jane M. Simoni, PhD
Noting that alcohol use is frequently implicated as a factor in non-adherence to highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART), the study authors performed a meta-analysis to provide a quantitative evaluation of the association between alcohol use and adherence by aggregating findings across studies and examining potent


UNITED STATES: Men's Sex Lives May Suffer on Hepatitis C Therapy
ABC News (09.16.09) - Tuesday, September 22, 2009
Reuters Health
All three components of sexual health - desire, function, and satisfaction - may be negatively impacted for men taking standard therapy for chronic hepatitis C, new research shows. Men planning to receive peginterferon and ribavirin should be counseled about the possibility of a decline in sexual health during treatmen


AUSTRALIA: Antibiotic-Resistant TB on the Rise
Australian Associated Press (09.20.09) - Tuesday, September 22, 2009
Danny Rose
New research shows cases of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR TB) are increasing in Victoria, a trend with significant implications for public health policy and planning, according to the study s investigators. Caroline Lavender of the Victorian Infectious Diseases Reference Laboratory and colleagues reviewed provi


AUSTRALIA: Alert as Infection Rates Soar
Sydney Morning Herald (09.09.09) - Tuesday, September 22, 2009
Louise Hall
Recent Australian STD surveillance shows many young heterosexuals and men who have sex with men (MSM) are having unprotected sex, pointing to the need for education about condom use, officials say. STD data for Australia were released during the recent Australasian HIV/AIDS Conference in Brisbane. The rate of hepatitis


NEW YORK: Tool to Offer Fast Help for HIV Exposure
New York Times (09.08.09) - Tuesday, September 22, 2009
Roni Caryn Rabin
A new computer application, or widget, developed by doctors at St. Vincent s Hospital in Manhattan will allow emergency room physicians throughout the state to access up-to-date guidelines for post-exposure prophylactic (PEP) HIV treatment. The state AIDS Institute-funded initiative is currently being distributed to mo


CALIFORNIA: HIV and Aging Forum
Bay Area Reporter (San Francisco) (09.17.09) - Monday, September 21, 2009
Cynthia Laird
A town hall meeting entitled The Consequences and Management of HIV and Aging will take place on Sept. 24 from 6:30 to 9 p.m. at the San Francisco LGBT Community Center, 1800 Market St. The meeting will seek to address challenges facing persons with HIV who, thanks to effective drug therapies, are surviving into their


SOUTH AFRICA: Government to Miss HIV/AIDS Drug Target
Ottawa Citizen (09.16.09) - Monday, September 21, 2009
Canwest News Service
Health Minister Aaron Motsoaledi reported on Sept. 15 that South Africa will not meet its announced target of providing HIV/AIDS drugs to 80 percent of patients by 2011. We are now covering 700,000 people, Motsoaledi said. Unfortunately, it is only 50 percent of the number that has been targeted. The drug distribution


UNITED STATES: Hepatitis A Vaccine Advised for Contacts of Some Adopted Children
Reuters Health Medical News (09.17.09) - Monday, September 21, 2009
The Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) recently released information to complement its Feb. 25 recommendation regarding hepatitis A virus vaccination for household members and other close personal contacts of adopted children from HAV-endemic countries. In making its recommendation, ACIP considered the


UNITED NATIONS: UN to Address Rape as a Tool of War
Washington Times (09.14.09) - Monday, September 21, 2009
Betsy Pisik
At its annual gathering of world leaders later this month, the UN is expected to review the implementation of Resolution 1820, which outlaws conflict-related sexual violence. The United States intends to call for strengthening the resolution in a session chaired by Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, US Ambassad


CANADA: Hope for Cheap HIV Drugs Dims
Toronto Star (09.19.09) - Monday, September 21, 2009
Tanya Talaga
A five-year-old Canadian initiative to send cheap generic drugs to countries hard-hit by HIV/AIDS is mired in debate over whether the government program is too cumbersome to be effective. Canada s Access to Medicines Regime (CAMR) received all-party support and praise from the UN when Liberals introduced it five years


CANADA: Young, Single Adults Less Likely than Teens to Use Condoms, Canadian Researchers Say
Ottawa Citizen (09.10.09) - Monday, September 21, 2009
Mike Barber
Single young Canadians tend to use condoms less and less as they grow older, putting them at increased risk of STDs, according to a new study. The Statistics Canada study utilized data from the Canadian Community Health Surveys, and it focused on young adults who were neither married nor in common-law partnerships.


AUSTRALIA: Number of Australians with HIV Steady
Australian Associated Press (09.09.09) - Monday, September 21, 2009
Danny Rose
In recent years, new HIV diagnoses in Australia have plateaued at about 1,000 cases annually. In 2008, Australia recorded 995 new HIV diagnoses, a slight decline from 1,051 diagnoses in 2007, which experts attributed to a change in data collation. The Australia Annual Surveillance Report 2009 was released at the recent


MISSISSIPPI: ACLU Files Suit over Mississippi Abstinence Summit
Associated Press (09.09.09) - Monday, September 21, 2009
Shelia Byrd
On Sept. 9 in US District Court in Jackson, the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) filed suit against the state Department of Human Services over a 2009 abstinence summit it says featured Bible teachings and religious music. The event was organized by DHS Just Wait Abstinence Unit. According to the lawsuit, the prog


CANADA: AIDS Walk for Life Goes Saturday
Daily Herald-Tribune (09.17.09) - Friday, September 18, 2009
Christopher Mills
ScotiaBank s AIDS Walk for Life takes place across Canada Sept. 12-20. In Grand Prairie, the walk will be this Saturday, and this year s goal is to raise $20,000 (US $18,600). Two local participating ScotiaBank branches in the city are also accepting donations for the campaign: Customers can leave spare change on ribbo


MALAWI: Gay Rights Way to Fight AIDS in Malawi - Official
Reuters (09.15.09) - Friday, September 18, 2009
Mabvuto Banda
Recognizing the rights of Malawi s gay population is essential if the spread of HIV is to be checked, the president s secretary for nutrition and HIV/AIDS said Tuesday. There is a need to incorporate a human rights approach in the delivery of HIV and AIDS services to such risk groups like men who have sexual intercours


OKLAHOMA: University of Oklahoma Offers HPV Vaccine to Female Students
University Wire (09.16.09) - Friday, September 18, 2009
LeighAnne Manwarren, Oklahoma Daily
The University of Oklahoma s Health Services is now offering female students vaccination against human papillomavirus. Gardasil is given in three injections and protects against HPV strains linked to 70 percent of cervical cancers and 90 percent of genital warts. Each shot costs $148 and may be charged to the bursar ac


CALIFORNIA: HIV Prevention Planning Council Endorses Latino Prevention Plan
Bay Area Reporter (San Francisco) (09.17.09) - Friday, September 18, 2009
Seth Hemmelgarn
By a unanimous vote, the city s HIV Prevention Planning Council recently endorsed several proposals to fight HIV among Latino men who have sex with men (MSM). The Latino Action Plan was crafted with input from several researchers and service providers, as well as 157 Latino MSM who were recruited from community venues.


UNITED STATES: Condom Use and High-Risk Sexual Acts in Adult Films: A Comparison of Heterosexual and Homosexual Films
American Journal of Public Health Vol. 99; No. 51: P. S152- S156 (04..09) - Friday, September 18, 2009
Corita R. Grudzen, MD, MSHS; Marc N. Elliott, PhD; Peter R. Kerndt, MD, MPH; Mark A. Schuster, MD, PhD; Robert H. Brook, MD, ScD; Lillian Gelberg, MD, MSPH
The study authors compared the prevalence of condom use during a variety of sexual acts portrayed in homosexual and heterosexual adult films to assess compliance with state Occupational Health and Safety Administration regulations. From Aug. 1, 2005, to July 31, 2006, 50 heterosexual and 50 male homosexual films were r


AFGHANISTAN: Afghan Addicts Risk Triggering AIDS Epidemic
CNN.com (09.14.09) - Friday, September 18, 2009
Nic Robertson
Afghanistan has long been the major supplier of heroin in the world, with poppy cultivation doubling since 2001. The Taliban government toppled that year once outlawed the crop, but now uses it for funding despite international efforts to curtail production. AIDS experts worry the disease will quickly overtake local


UNITED KINGDOM: Almost 90 Percent of Girls Take Up Anti-Cancer Jab
Belfast Telegraph (09.17.09) - Friday, September 18, 2009
Victoria O'Hara
Since its launch in September 2008, a human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccination program in Northern Ireland has enjoyed high uptake: Nearly 90 percent of girls ages 12-13 have received the first dose, with 85 percent and 83 percent, respectively, getting the second and third doses. In announcing the figures, Health Mi


CALIFORNIA: Released California Prison Inmates at Risk for More Health Problems
San Jose Mercury News (09.06.09) - Friday, September 18, 2009
April Dembosky
Federal judges recently found health care in California s prison system so poor as to be unconstitutional. Lacking any other solution, they ordered a reduction in the prison population. Over the next two years, tens of thousands of state prison inmates may be released - including many who have hepatitis C, tuberculosis


UNITED STATES: Third of Teen Girls Get Cancer Vaccine
Newsday (New York) (09.18.09) - Friday, September 18, 2009
David Olmos, Bloomberg News
New estimates from CDC indicate that 37.2 percent of US females ages 13 to 17 received an initial dose of human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine in 2008. The comparable figure for 2007 was 25.1 percent. Administered in three shots over a six-month period, the Gardasil vaccine protects against four strains of HPV: two that


ILLINOIS: AIDS Walk/Run Oct. 3
Windy City Times (Chicago) (09.16.09) - Thursday, September 17, 2009
Registration is continuing for AIDS Run & Walk Chicago 2009, scheduled for Oct. 3 in Grant Park. The AIDS Foundation of Chicago has announced it will give 100 percent of all funds raised by CommunityDirect teams back to participating AIDS service organizations. To be eligible, groups must belong to AFC s Service Pr


MISSOURI: STD Center Has Helped 1,500 St. Louis-Area Youth
Associated Press (09.17.09) - Thursday, September 17, 2009
On Thursday afternoon in St. Louis, 17 young people will be recognized for completing a leadership training program at Supporting Positive Opportunities for and with Teens, a drop- in community center known as The Spot. The center offers HIV and STD testing to anyone age 13 to 24. It opened just one year ago and has al


ETHIOPIA: Ethiopians Offered Free HIV Tests by Text Message
ABC News (09.08.09) - Thursday, September 17, 2009
Barry Malone, Reuters
Ahead of New Year s Day 2002 - celebrated on Sept. 11, 2009, under their nation s 13-month calendar - millions of Ethiopians received a text message urging them to be tested for HIV. New Year! New Life! Test for HIV, test your partner, get your children tested and brighten the future of your family! said the message se


CALIFORNIA: State Cuts Lead to Desert AIDS Project Layoffs
Desert Sun (Palm Springs) (09.10.09) - Thursday, September 17, 2009
Nicole C. Brambila
In the aftermath of AIDS program funding cuts by the Legislature and the governor, the Desert AIDS Project this summer laid off a dozen full- and part-time education and outreach staff. DAP lost approximately $427,000 in state grants for these programs. We did lose, basically, our education department, said DAP spokesp


UNITED STATES: Study Shows Evidence Linking HPV-Related Cancers with Immunosuppression Levels
Oncology Nursing News (09.03.09) - Thursday, September 17, 2009
Tasheema Prince
A new study finds that people with AIDS are at increased risk of developing cancers associated with human papillomavirus (HPV) infection, and that this risk increases as the patients level of immunosuppression rises. The researchers accessed data on 499,230 persons diagnosed with AIDS between Jan. 1, 1980, and Dec. 31,


UNITED STATES: Screening Colonoscopies Urged for HIV-Infected Patients
Reuters Health Medical News (08.20.09) - Thursday, September 17, 2009
A new study finds that HIV-positive patients have a higher prevalence of colonic neoplasms and should be offered screening colonoscopy. Although non-AIDS defining malignancies are rapidly increasing as HIV-infected subjects live longer, little is known about the results of screening for colonic neoplasms (adenomatous p


AUSTRALIA: Push for Chlamydia Sufferers to Give a Script to Partners
Australian Associated Press (09.09.09) - Thursday, September 17, 2009
Danny Rose
Australia logged in excess of 58,000 new chlamydia diagnoses last year, 6,000 more than in 2007, and a move is underway to target STD patients untreated partners. The government of New South Wales has asked medical professionals to weigh in on a policy that would allow chlamydia patients to receive an extra prescript


UNITED STATES: Ryan White Act Renewal Backed at House Hearing
Washington Blade (09.11.09) - Thursday, September 17, 2009
Lou Chibbaro, Jr.
At a recent House Subcommittee on Health hearing, Democratic and Republican members said they support reauthorizing the Ryan White CARE Act beyond its Sept. 30 expiration, though details still need to be negotiated. Under the draft version, Ryan White funding for HIV/AIDS treatment and care services would be extended f


UNITED STATES: US Medicare May Pay for HIV Testing
Reuters (09.10.09) - Thursday, September 17, 2009
Susan Heavey
Under a draft proposal released on Sept. 9, Medicare, the government health insurance program for the elderly and disabled, would pay for HIV testing for its enrollees. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) said it has sufficient evidence to show that such screenings could help detect the infection soone


MISSOURI: AIDS Project to Get Grant
News-Leader (Springfield) (09.06.09) - Wednesday, September 16, 2009
Rep. Roy Blunt (R-Mo.) has announced that the AIDS Project of the Ozarks will get a $197,000 grant from the US Department of Health and Human Services. The Ryan White program funds will help provide comprehensive medical care for some 600 area HIV/AIDS patients. This program is designed to augment medical coverage for


FLORIDA: Councilwoman to Speak on Sex Education at Conference
Florida Today (Brevard) (09.14.09) - Wednesday, September 16, 2009
Kimberly C. Moore
Palm Bay City Council member Michele Paccione has been announced as a keynote speaker for the Southeastern Urban Initiative for Reproductive Health Regional Summit, which will be held Sept. 30-Oct. 2 in Atlanta. A former president of the local chapter of the National Organization for Women, Paccione is credited with he


UNITED KINGDOM: Boots Offers Anti-Cancer Jab at 405 pounds
The Mirror (London) (09.11.09) - Wednesday, September 16, 2009
Pharmacists at the Boots retail drug chain have begun administering the human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine Cervarix in 134 stores in England and Wales. The Boots program is open to women ages 18 to 54. Last September, the National Health Service launched an effort to vaccinate females ages 12 to 18. Older women can ben


CALIFORNIA:: Mayor Gavin Newsom Orders Hepatitis B Educational Materials to Be Distributed to the City's Newlyweds
Asian Week (09.09.09) - Wednesday, September 16, 2009
Angela Pang
Under a new executive directive signed by Mayor Gavin Newsom, all couples registering for marriage licenses in San Francisco will be offered information on hepatitis B, as well as where to access the vaccine against it, when they receive the required marriage license booklet. The San Francisco Department of Public Heal


UNITED KINGDOM: Sexually Transmitted Infection Risk Exposure Among Black and Minority Ethnic Youth in Northwest London: Findings from a Study Translating a Sexually Transmitted Infection Risk-Reduction Intervention to the UK Setting
Sexually Transmitted Infections Vol. 85: P. 283-289 (08.09.09) - Wednesday, September 16, 2009
M. Gerressu; G. Elam; R. Shain; C. Bonell; G. Brook; J. Dimmitt Champion; R. French; J. Elford; G. Hart; J. Stephenson; J. Imrie
Effective interventions to address the disproportionate impact of sexually transmitted infections (STIs) among young black women in the United Kingdom are lacking, noted the investigators. Thus, the Young Brent Project explored the nature and context of sexual risk-taking in young people to inform the translation of an


FRANCE: Online Chatter a Promoter of Unsafe Sex: Expert
Australian Associated Press (09.10.09) - Wednesday, September 16, 2009
Danny Rose
In a survey of some 2,600 users of a French Web service for finding partners, most gay men chatting online did not anticipate later having unprotected sex. However, online discussions of sexual fantasies often preceded sex without a condom, the study found. Something very specific is created in the dynamic of chatting


CANADA: Fewer Calgary Catholic Students Took Free Cancer Vaccine
Calgary Herald (09.12.09) - Wednesday, September 16, 2009
Michelle Lang
Just 38 percent of fifth-grade Catholic schoolgirls in Calgary received at least one human papillomavirus (HPV) immunization last fall, compared with 75 percent of girls the same age in public schools, new data show. While the provincial program offered free HPV vaccines at schools, the Calgary Catholic School District


UNITED STATES: Girl Rejects Gardasil, Loses Path to Citizenship
ABC News (09.11.09) - Wednesday, September 16, 2009
Susan Donaldson James
A teenager s quest for US citizenship is in jeopardy because she refuses to comply with an immigration requirement to be vaccinated against human papillomavirus (HPV), the cause of most cervical cancer cases. Born in Britain in 1992, Simone Davis was adopted at age three by her paternal grandmother, Jean Davis, who mar


CALIFORNIA: Wiggins Bill Headed for Governor's Desk
Contra Costa Times (09.11.09) - Wednesday, September 16, 2009
Times-Standard (Eureka)
Just before the end of this year s session, California s Legislature approved a measure mandating health care coverage for human papillomavirus vaccinations. Under SB 158, health service plan contracts and health insurance plans that cover cervical cancer treatment must also cover vaccination against HPV, the cause of


GEORGIA: Emory to Welcome AIDS Vaccine Conference
Atlanta Journal-Constitution (09.15.09) - Tuesday, September 15, 2009
Shelia M. Poole
On Monday, the Global HIV Vaccine Enterprise announced that Emory University s Center for AIDS Research will be the local host of AIDS Vaccine 2010, a global scientific conference for new research on potential HIV/AIDS vaccines. More than 1,000 participants are expected at the Sept. 28-Oct. 1, 2010, gathering, includin


IDAHO: Idaho to Join in Chlamydia Study
Associated Press (09.04.09) - Tuesday, September 15, 2009
The University of Idaho is joining a worldwide effort aimed at learning more about the most common bacterial STD, chlamydia. The $12.5 million National Institutes of Health project is being led by the University of Maryland and is supported by the Arkansas Children s Hospital Research Institute, the F. Edward Hebert Sc


AFRICA: Germany Backs West African AIDS Prevention Efforts
Agence France Presse (09.10.09) - Tuesday, September 15, 2009
On Thursday in Abuja, Nigeria , Germany signed an agreement to provide 8 million euro (US $11.7 million) to support the AIDS prevention and reproductive health initiatives of the Economic Community of West African States. A statement from the 15- member ECOWAS said the agreement takes effect immediately, and the money


TEXAS: Survey: Parents Overestimate Role in Teens' Sex Education
Austin American-Statesman (09.02.09) - Tuesday, September 15, 2009
Melissa B. Taboada
Parents in Austin are not as important in the sexual education of their children as they think they are. That is the conclusion researchers are drawing from a survey of teens and parents sponsored by abstinence-based sexual education curriculum provider Austin LifeGuard. While more than 40 percent of surveyed parents s


CALIFORNIA: Santa Cruz AIDS Project to Close Drop-In Center
San Jose Mercury News (09.11.09) - Tuesday, September 15, 2009
Liz Kersjes
After 12 years of operation, the Drop-In Center of the Santa Cruz AIDS Project will close on Sept. 15 due to the loss of all its state funding last month. The center at 412 Front St. served about 900 people monthly, running a needle-exchange program (NEP); offering free HIV testing, counseling and prevention workshops;


UNITED STATES: Does Infection Boost Prostate Cancer Risk?
Washington Post (09.10.09) - Tuesday, September 15, 2009
Rob Stein
A new study further supports the theory that the presence of antibodies against Trichomonas vaginalis (T. vaginalis) is associated with an increased risk of prostate cancer, researchers say. Trichomoniasis, a common STD caused by the single-celled protozoan parasite T. vaginalis, infects an estimated 174 million people


GERMANY: Hitler AIDS Ad Stirs Controversy
United Press International (09.11.09) - Tuesday, September 15, 2009
A German charity s new anti-AIDS campaign has sparked outrage due to its depiction of Adolph Hitler having sex. The video shows blurry but explicit images of a nude man and woman engaged in sex, then reveals the man to be Hitler as it displays the tag line, AIDS Is a Mass Murderer. Commissioned by the AIDS awareness gr


TEXAS: Dallas Leads Nation in Repeat Teen Births
Dallas Morning News (09.01.09) - Tuesday, September 15, 2009
Robert T. Garrett
Texas has the nation s highest rate of teen mothers who give birth for at least a second time, according to Child Trends, a non-partisan, Washington-based group that advocates for children s well-being. Among births to Texas teens in 2006, 23 percent were not the mother s first delivery. For first-time as well as repea


NEW YORK: New York May Tighten Review of Inmate HIV/Hepatitis Care
Associated Press (09.04.09) - Tuesday, September 15, 2009
Jessica M. Pasko
Gov. David Paterson is considering a bill that would require the New York State Health Department to monitor the care of state and local prisoners with HIV or hepatitis C. Under the measure, the department would be responsible for conducting annual treatment reviews, mandating necessary changes, and releasing annual re


CALIFORNIA: AIDS/HIV Awareness Focus of Seminar
Desert Sun (Palm Springs) (09.12.09) - Monday, September 14, 2009
Erica Felci
On Thursday, the Hi-Desert Medical Center will host a free community seminar about HIV/AIDS and STDs. The center is partnering with the Desert AIDS Project for the 6 p.m. gathering at the hospital s Helen Gray Education Center, 6601 White Feather Rd. For more information and registration, which is required, call 760-36


KENTUCKY: AIDS Walk Attracts 5,000 to Support Cause
Courier Journal (Louisville) (09.13.09) - Monday, September 14, 2009
Antoinette Konz
The 17th annual Louisville AIDS Walk took place on Sunday. The walk, the state s largest annual HIV/AIDS fundraiser, benefits people living with the disease by contributing to medication co-payments, transportation, counseling, food, housing, children s programs, and legal services. Around 5,000 participants helped rai


TENNESSEE: Church Places Abstinence and Safe-Sex Billboards
Associated Press (09.05.09) - Monday, September 14, 2009
Using state grant funds, a Memphis church has launched a billboard campaign aimed at preventing teen pregnancy. Most of St. Andrew A.M.E. s billboards promote abstinence, but one reads, Don t make love without a glove. The Rev. Kenneth Robinson, who also serves as chief health officer for the Memphis and Shelby County


INDIA: India Patent Rejections Welcomed by HIV/AIDS Groups
Reuters (09.09.09) - Monday, September 14, 2009
Bappa Majumdar
Health officials and AIDS advocates hailed India s recent rejection of patent applications for two HIV/AIDS drugs. India s Patent Office denied a patent to US firm Gilead for the drug tenofovir and to Irish firm Tibotec Pharmaceuticals for darunavir. This is a welcome decision and we have always been supporting [the co


UGANDA: HIV Subtype Linked to Increased Likelihood for Dementia
Science Daily (08.29.09) - Monday, September 14, 2009
Almost half of patients with advanced HIV infection suffer at least mild cognitive impairment, and about 5 percent have dementia , a severe form of cognitive impairment. In previous research, Ned Sacktor, MD, and colleagues noted that 31 percent of patients presenting at an infectious-disease clinic in Kampala,


UNITED KINGDOM: Telltale Signs
The Guardian (London) (08.26.09) - Monday, September 14, 2009
Mary O'Hara
A new report presents some encouraging news about HIV in the workplace and offers suggestions for securing further job- related protection for those with the virus. Britain s National Aids Trust (NAT) tapped the gay social networking site Gaydar for participants in an online survey among people with HIV. More than half


AUSTRALIA: HIV-Positive and They Don't Know It
The Age (Melbourne) (09.04.09) - Monday, September 14, 2009
Nick Miller
Many HIV-positive gay men in Melbourne do not realize they are infected, according to a new prevalence study by the Burnet Institute. Researchers surveyed gay men at city sexual health clinics and gay social venues, enrolling 745 participants who were interviewed and given an oral swab HIV test. Of the men, 13.4 percen


SOUTH CAROLINA: A Cure for the Stigma: Medicines Have Advanced, but Stigma Is Biggest Challenge in HIV/AIDS Battle
Anderson Independent Mail (08.29.09) - Monday, September 14, 2009
Charmaine Smith-Miles
In South Carolina, whose AIDS case rate ranks eighth among US states, stigma remains a major obstacle to HIV prevention and treatment efforts. In 2007, the state health department reported 742 AIDS cases for a rate of nearly 17 per 100,000 people. Yet, South Carolinians are often reluctant to talk about the disease. Dr


UNITED STATES: FDA: Merck's Gardasil Stops Genital Warts in Boys
Associated Press (09.04.09) - Monday, September 14, 2009
Matthew Perrone
In documents posted online, the Food and Drug Administration ( FDA ) said the human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine Gardasil is 90 percent effective in preventing genital warts in males. Already approved for use in females ages nine to 26, the Merck & Co. vaccine blocks HPV strains linked to 70 percent of cervical


UNITED STATES: FDA Panel Backs Glaxo Cervical Cancer Vaccine
Reuters (09.09.09) - Monday, September 14, 2009
Lisa Richwine
A Food and Drug Administration advisory panel has said GlaxoSmithKline s human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine Cervarix is safe and effective for females ages 10-25. The committee voted 11-1 in favor of Cervarix s safety and 12-1 in support of its efficacy. FDA typically follows its expert panels recommendations. Som


UNITED STATES: Jay-Z Designs Arthur Ashe T-Shirt for Charity
Associated Press (09.01.09) - Friday, September 04, 2009
Rap mogul Jay-Z has designed a T-shirt with the image of tennis great Arthur Ashe that will be sold during the US Open to benefit the Arthur Ashe Endowment for the Defeat of AIDS and the US Tennis Association s National Junior Tennis and Learning. Ashe co-founded NJTL, which this year is celebrating its 40th anniversar


SOUTH CAROLINA: 160 at Greenville High Tested for TB
Greenville News (09.04.09) - Friday, September 04, 2009
Liv Osby
Health officials said Thursday that TB tests have been administered to about 160 people at Greenville High School, where a person with an active case of the disease was present between January and May. Because a person with active TB can transmit the disease before he or she is ill enough to seek care, the Department o


CALIFORNIA: Stop AIDS Looks at New Prevention Techniques
Bay Area Reporter (San Francisco) (09.03.09) - Friday, September 04, 2009
Brian Gougherty
At the San Francisco LGBT Community Center, Stop AIDS Project (SAP) recently presented the results of a survey that collected men s feedback on specific structural interventions proposed for making bars, sex clubs and Web sites more supportive of safer sex. Researchers in the Where study interviewed almost 200 men, chi


ILLINOIS: Renslow Talks Barebacking
Windy City Times (Chicago) (09.02.09) - Friday, September 04, 2009
Sam Worley
In July, International Mr. Leather President Chuck Renslow announced that vendors in the annual convention s marketplace will no longer be allowed to sell or distribute materials that promote or advocate barebacking, or unprotected anal sex. In a letter notifying vendors of the change, Renslow wrote, Too many in our co


UNITED STATES: Scientists Locate Antibodies that Can Stop Advance of AIDS
Los Angeles Times (09.04.09) - Friday, September 04, 2009
Thomas H. Maugh II
In a new study, researchers reported that two antibodies to HIV could prove to be keys to a vaccine to stop the progress of the infection to AIDS. The Scripps Research Institute-based team found the antibodies, called PG9 and PG16, in people who remained asymptomatic after infection. This is opening up a whole new area


PHILIPPINES: Families of Philippine Seafarers Exposed to High Risks of HIV Infection
Xinhua News Agency (08.28.09) - Friday, September 04, 2009
Men - chiefly seafarers - returning from contract work abroad accounted for 35 percent of new HIV infections in the Philippines last year, according to the country s National AIDS Council. The confluence of mobile men with money away from family and social connections and with the interaction with local communities and


UGANDA: The Battle in Uganda over Female Condoms
Time Magazine (08.30.09) - Friday, September 04, 2009
Nick Wadhams
In July, Uganda s government announced it would begin a female condom program to prevent HIV, distributing 100,000 units in two regions using money from the UN Population Fund. The government said it would extend the pilot program after a year if it found donor support. Civil society groups lauded the initiative for pr


FLORIDA: First Big Decline in AIDS-Related Deaths in 8 Years, State Reports
Orlando Sentinel (09.01.09) - Friday, September 04, 2009
Fernando Quintero
A new report from the Florida Department of Health documents the state s first significant decline in AIDS death rates since 1999. Man Up: The Crisis of HIV/AIDS Among Florida s Men shows that from 2006 to 2007, AIDS-related death rates fell by 16 percent among black men, 15 percent among Hispanic men, and 11 percent a


CALIFORNIA: Desert Regional to Sponsor AIDS Walk, Donates $25,000
Desert Sun (Palm Springs) (08.30.09) - Thursday, September 03, 2009
Nina Ronda
Oct. 31 is the date for 2009 AIDS Walk Palm Springs, and for the second year Desert Regional Medical Center has signed on as the event s presenting sponsor. With potentially huge state budget cuts to health care, it s more important than ever for people to help us support great organizations like DAP, said Cliff Daniel


ILLINOIS: Online Tool Connects Residents to Food Resources
Associated Press (09.02.09) - Thursday, September 03, 2009
The Illinois Food and Nutrition Advocacy Partnership, a consortium of community partners that includes the AIDS Foundation of Chicago, has introduced a new Web site to help Chicagoland residents in need of food assistance. The online tool asks users to enter a ZIP code and answer questions about the ages of family memb


NORTH CAROLINA: HIV/AIDS Funding Cut Won't Limit Treatment
News & Record (Greensboro) (09.02.09) - Thursday, September 03, 2009
Gerald Witt
Health officials say a $3 million cut to the 2009-10 budget of the state AIDS Drug Assistance Program should not affect the patients who count on it for their medicines. [ADAP] is really solid, said Addison Ore, director of the Triad Health Project, which advocates for Guilford County s approximately 1,600 HIV/AIDS pat


NORTH CAROLINA: Forsyth Syphilis Cases Way Up
Winston-Salem Journal (08.29.09) - Thursday, September 03, 2009
Richard Craver
On Saturday, local and state health officials visited Forsyth County neighborhoods to raise awareness of syphilis and offer screening in areas where clusters of the STD have been detected this year. The county leads the state in new syphilis reports, with diagnoses of infectious cases doubling from 70 to 140 in the thr


IRAN: Totally Drug-Resistant Tuberculosis Bacilli Emerge in Iran
Reuters Health Medical News (09.01.09) - Thursday, September 03, 2009
In a new study, scientists in Iran report the emergence of new forms of resistant bacilli (totally drug-resistant [TDR] or super extensively drug-resistant [XDR] tuberculosis [TB] strains) among patients with multidrug-resistant TB (MDR-TB). Of 146 MDR-TB strains, eight XDR isolates (5.4 percent) and 15 TDR isolates (1


BRAZIL: Brazil Faces Fresh HIV/AIDS Fight
CNN.com (08.27.09) - Thursday, September 03, 2009
Brazil s response to its HIV epidemic, hailed as a model throughout the world, is changing to adapt to the evolving face of the disease. Widespread access to effective antiretroviral HIV medications has lengthened the lifespan of Brazil s HIV-positive population and left them susceptible to diseases associated with agi


UNITED NATIONS: UN Guide for Sex Education Generates Opposition
New York Times (09.03.09) - Thursday, September 03, 2009
Stephen Erlanger
Even before they are published, proposed sex education guidelines from the UN have proven so controversial that their release date has been moved back and a key sponsor - the UN Population Fund (UNPF) - has asked to have its name removed from the materials. The UNESCO guidelines have been attacked by conservative and r


UNITED STATES: A Look at States' Legislation on an HPV Vaccine
Associated Press (08.31.09) - Thursday, September 03, 2009
In 2006, CDC s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices recommended routine vaccination against human papillomavirus (HPV) for girls ages 11-12. States have approached the issue variously through school mandates, requiring insurance providers to cover the vaccine, educational campaigns targeting parents and referri


SOUTH AFRICA: Controversial Priest to Remain Working in South Africa
Deutsche Presse-Agentur (09.01.09) - Wednesday, September 02, 2009
Even though he is known for disagreeing with Catholic Church policies on AIDS and condoms, a German priest has been cleared to continue fighting the disease in Cape Town. A spokesperson for Stefan Hippler s home diocese in Trier, Germany , said, Despite his critical statements, Hippler has earned great achievements wit


INDIA: Police Arrest Six for Supplying Blood Tainted with Hepatitis B, C to Hospitals in Northern India
Canadian Press (09.01.09) - Wednesday, September 02, 2009
Biswajeet Banerjee
A doctor and five other people are facing charges of spreading infectious diseases after they supplied blood contaminated with hepatitis B and C to blood banks in northern India . In raids last month on blood banks in Lucknow, police seized 60 units of blood ready to be delivered to hospitals and private clinics. Accor


OHIO: HIV Agency Finally Gets State Money
Cincinnati Enquirer (09.01.09) - Wednesday, September 02, 2009
Mark Curnutte
Despite a six-week delay in the delivery of federal funds, Cincinnati-based STOP AIDS was able to provide uninterrupted care to its 1,000 clients, said Executive Director Amy McMahon. The issue was resolved last week when the organization received $170,000 from the Ohio Department of Health, which disburses dollars fro


CALIFORNIA: Billy DeFrank Center Cutting All Paid Staff, Suspending HIV Testing
San Jose Mercury News (09.01.09) - Wednesday, September 02, 2009
Sandra Gonzales
Volunteers will replace paid staff at the Billy DeFrank LGBT Community Center in San Jose, which is struggling with the loss of more than half of its budget. It will also suspend its HIV testing program. The amount of revenue coming in will support keeping the doors open for all volunteers, but not pay for program staf


CALIFORNIA: Sonoma County's HIV Clinic Likely to Close
Press Democrat (Santa Rosa) (08.29.09) - Wednesday, September 02, 2009
Martin Espinoza
The economic downturn has the decades-old system of HIV care in Sonoma County dismantling right before our eyes, said Lisa Albertson, chair of the County Commission on AIDS. Among the possible casualties is a county HIV clinic in downtown Santa Rosa that serves about 500 clients. Public health officials are exploring a


UNITED STATES: Reducing Risky Sexual Behavior and Substance Use Among Currently and Formerly Homeless Adults Living with HIV
American Journal of Public Health Vol. 99; No. 6: P. 1100-1107 (06.01.09) - Wednesday, September 02, 2009
Mary Jane Rotheram-Borus, PhD; Katherine Desmond, MS; W. Scott Comulada, DrPH; Elizabeth Mayfield Arnold, PhD; Mallory Johnson, PhD
The researchers examined the efficacy of an intervention, the Healthy Living Program, in reducing risky sexual behavior and substance use among HIV-positive adults who were marginally housed (homeless at least some point over a period of 37 months). With a population of 936 HIV-positive adults, the authors had previous


CANADA: Stephen Lewis Dares Canadians to Support Grassroots AIDS Projects in Africa
Canadian Press (08.30.09) - Wednesday, September 02, 2009
Amy Fuller
With the launching of the new Dare to Remember campaign, the Stephen Lewis Foundation is asking people to go beyond their comfort zones and do something personally meaningful to raise money for HIV/AIDS. Lewis, Canada s former UN ambassador and now a professor of global health at Hamilton s McMaster University and co-


VIRGINIA; DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA: HPV Vaccine a Suggestion, Not Mandate in District of Columbia, Virginia
Associated Press (08.31.09) - Wednesday, September 02, 2009
Dena Potter
Following federal officials 2006 recommendation that girls ages 11-12 be immunized against human papillomavirus (HPV), about two dozen states have considered mandating the vaccination. However, officials in most of the states declined to do so due to funding constraints, concerns about the safety of Merck & Co. s v


MISSISSIPPI: HIV/AIDS Focus of Campaign
Clarion Ledger (Jackson) (09.01.09) - Tuesday, September 01, 2009
Rap-It-Up, a national HIV/AIDS awareness campaign, will be presented by the state Health Department and Black Entertainment Television on Thursday from 10 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. in the Rose E. McCoy Auditorium of Jackson State University. Other partners in the effort include Building Bridges, My Brother s Keeper, Grace Hou


AUSTRALIA: New South Wales Government Campaign Against Sexually Transmitted Disease
Australian Associated Press (08.30.09) - Tuesday, September 01, 2009
New South Wales has launched a new STD awareness campaign with a bold question: How many people have you slept with? NSW Chief Health Officer Kerry Chant said the theme of the outreach - sleeping with one is sleeping with many - is a call for young people to use condoms and get tested and treated for STDs. Imagine all


MISSOURI: County Might Institute Fees for STD Testing
Columbia Daily Tribune (08.27.09) - Tuesday, September 01, 2009
Jodie Jackson Jr.
Public health officials in Boone County, Missouri - home of the flagship campus of the University of Missouri - want to begin charging for STD testing, but at the same time worry that fees will deter some people from getting tested. Stephanie Browning, director of the Columbia-Boone County Department of Public Health a


ARKANSAS: HIV-Fear Claim Fails as Shelter Is Cleared
Arkansas Democrat-Gazette (Little Rock) (08.29.09) - Tuesday, September 01, 2009
Seth Blomeley
After an all-day hearing on Friday, the Arkansas Fair Housing Commission voted 4-3 to reject a discrimination complaint filed against a local homeless shelter by an HIV-positive man and his wife. The couple alleged that Our House evicted the man after one day because he has the virus. Our House Executive Director


MAINE: Hepatitis A Death Traced to Island
Bangor Daily News (08.31.09) - Tuesday, September 01, 2009
Bill Trotter
Six cases of acute hepatitis A infection have been traced to the same house on Swans Island in Hancock County, state health officials said on Sunday. Among four cases that have been confirmed, one patient died and another was hospitalized. All the patients were out-of-state residents who had vacationed at the house in


UNITED STATES: Methamphetamine Use, Sexual Activity, Patient- Provider Communication, and Medication Adherence Among HIV- Infected Patients in Care, San Francisco, 2004-2006
AIDS Care Vol. 21; No. 5: P. 575-582 (05.01.09) - Tuesday, September 01, 2009
Carina Marquez; Samuel J. Mitchell; C. Bradley Hare; Malcolm John; Jeffrey D. Klausner
While numerous studies examine methamphetamine use and associated risky sexual behaviors in HIV-uninfected individuals, few studies have surveyed HIV-infected individuals in the health care setting, the authors wrote. To assess the frequency and trends of methamphetamine use, sexual activity, injection drug use, patie


LESOTHO: Daring Festival Challenges AIDS Stigma
Guelph Mercury (Ontario, Canada) (08.29.09) - Tuesday, September 01, 2009
Rob O'Flanagan
The Leribe Anti-Stigma and Discrimination Festival, held in an open field in Hlotse on Friday, drew more than 1,000 people determined to raise their voices in defense of those living with HIV/AIDS. HIV/AIDS patients in Lesotho have endured a long history of discrimination and shame - a situation that is beginning to ch


DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA: District Launches HIV-Test Campaign
Washington Post (08.29.09) - Tuesday, September 01, 2009
Darryl Fears
On Friday, Mayor Adrian M. Fenty launched an HIV testing campaign, D.C. Takes On HIV, which will feature messages on television, radio, billboards, and Metro trains and buses. The District has a confirmed HIV/AIDS prevalence of 3 percent - the highest for any major city in the nation. We re encouraging all residents to


ARKANSAS: Shelter Accused of HIV Eviction
Arkansas Democrat-Gazette (Little Rock) (08.28.09) - Monday, August 31, 2009
Kristin Netterstrom
In a complaint presented Friday to the Arkansas Fair Housing Commission, a homeless man says he was evicted from a Little Rock shelter because he has HIV. The complaint says Our House, which receives federal funds and provides long-term housing and education training for the working homeless, denied the man housing in


COLORADO: Hepatitis C Infected Patients at 35, Feds Say
Denver Post (08.29.09) - Monday, August 31, 2009
Felisa Cardona
According to federal court records, the number of hepatitis C virus cases potentially linked to a surgical technician s drug-theft scheme has risen to 35. The HCV-infected worker, now fired, is accused of injecting herself with a powerful painkiller meant for patients, then refilling the used syringes with saline solut


UTAH: Debate Continues over Utah Sex Education Changes
Salt Lake Tribune (08.26.09) - Monday, August 31, 2009
Lisa Schencker
At a recent meeting in Murray to discuss sex education in Utah schools, state Rep. Lynn Hemingway (D-Salt Lake City) presented a draft bill that would require districts to offer both an abstinence-based and a comprehensive curriculum. Parental consent would be necessary for students to participate in the program offeri


CALIFORNIA: Solano Ending HIV/AIDS Services
Times-Herald (Vallejo) (08.30.09) - Monday, August 31, 2009
Lanz Christian Banes
Solano County is no longer offering HIV testing, monitoring, prevention or outreach programs, or AIDS case management due to $80 million in state Office of AIDS (OA) funds being slashed. The result of the funding loss locally is there are virtually no programs, said Peter Turner, supervising health education specialist


UNITED KINGDOM: The English National Chlamydia Screening Program: Variations in Positivity in 2007/2008
Sexually Transmitted Diseases Vol. 36; No. 8: P. 522-527 (08.01.09) - Monday, August 31, 2009
Ian Simms; Alireza Talebi; Johanna Rhia; Paddy Horner; Rebecca S. French; Randall Sarah; Mary Macintosh
In the current study, investigators examined the rate of positivity in the English National Chlamydia Screening Program in 2007-2008. Among 334,902 chlamydia tests performed, 29 percent were for male patients, among whom 7.6 percent had positive diagnoses. Among women, 9.3 percent were positive for chlamydia. Positivit


MALAWI: Malawi: New Data Show Greater Risk of AIDS Among Gay Men
Inter Press Service (08.18.09) - Monday, August 31, 2009
Christi Van Der Westhuizen
A recent study finds Malawian men who have sex with men (MSM) are at greater risk for HIV/AIDS, yet prevention initiatives fail to target them. The survey of 202 men included a sample of 20 originally recruited from the researchers contacts, with each then asked to recruit nine or 10 other MSM. Some 54 percent had a bo


CANADA: Drug Users Back Proposed Needle Exchange in Victoria
Canwest New Service (08.27.09) - Monday, August 31, 2009
Matthew Pearson
Toward the goal of having a program operating in a fixed site by winter, an association of intravenous drug users in Victoria is throwing its support behind a proposed needle- exchange program (NEP) location it had previously rejected. In a July letter to health officials, the Society of Living Intravenous Drug Users (


DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA: Amid City Epidemic, Barry Proposes Mandatory HIV Tests for Inmates
Washington Post (08.30.09) - Monday, August 31, 2009
Martin Ricard
The District of Columbia screens all inmates for HIV under a voluntary opt-out program launched in 2006 by the Department of Corrections (DOC). In July, City Council member Marion Barry (D-Ward 8) proposed a bill that would mandate inmate screening as one response to curb the District s high HIV rate. Three percent of


WEST VIRGINIA: WVU's Condom Caravan Features 10-Cent Thursdays
Associated Press (08.27.09) - Friday, August 28, 2009
West Virginia University is using the Condom Caravan program to support safer sex on campus. Some 30 varieties are available at a bargain price: 25 cents each, or five for $1. The outreach takes place on Tuesdays at the Student Health Services in the Health Sciences Center from 5 to 7 p.m.; the program visits various c


ILLINOIS: AIDS Patients Taught About Food Safety
United Press International (08.25.09) - Friday, August 28, 2009
The University of Illinois Chicago School of Public Health has received a three-year, $600,000 grant to educate AIDS patients about food safety. Scientists from the university noted that AIDS patients with severely compromised immune systems are at risk of developing life-threatening conditions from food-borne illnesse


UNITED STATES: J&J Unit Warns of Deadly Skin Reaction with HIV Drug
Bloomberg News (08.26.09) - Friday, August 28, 2009
Catherine Larkin
In a letter distributed via e-mail by the Food and Drug Administration on Wednesday, Johnson & Johnson warned doctors of reports of a deadly skin reaction and liver failure linked to its HIV drug Intelence (etravirine). Pamela Van Houten, spokesperson for J&J s Tibotec Therapeutics unit, said in a phone intervi


NORTH CAROLINA: Syphilis on the Rise; Officials Urge More Testing
Q Notes (Charlotte) (08.08.09) - Friday, August 28, 2009
Matt Comer
Syphilis cases in Mecklenburg County have more than doubled in 2009, prompting health department officials to urge more testing. From Jan. 1 through the end of July, Mecklenburg County logged 98 new syphilis cases, compared to 45 cases reported in the same period in 2009. Only Forsyth County has seen a higher increase


CALIFORNIA: City Postpones Cutting AIDS Contracts Until October
Bay Area Reporter (San Francisco) (08.27.09) - Friday, August 28, 2009
Matthew S. Bajko
Local AIDS service providers have been told the San Francisco Department of Public Health is delaying any contract cuts until Oct. 15. SFDPH is postponing action to give city supervisors time to formulate a response to the loss of nearly $4 million in state HIV funding. We have informed our contractors that by mid-Octo


CALIFORNIA: Budget Cuts Close AIDS Clearinghouse
Advocate (08.26.09) - Friday, August 28, 2009
Chris Jai Centeno
The Los Angeles-based California AIDS Clearinghouse will cease operations next week due to state budget cuts, said officials. CAC developed culturally competent HIV prevention materials and provided technical assistance and training to HIV/AIDS programs. The organization received notice that its funding had been elimin


THE NETHERLANDS: Opting Out Increases HIV Testing in a Large Sexually Transmitted Infections Outpatient Clinic
Sexually Transmitted Infections Vol. 85: P. 249-255 (08.01.09) - Friday, August 28, 2009
R.L.J. Heijman; I.G. Stolte; H.F.J. Thiesbrummel; E. van Leent; R.A. Coutinho; J.S.A. Fennema; M. Prins
The current study examines the effect of an opt-out strategy on HIV testing uptake and identifies factors associated with refusing the test. The study was based in a sexually transmitted infection (STI) clinic in Amsterdam that, in January 2007, replaced provider-initiated testing with opt-out testing. The data that we


MAINE: Drug Needle Exchanges Threatened
Bangor Daily News (08.26.09) - Friday, August 28, 2009
Meg Haskell
Needle-exchange programs would be able to receive federal funds under an appropriations bill approved by the US House. However, many advocates are lobbying against a part of the measure regarding where NEPs can be located. The Senate will later this year consider its own version of the Health and Human Services appropr


GEORGIA: Gay Obama Appointee Convenes First Town Hall Meeting on National HIV/AIDS Strategy
Southern Voice (Atlanta) (08.28.09) - Friday, August 28, 2009
Dyana Bagby
Tuesday at the 2009 National HIV Prevention Conference in Atlanta, the director of the White House Office of National AIDS Policy kicked off the first in a series of town hall meetings aimed at soliciting public feedback to help guide the creation of a national HIV/AIDS strategy. As Jeff Crowley took the stage, he was


LOUISIANA: Church Leaders Join Fight Against AIDS
The Advocate (Baton Rouge) (08.21.09) - Thursday, August 27, 2009
Ellyn Couvillion
In a program being piloted by the Louisiana Conference of the United Methodist Church, seven Baton Rouge congregations - First United Methodist Church, Unitarian Church, Metropolitan Community Church, St. Mark United Methodist Church, Greater New Guide Baptist Church, Broadmoor Presbyterian Church, and St. Paul Catholi


BRAZIL: In Brazil, You've Got Mail and Possibly an STD
Associated Press (08.21.09) - Thursday, August 27, 2009
A new Web site created by the Brazilian Health Ministry lets visitors e-mail a virtual postcard to inform their sex partners that they may be infected with an STD. The cards suggest that the recipients visit a doctor for screening. The cards may help people tackle these diseases directly and with minimum exposure, said


UNITED KINGDOM: More Contracting HIV Abroad
UK Press Association (08.25.09) - Thursday, August 27, 2009
New data show that 42 percent of all new HIV cases in North West England are the result of transmissions that occurred outside the country. Seventy-four percent of these new patients are black Africans. The 2008 figures also showed that the number of regional residents receiving HIV treatment, 5,767, was up by 11 perce


CALIFORNIA: Cuts Hurt HIV/AIDS Support Group
Union Democrat (Sonora) (08.25.09) - Thursday, August 27, 2009
Walt Cook
The HIV/AIDS organization Sierra HOPE (Health Opportunities, Programs and Education) has seen its budget for the current fiscal year slashed by more than a third. The nonprofit has experienced a $62,000 cut in state money and a $42,000 in federal funding cut this year, said Executive Director Jerry Cadotte. The agency


DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA: D.C.'s Ex-Dealers Back on Streets - Saving Lives
Washington Post (08.26.09) - Thursday, August 27, 2009
Darryl Fears
Wards 7 and 8 are home to some of the District s highest HIV/AIDS infection rates and to what prevention experts call hard-to-reach populations, those who are least likely to be tested for and educated about the virus and the most likely to spread it. Now, an organization working to combat HIV/AIDS there is tapping the


TAIWAN: Smokers Seen Twice as Likely to Develop Active TB
Reuters (08.24.09) - Thursday, August 27, 2009
Tan Ee Lyn
A representative study of nearly 18,000 Taiwanese finds that those who smoke have double the risk of developing active TB compared to those who have never smoked. Lead author Hsien-Ho Lin, a post-doctoral fellow at Brigham and Women s Hospital in Boston, and colleagues tracked 17,699 people in Taiwan, of whom 13,254 ha


SPAIN: Penile Cancer Linked to Sexually Transmitted Virus, Study Says
Bloomberg News (08.25.09) - Thursday, August 27, 2009
Michelle Fay Cortez
Nearly half of penile cancer cases are linked to human papillomavirus (HPV), according to a new study led by Silvia de Sanjose of the cancer epidemiology research program at the Barcelona-based Catalan Institute of Oncology. The investigators reviewed 31 studies involving 1,466 men with penile cancer, finding HPV prese


UNITED KINGDOM: Jade Goody Cancer Battle Prompts 20 Percent Increase in Smear Tests
Daily Telegraph (London) (08.25.09) - Thursday, August 27, 2009
Simon Johnson
Over 450,500 cervical smears were processed in Scotland from March 31, 2008, to March 31, 2009, an increase of more than 75,000 (20 percent) over the previous year and the largest screening increase seen since 2001-02, health officials announced on Tuesday. One factor contributing to the upturn in Pap screening uptake


VIRGINIA; DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA: Schools Urging Girls to Get HPV Vaccine
Washington Post (08.21.09) - Thursday, August 27, 2009
Yamiche Alcindor
This year for the first time, schools in the District of Columbia and Virginia are asking parents of sixth-grade girls to vaccinate them against human papillomavirus (HPV). In the District, parents who decline to do so must sign a waiver affirming the decision. In Virginia, parents can opt out without a waiver, said Sa


INDIA: HIV-Positive Boy Driven Out of School in India
Xinhua News Agency (08.24.09) - Wednesday, August 26, 2009
On Monday, relatives of a nine-year-old with HIV filed a complaint against the principal of Belmonda Primary School in Allahabad, Uttar Pradesh, for expelling the boy. The principal said he did so because he feared the youth would infect other children. Both the boy s parents died of AIDS. According to a report by the


SOUTH AFRICA: Anglo American Says 18 Percent of Southern African Staff HIV-Positive
Bloomberg News (08.24.09) - Wednesday, August 26, 2009
Carli Lourens
South Africa s largest employer reported this week that about 14,500 of its employees in southern Africa, 18 percent of its workforce in the region, are HIV-positive. Anglo American said about 7,400 people, or 51 percent of those needing treatment, are in disease management programs. The London-based company acknowledg


GEORGIA: Lack of Urgency Seen in Atlanta AIDS Efforts
Atlanta Journal-Constitution (08.25.09) - Wednesday, August 26, 2009
Craig Schneider
Jeffrey Crowley, director of the White House Office of National AIDS Policy, visited several Atlanta AIDS service organizations on Tuesday and was troubled by what he heard. There is a concern in Atlanta about the commitment of elected officials in the fight against HIV/AIDS, Crowley said. People say there s not the ur


CALIFORNIA: Two STOP AIDS Project Forums at the LGBT Community Center
San Francisco Bay Times (08.20.09) - Wednesday, August 26, 2009
Rink
Two recent STOP AIDS Project (SAP) forums at San Francisco s LGBT Community Center touched on several topics relating to HIV prevention. On Aug. 13, the organization sponsored a panel discussion on pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) studies, in which HIV-negative participants take antiretrovirals to protect against infect


CHINA: Drugs Don't Work for Half of China's AIDS Patients, Study Says
Bloomberg News (08.18.09) - Wednesday, August 26, 2009
Simeon Bennett
A new study of China s free antiretroviral (ARV) program finds nearly half of patients receiving treatment stopped responding to the drugs after five years and were unable to access second-line medicines available in developed countries. Fujie Zhang of China s Center for Disease Control and colleagues examined 48,785 H


NORTH AMERICA; EUROPE: Circumcision Doesn't Protect Gays from AIDS Virus
Associated Press (08.26.09) - Wednesday, August 26, 2009
Mike Stobbe
Circumcision is not considered beneficial in preventing sexual transmission of HIV among men who have sex with men (MSM), CDC researchers said Tuesday at the 2009 National HIV Prevention Conference in Atlanta. The study re-analyzed data from the 1998-2002 randomized, double-blind, prospective clinical trial of the inef


PHILIPPINES: AIDS Not Just About Gays
Philippine Daily Inquirer (08.26.09) - Wednesday, August 26, 2009
Dona Pazzilbugan
The Philippines Department of Health has launched a new survey to determine the prevalence of HIV infection among persons who engage in risky behaviors like drug injection and multi- partner sex. In particular, it will target a group that is increasingly affected by HIV: men who have sex with men (MSM) but who do not s


SOUTH AFRICA: 'Agony Aunts' Taken to Task for Risky Relationship Advice
Business Day (South Africa) (08.22.09) - Wednesday, August 26, 2009
Jocelyn Newmarch
An analysis of South Africa s advice columnists finds most do not mention HIV/AIDS in response to readers relationship concerns over unfaithful partners and sexual infidelity. The advice given is mostly emotional encouragement rather than letting the person know that they are at very high risk of getting HIV when they


ILLINOIS: Quinn Signs STD Self-Treat Measure
Peoria Journal Star (08.24.09) - Wednesday, August 26, 2009
Adriana Colindres
Effective Jan. 1, Illinois physicians will be able to prescribe antibiotic treatment for chlamydia and gonorrhea patients partners without first having examined them. Gov. Pat Quinn signed the expedited partner therapy bill on Monday. The measure aims to stop re-infections among patients whose partners have not been ex


UTAH: Murray Meeting to Discuss Plan to Change Sex Education in Utah
Deseret Morning News (Salt Lake City) (08.25.09) - Tuesday, August 25, 2009
Amy K. Stewart
A bill that would implement changes in Utah s sex education curriculum will be the topic Wednesday night at a town hall- style meeting in Murray. Sponsored by Rep. Lynn Hemingway (D- Salt Lake), the bill would allow parents to select for their children one of two abstinence-based approaches: One introduces strategies f


ILLINOIS: Teacher Ousted over AIDS Video Gets His Job Back
Chicago Daily Herald (08.22.09) - Tuesday, August 25, 2009
Bob Susnjara
Four months after he was fired for showing an AIDS prevention video to his eighth-grade science class, teacher Patrick Szady has been rehired at St. Francis de Sales Parish s Catholic elementary school in Lake Zurich. Numerous parents and former students had taken up Szady s cause; some even wrote to Cardinal Francis G


UNITED STATES: Helene Gayle to Advise Obama on AIDS
Reuters (08.24.09) - Tuesday, August 25, 2009
The US government has tapped Dr. Helene Gayle, president and CEO of CARE USA, to chair the Presidential Advisory Council on HIV/AIDS. As we organize numerous ways to engage the American people in confronting the HIV epidemic in our country, the Presidential Advisory Council on HIV/AIDS will play a critical role in deve


UNITED STATES: Drug Use and High-Risk Sexual Behaviors Among African-American Men Who Have Sex with Men and Men Who Have Sex with Women
American Journal of Public Health Vol. 99; No. 6: P. 1062-1066 (06.01.09) - Tuesday, August 25, 2009
Dorothy C. Browne, DrPH, MSW; Patricia A. Clubb, PhD; Yan Wang, DrPH; Fernando Wagner, ScD
In the current study, the researchers investigated covariates related to risky sexual behaviors among young African-American men at historically black colleges and universities (HBCUs). The authors analyses were based on data from 1,837 male freshmen enrolled at 34 HBCUs who took part in the 2001 HBCU Substance Use Sur


RUSSIA: Russia Bracing for Spread of Dangerous TB Strains
Washington Post (08.24.09) - Tuesday, August 25, 2009
Sarah Schafer
Preliminary state surveys have recorded an uptick in Russia s TB rate, from 83.2 cases per 100,000 people in 2007 to 85.2 cases per 100,000 last year. Health officials and other experts are warning that worse could follow, given the most severe economic decline in a decade and Russia s weak health care system. The 1998


CANADA: Nightmare HIV Scenario for Aboriginals Unlikely
Edmonton Journal (08.22.09) - Tuesday, August 25, 2009
Anne Kyle, Regina Leader-Post
Public health officials have backed away from an earlier warning that compared HIV s spread among Saskatchewan s aboriginal community to the AIDS epidemic in sub-Saharan Africa. If you think decimating the African population was bad. HIV in this province will kill 15 to 30 percent [of the aboriginal population] over fi


SOUTH AFRICA: AIDS, Violence Burden Health Care in South Africa: Studies
Agence France Presse (08.25.09) - Tuesday, August 25, 2009
Courtney Brooks
South Africa s new government has the chance to turn around a public health system that has been plagued by poor leadership and management, according to a new series of articles in the Lancet medical journal. The country s health care system is challenged by HIV/AIDS foremost, the articles said. About 17 percent of the


UNITED STATES: Magic Johnson Addresses National HIV Prevention Conference
Southern Voice (Atlanta) (08.24.09) - Tuesday, August 25, 2009
Dyana Bagby
His role as one of the most public faces of HIV has helped prevent others from becoming infected, but the attention has also been a curse, Earvin Magic Johnson said Sunday at the opening plenary of the 2009 National HIV Prevention Conference in Atlanta. The Los Angeles Lakers basketball legend made his HIV status publi


UNITED STATES: US at 'Turning Point' in Fight Against AIDS, Says Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius
Southern Voice (Atlanta) (08.24.09) - Tuesday, August 25, 2009
Dyana Bagby
Speaking to a capacity crowd at the 2009 National HIV Prevention Conference in Atlanta on Monday, US Secretary of Health and Human Services (HHS) Kathleen Sebelius said Americans attitudes about HIV/AIDS are at a crossroads. We are at a turning point as a country. Either we choose to get used to HIV/AIDS. to accept tha


CALIFORNIA: Surfers Get Vaccines Against Hepatitis A
United Press International (08.23.09) - Monday, August 24, 2009
On Saturday, workers with the Imperial Beach Health Center and the beach conservation group Wildcoast signed up about 75 beachgoers for free hepatitis A shots. San Diego State University researchers identified the danger of infection three years ago when they found hepatitis A in 80 percent of water samples pulled near


COLORADO: 27 Cases of Hepatitis C Now Linked to Suspect
Denver Post (08.22.09) - Monday, August 24, 2009
According to an updated tally released Friday, state health officials have now tentatively linked 27 hepatitis C cases to an infected surgical technician s drug-theft scheme. The worker is alleged to have injected herself with a painkiller, then refilled the syringes with saline that was administered to patients. In th


UNITED STATES: Charting the HIV/AIDS Epidemic
Atlanta Journal-Constitution (08.23.09) - Monday, August 24, 2009
Dr. Kevin Fenton
Today, thousands of public health leaders will gather in Atlanta at the National HIV Prevention Conference to discuss the path forward in combating America s HIV crisis. The severe and continued burden of HIV in this nation is neither acceptable nor inevitable. But significant progress will require that we strengthen


CALIFORNIA: State AIDS Cuts to San Francisco Near $4 Million
Bay Area Reporter (San Francisco) (08.20.09) - Monday, August 24, 2009
Matthew S. Bajko
State funding to San Francisco for HIV prevention and testing will be cut 82 percent, or $2.4 million, according to documents recently released by the California Office of AIDS. State budget cuts have left San Francisco with a loss of at least $4 million for HIV/AIDS care and prevention services for fiscal 2009-10. The


UNITED STATES: Effects of Written Informed Consent Requirements on HIV Testing Rates: Evidence from a Natural Experiment
American Journal of Public Health Vol. 99; No. 6: P. 1087-1092 (06..09) - Monday, August 24, 2009
Coady Wing, MA, BPAPM
To assess whether written informed consent requirements create barriers that discourage HIV testing, the study author evaluated their effect on HIV testing rates in New York state. On June 1, 2005, New York streamlined its HIV testing consent procedures. If written informed consent creates barriers to testing, then the


DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA: Raising Awareness in Washington About HIV
Hudson Valley Press (Newburgh) (08.12.09) - Monday, August 24, 2009
Congressional Black Caucus members and the National Minority AIDS Council are co-sponsoring an Evening Without Politics on Sept. 25 in Washington. The event will focus on raising HIV/AIDS awareness in African-American communities - nationwide, but particularly in the District - and on supporting HIV/AIDS education init


UNITED STATES: Public Health Agency Weighs Routine Circumcision to Fight HIV Risk
New York Times (08.24.09) - Monday, August 24, 2009
Roni Caryn Rabin
Public health officials are considering recommendations to promote the routine circumcision of US-born male infants as a way to prevent female-to-male HIV transmission. Experts are also considering whether to encourage circumcision for high- risk heterosexual men. CDC could release a formal draft of recommendations by


UNITED STATES: New AIDS Plan Set to Be Unveiled
Atlanta Journal-Constitution (08.22.09) - Monday, August 24, 2009
Bob Keefe
The 2009 National HIV Prevention Conference is underway in Atlanta, with some 3,000 attendees gathered through Wednesday to address the nation s epidemic. Highlights of the conference include: *On Monday, Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius will unveil details of a new effort to develop


UNITED KINGDOM: Lennox Unveils Mandela Memorial
BBC (08.19.09) - Friday, August 21, 2009
Eurhythmics singer Annie Lennox, in Edinburgh to take part in the Festival of Politics at the Scottish Parliament, has unveiled a stone memorial honoring the city s links with Nelson Mandela and his fight against HIV/AIDS. It s in our hands to win the fight against HIV, reads the memorial, which includes the handprints


ILLINOIS: Rock Island County Health Department Reports New Hepatitis Case
Quad-City Times (Davenport, Iowa) (08.18.09) - Friday, August 21, 2009
Deirdre Cox Baker
Rock Island County Health Department s new report of an 18th case of hepatitis A brings to 32 the total number of cases diagnosed in western Illinois and eastern Iowa in the recent outbreak. This individual is a household contact to one of the cases reported the week of July 13, said department spokesperson Theresa Foe


UNITED STATES: More than Half of Texas Physicians Do Not Always Recommend HPV Vaccine to Girls
Science Daily (08.06.09) - Friday, August 21, 2009
The quadrivalent human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine was approved by the Food and Drug Administration in 2006, and the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices recommends it for all 11- and 12-year old girls. A recent study, however, found that more than half of Texas physicians were not following ACIP s recommendat


ROMANIA: Romania: Supply of AIDS Drugs Running Low Where Epidemic Had Been Controlled
New York Times (08.18.09) - Friday, August 21, 2009
Donald G. McNeil Jr.
Patients in Romania with chronic diseases including HIV/AIDS are facing medicine shortages due to the global recession, local media and health workers say. AIDS patients have launched an open letter campaign asking President Traian Basescu and Parliament to intervene and ensure treatment, according to the Romanian Libe


GLOBAL: Religious Leaders Absent in the Anti-AIDS Fight
Inter Press Service (08.13.09) - Friday, August 21, 2009
Lynette Lee Corporal
Though they exert great influence in the communities in which they serve, religious leaders are not doing enough to fight HIV/AIDS, said experts at the recent ninth International Congress on AIDS in Asia and the Pacific, held in Bali, Indonesia . Many religious groups and leaders are unwilling to address HIV/AIDS and m


CANADA: Saskatchewan Health Officials Raise HIV Alarm, Warn Virus Will Hit Aboriginals Hard
Canadian Press (08.19.09) - Friday, August 21, 2009
Angela Hill, Prince Albert Daily Herald
HIV in Saskatchewan s aboriginal community is comparable to the epidemic found in some African countries, health officials say. The province logged 174 HIV cases last year, a three-fold increase since 2004, and aboriginals are the hardest-hit group, according to the Ministry of Health. Most transmissions were acquired


CALIFORNIA: Porn Makers Challenged for Not Mandating Condoms
Associated Press (08.21.09) - Friday, August 21, 2009
Shaya Tayefe Mohajer
On Thursday, the Los Angeles-based AIDS Healthcare Foundation filed labor complaints with the state alleging unsafe working conditions that could spread HIV and other STDs at 16 pornographic-movie companies. AHF lodged the complaint, which names Hustler Video, Maverick Entertainment, Vivid, and other California adult-f


UNITED STATES: National HIV Conference to Address Many LGBT Topics
Southern Voice (Atlanta) (08.20.09) - Friday, August 21, 2009
NBA great Earvin Magic Johnson, US Secretary of Health and Human Services Kathleen Sebelius, and CDC Director Dr. Thomas Frieden are among those scheduled to address CDC s National HIV Prevention Conference, which meets in Atlanta Aug. 23-26. On Aug. 25, a town hall meeting on a national AIDS strategy will feature Jeff


CALIFORNIA: Vaccinations Against Hepatitis A to Be Offered
San Diego Union-Tribune (08.19.09) - Thursday, August 20, 2009
Janine Zuniga
Officials with the beach conservation group Wildcoast report that San Diego University researchers have found hepatitis A in water samples taken near the Imperial Beach pier. In response, representatives of Wildcoast and the Imperial Beach Health Center will conduct an informational outreach on Saturday, 9 a.m. to 1 p.


UNITED STATES: Life Expectancy in US Up, Deaths Not, CDC Says
Associated Press (08.19.09) - Thursday, August 20, 2009
Mike Stobbe
Falling rates in nearly all leading causes of death have pushed US life expectancy to a new high, according to a preliminary report released Wednesday by CDC s National Center for Health Statistics. Based on data collected from about 90 percent of death certificates filed in 2007, the report concludes that a baby born


OHIO: Funding Snag Hurts AIDS Group
Cincinnati Enquirer (08.20.09) - Thursday, August 20, 2009
Mark Curnutte
Officials with STOP AIDS, formerly AIDS Volunteers of Cincinnati, are hoping that a delay in reimbursement of federal Ryan White funds by the state will be resolved soon. The organization serves around 1,000 clients, of whom 65 percent live below the federal poverty level. These are destitute people, said Executive Dir


UNITED STATES: Gene Predicts Response to Hepatitis C Drugs: Study
Reuters (08.16.09) - Thursday, August 20, 2009
Julie Steenhuysen
A slight variation in a person s genetic code could explain why some racial and ethnic groups respond differently to standard hepatitis C treatment, a new study finds. In a clinical trial of 1,671 people with the most common form of hepatitis C who were taking either of two standard treatments - Schering-Plough s Pegin


THAILAND: 'Rampant Unprotected Sex, Drug Abuse at Thai Jails'
The Nation (Bangkok) (08.14.09) - Thursday, August 20, 2009
Bans have not stopped risky sex and drug use among Thai prisoners, according to a recent survey of inmates. Top officials at the Justice Ministry won t admit that such things happen, but in reality they do, said Dr. Sutayut Osornprasop, a development specialist at the World Bank office in Thailand . Sutayut c


BRAZIL: Sexually Transmitted Diseases Affect over 10 Million Brazilians
Xinhua News Agency (08.18.09) - Thursday, August 20, 2009
A study released Tuesday by Brazil s Health Ministry finds some 10.3 million Brazilians are or have been infected with an STD at some point in their lives. Of these, 6.6 million are men and 3.7 million are women. We are talking about the diseases which, in most cases, are curable, but are still very much present in the


FLORIDA: North Miami Man Files Notice to Sue VA over HIV Infection
Miami Herald (08.20.09) - Thursday, August 20, 2009
Fred Tasker
On July 20, Army veteran Juan Rivera filed notice that he is suing the federal government after allegedly becoming infected with HIV during a colonoscopy at the Miami VA hospital. The 55-year-old married father of five claims he was infected by improperly sterilized endoscopy equipment around May 19, 2008. According to


UNITED STATES: Access to AIDS Drugs in Danger, Activists Say
Chicago Tribune (08.20.09) - Thursday, August 20, 2009
Tom Hamburger
Representatives of aid groups are warning that the Obama administration, in its bid to craft a consensus health care reform package, is blocking access to cheaper AIDS treatment for patients in poor countries. On Wednesday, advocates met with administration officials at the State Department in Washington. Afterward, so


NEW YORK: Rockland Community College to Showcase AIDS Memorial Quilt
Journal News (White Plains) (08.17.09) - Wednesday, August 19, 2009
Khurram Saeed
Rockland Community College and the Congers-based AIDS service organization TOUCH ( Together Our Unity Can Heal ) are coordinating to host a display of panels from the AIDS Memorial Quilt. Robert Maher, executive director of TOUCH, hopes to bring 250 12- by 12-foot blocks of the quilt to Rockland for the event, saying t


INDIANA: Walkers Warn About AIDS
Fort Wayne Journal Gazette (08.16.09) - Wednesday, August 19, 2009
Becky Manley
More than 20 people took part in the AIDS Walk that began Saturday s annual Project SHIP ( Serving Humanity through Innovative Programs ) Day in Fort Wayne. Project SHIP s year- round offerings include free HIV testing and education targeting youths, said the Rev. Sylvester Hunter of Union Baptist Church, the sponsor o


NEVADA: Burden of HIV Disease in Nevada 'Alarming'
KOLOTV.com (Reno) (08.17.09) - Wednesday, August 19, 2009
In the wake of this week s Nevada State Health Division report showing that the state ranks 24th nationally for cumulative AIDS cases, Reno s 2009 AIDS Walk will take place Saturday. The event, a first for the city, is being staged in memory of community member Steven Hendrix, who battled AIDS for 13 years until his de


TEXAS: San Antonio AIDS Foundation Offers Refuge for Homeless with HIV and AIDS
San Antonio Express-News (08.12.09) - Wednesday, August 19, 2009
Nancy Prevor-Johnson
A new transitional home for the homeless living with HIV/AIDS opened this month in downtown San Antonio, and the facility already has its first six residents. San Antonio AIDS Foundation (SAAF) purchased the six-bedroom, two-story house near the Government Hill Historic District in July in order to fill the service gap


MASSACHUSETTS: Fenway Health: New Building, Classic Message
Bay Windows (Boston) (08.06.09) - Wednesday, August 19, 2009
Hannah Clay Wareham
Though it relocated to a new, upgraded home on March 30, Fenway Health continues its mission of providing quality health care for underserved communities, namely the LGBT population. President Dr. Stephen Boswell views the 10-story, 100,000- square foot building at 1340 Boylston St. as a symbol of our community. It s


TANZANIA: STI Management in Tanzanian Private Drugstores: Practices and Roles of Drug Sellers
Sexually Transmitted Infections Vol. 85: P. 300-308 (08..09) - Wednesday, August 19, 2009
N. Viberg; P. Mujinja; W. Kalala; L. Kumaranayake; S. Vyas; G. Tomson; C. Stalsby Lundborg
To assess the role of private drugstores in the management of sexually transmitted infections (STI) in rural Tanzania , the researchers designed a cross-sectional study that included drug sellers in eight districts of the country. The simulated client method was employed, presenting a male and a female STI case; in add


UNITED STATES: Study on Vaccine for Cervical Cancer Finds Benefits Despite Some Risks
New York Times (08.19.09) - Wednesday, August 19, 2009
Roni Caryn Rabin
Adverse events following immunization with the human papillomavirus vaccine (HPV) Gardasil are comparable to rates seen with other vaccines on the market, according to a new study by CDC and Food and Drug Administration researchers. However, there have also been disproportionate reports of fainting episodes and blood c


GEORGIA: Georgia's State HIV Director Resigns
Southern Voice (Atlanta) (08.17.09) - Wednesday, August 19, 2009
Dyana Bagby
The leader of Georgia s state HIV prevention unit has resigned after slightly more than one year on the job. In response to inquiries about the resignation of Raphael Holloway, Division of Public Health Communication Director Ravae Graham issued the following statement: Mr. Holloway s resignation as director of the HIV


UNITED STATES: Medical Groups Promoted HPV Vaccine Using Funds Provided by Drugmaker
Washington Post (08.19.09) - Wednesday, August 19, 2009
Rob Stein
In an analysis published today, two Columbia University researchers say that at least three medical societies promoted the human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine Gardasil with funds provided to them by its manufacturer, Merck & Co. The American College Health Association (ACHA), the American Society for Colposcopy and


UNITED STATES: Sexual Mixing Patterns and Partner Characteristics of Black MSM in Massachusetts at Increased Risk for HIV Infection and Transmission
Journal of Urban Health Vol. 86; No. 4: P. 602-623 (07..09) - Tuesday, August 18, 2009
Matthew J. Mimiaga; Sari L. Reisner; Kevin Cranston; Deborah Isenberg; Donna Bright; Gary Daffin; Sean Bland; Maura A. Driscoll; Rodney VanDerwarker; Benny Vega; Kenneth H. Mayer
In the current study, the researchers note that black men who have sex with men are at increased risk of HIV infection compared with other MSM. To explore possible reasons for this, the authors investigated sexual mixing patterns, partner characteristics and risk behaviors among black MSM. Between January and July 2008


UNITED STATES: Gel Condom to Empower Women
New Scientist (08.11.09) - Tuesday, August 18, 2009
Andy Coghlan
In a new study, researchers report promising results from tests of a gel that might act as a molecular condom to protect women against HIV. So far, Patrick Kiser of the University of Utah-Salt Lake City and colleagues have only tested the gel in the laboratory. Kiser said the goal of the research was to develop technol


CANADA: More Needles Given to Drug Users
Waterloo Region Record (08.17.09) - Tuesday, August 18, 2009
Frances Barrick
The number of sterile needles distributed to injection drug users in the Waterloo Region has increased three-fold over the past five years, said health officials. The uptick reflects better service provision rather than a growth in the number of IDUs, said Karen Verhoeve of the region s public health unit. The demand h


SOUTHEAST ASIA: Trafficked Women Face High HIV Infection Risk - Study
Reuters (08.12.09) - Tuesday, August 18, 2009
Tan Ee Lyn
A new study of criminal activity in Cambodia , Indonesia , and Thailand finds nearly a quarter-million women and girls in Southeast Asia are forced into prostitution annually, placing them at risk for extreme situations of violence and exploitation. The report, Sex Trafficking and STI/HIV in So


ASIA-PACIFIC: Most Gay Men in Asia Have No Access to HIV Prevention, Care
The Nation (Bangkok) (08.13.09) - Tuesday, August 18, 2009
HIV prevention efforts targeting men who have sex with men (MSM) and transgender persons are lacking in many Asian countries, making them much more vulnerable to infection, warned speakers at the recent ninth International Congress on AIDS in Asia and the Pacific in Bali, Indonesia . A 2006 survey of HIV preventi


CHINA: HIV/AIDS Epidemic Still on Rise in China, Expert Says
Xinhua News Agency (08.14.09) - Tuesday, August 18, 2009
Citing new estimates set to be released in November, the director of the National Center for AIDS/STD Control and Prevention said HIV continues to spread in China , chiefly by sexual transmission from persons in high-risk groups. The rise of the HIV/AIDS epidemic has yet to be under effective control, said Wu Zunyou.


UNITED STATES: Veterans to Routinely Be Offered HIV Tests
Associated Press (08.17.09) - Tuesday, August 18, 2009
Kimberly Hefling
In line with CDC recommendations, the Veterans Affairs Department announced Monday it will offer routine, opt-out HIV testing to all veterans receiving medical care at its facilities. Under the new policy, VA staff will provide HIV education materials and discuss testing, but they will not be required to use standardiz


CALIFORNIA: HIV/AIDS Specialist Dr. Enejosa Joins Desert AIDS Project
Desert Sun (Palm Springs) (08.09.09) - Monday, August 17, 2009
Terria Smith
The Desert AIDS Project has announced that Dr. Jeffrey Enejosa has joined its staff in the Wells Fargo HIV Health Center. A specialist in HIV/AIDS, hepatitis, and related conditions, Enejosa is a board-certified physician with more than 14 years of experience in internal medicine, DAP said. For more information, teleph


GEORGIA: Wal-Mart Employee Tests Positive for TB
Atlanta Journal-Constitution (08.14.09) - Monday, August 17, 2009
Katie Leslie
The news that an employee of the Riverdale Wal-Mart has a confirmed case of TB prompted the screening of 60 to 70 other store workers, health officials said on Thursday. The Clayton County Health Department learned of the initial case during the first week of August, said spokesperson Veronda Griffin. The store is loca


CUBA: AIDS on the Rise in Cuban Youth: Officials
Agence France Presse (08.16.09) - Monday, August 17, 2009
In a televised interview Saturday, the deputy director of Havana s Tropical Medicine Institute warned that Cuba is tracking an increase in HIV cases among young people. Cuba saw more than 1,300 new HIV infections last year; another 1,400 are projected to occur this year; and those most at risk are ages 19 to 24. This


ALABAMA: University of Alabama at Birmingham Gets Millions for AIDS Center
Birmingham News (08.12.09) - Monday, August 17, 2009
Dave Parks
The National Institutes of Health recently awarded $7.5 million to the Center for AIDS Research at the University of Alabama at Birmingham. The five-year renewable grant will allow the medical center to continue its research on HIV/AIDS prevention and treatment. The UAB center assists with HIV/AIDS research in developi


UNITED KINGDOM: Quick Chlamydia Urine Test Accurate in Men
Reuters (07.28.09) - Monday, August 17, 2009
A chlamydia test for males using first-void urine has proven effective in a study, and the rapidity of its results could offer patients same-day treatment, say British researchers. Dr. Helen H. Lee of the University of Cambridge and colleagues evaluated the Chlamydia Rapid Test versus the polymerase chain reaction (PCR


UGANDA: Doctors Want Compulsory Circumcision of Soldiers
New Vision (Kampala) (08.10.09) - Monday, August 17, 2009
Charles Ariko
A senior health official in Uganda recently suggested that prison and army personnel should be circumcised to prevent HIV infection. Police, corrections and army officials are among the most at-risk populations in Uganda, Dr. Stella Nema, an HIV/AIDS researcher, said during the launch of an HIV testing campaign at Luzi


SOUTH AFRICA: Cry for Help for Caregivers
Mail & Guardian (Johannesburg) (08.11.09) - Monday, August 17, 2009
Faranaaz Parker
Late payment of the small monthly stipend that the Health Department provides to volunteer caregivers threatens to undermine the system, experts say. Among South Africa s nearly 39,000 community caregivers, 57 percent work in critical HIV and TB fields such as testing, treatment adherence, and home- based care. The Hea


ASIA-PACIFIC: Transgenders Assert Identity at AIDS Meeting
Inter Press Service (08.13.09) - Monday, August 17, 2009
Lynette Lee Corporal
Few support networks, widespread discrimination, and low AIDS awareness put transgender persons at high risk of HIV infection, advocates said during the recent ninth International Congress on AIDS in Asia and the Pacific. The lack of knowledge and information about reproductive health are compounded by confusion about


ALABAMA: Alabama No Longer Bars HIV Inmates from Work Release
Associated Press (08.13.09) - Monday, August 17, 2009
Desiree Hunter
HIV-positive inmates in Alabama will soon be able to participate in work release programs, said state Department of Corrections spokesperson Brian Corbett. The decision by Commissioner Richard Allen and other department officials follows years of campaigning by the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) and inmate advoc


GEORGIA: Congressman to Host Health Fair Saturday
Atlanta Journal-Constitution (08.12.09) - Friday, August 14, 2009
Screenings for HIV, diabetes, high blood pressure, and numerous other conditions will be offered at Saturday s fifth annual 13th Congressional District Health Fair at Mundy s Mill High School, 9652 Fayetteville Rd. in Jonesboro. Hosted by Rep. David Scott (D-Ga.), the event will also offer assistance with accessing gov


TEXAS: Quilt Reminds of Lives Lost to AIDS
San Antonio Express-News (08.12.09) - Friday, August 14, 2009
Nazish Dholakia
Beginning this Saturday, the Institute of Texan Cultures will present a display of panels from the AIDS Memorial Quilt. Twelve quilt blocks, each containing eight individual panels, will be on view through Sept. 20. It s a powerful memorial for those who have lost their lives to AIDS or HIV-related illnesses, said Mary


ILLINOIS: Third Suit Filed Against Milan McDonald's
Quad-City Times (Davenport, Iowa) (08.13.09) - Friday, August 14, 2009
Deirdre Cox Baker; Dustin Lemmon
The Seattle-based law firm Marler Clark, which specializes in cases involving food-borne illness, has now filed three lawsuits on behalf of persons who say they contracted hepatitis A from a McDonald s in Milan, Ill. The first litigation was a class-action suit on behalf of a male diner and all who contracted hepatitis


AFRICA: 800,000 More Workers Needed in Africa to Meet Health Goals by 2015
New York Times (08.11.09) - Friday, August 14, 2009
Sarah Arnquis
A new study published in the journal Health Affairs concludes that Africa has just 30 percent of the 1.16 million doctors, nurses, and midwives it needs to meet ambitious targets for reducing AIDS deaths and improving the health of mothers and children. Paying these additional workers - if they were available - would c


UNITED STATES: Sexual Risk Behaviors Among HIV-Positive Black Men Who Have Sex with Women, with Men, or with Men and Women: Implications for Intervention Development
American Journal of Public Health Vol. 99; No. 6: P. 1072-1078 (06..09) - Friday, August 14, 2009
Pilgrim S. Spikes, PhD, MSW, MPH; David W. Purcell, JD, PhD; Kim M. Williams, PhD, MSW; Ying Chen, PhD; Helen Ding, MD, MSPH; Patrick S. Sullivan, DVM, PhD
The study authors compared demographics and sexual and drug risk behaviors among HIV-positive black men who have sex with women only, with men only, or with men and women as a way to assess differences among and between these groups. Cross-sectional data from the Supplement to HIV and AIDS Surveillance Project for 2,03


CHINA: Condom 'Painting' Helps Promote Sex Education in China
Xinhua News Agency (08.08.09) - Friday, August 14, 2009
At the recent fifth Reproductive Health Technology and Products Exhibition in Beijing, the Guilin Latex Factory wanted to show the public that sex can be beautiful and healthy, not a taboo not openly talked about, said Tao Ran, its manager. Guilin, one of China s leading condom producers, displayed an 18-by 3.5-meter t


GLOBAL: Drug Patents Come Under Fire at AIDS Conference
Inter Press Service (08.12.09) - Friday, August 14, 2009
Johanna Son
Governments and community advocates should campaign to reform international drug patent rights, especially with respect to life-saving HIV/AIDS drugs, advocates said Wednesday at the ninth International Congress on AIDS in Asia and the Pacific in Bali, Indonesia . These are medicines that make for life and death, said


ASIA-PACIFIC: Innovative Media Tools Deliver HIV/AIDS Messages
Inter Press Service (08.12.09) - Friday, August 14, 2009
Lynette Lee Corporal
At this week s ninth International Congress on AIDS in Asia and the Pacific, the region s largest meeting on the pandemic, journalism and media experts called for rethinking how HIV/AIDS is reported. Syed Qamar Abbas, deputy manager of the AIDS control program in Pakistan s Sindh province, said creative approaches are


ASIA-PACIFIC: AIDS Congress in Indonesia Closes with Pledge to Involve AIDS-Related Communities in Treatment, Prevention
Xinhua News Agency (08.14.09) - Friday, August 14, 2009
The ninth International Congress on AIDS in Asia and the Pacific (ICAAP) concluded in Bali today with agreement that regional prevention and treatment efforts need more involvement from the communities most affected by the disease. Empowering people means that the affected communities not only regain but also have the


KENTUCKY: HIV Campaign Educating Kentuckians
WKYT.com (08.11.09) - Friday, August 14, 2009
Tamara Evans
At a news conference in Frankfort on Tuesday, health officials called on all Kentuckians to learn their HIV status as part of a national testing effort. The Test 1 Million Campaign targets African Americans, but state officials say its message of early detection and treatment applies to everyone. Every nine-and-a-half


CALIFORNIA: Stop AIDS Forums
Bay Area Reporter (San Francisco) (08.13.09) - Thursday, August 13, 2009
Cynthia Laird
Can a Pill a Day Prevent HIV? is the topic of a community forum being held this evening at 6 o clock at the LGBT Community Center, 1800 Market St., San Francisco. At the event, physicians and others will discuss pre-exposure prophylaxis as a possible way to reduce HIV infection for HIV- negative people. At the same lo


NORTH CAROLINA: TB Cases Number 42 from Brunswick Jail Outbreak
Star-News (Wilmington) (08.10.09) - Thursday, August 13, 2009
Vicky Eckenrode
Screening of some 650 current and former inmates and employees at the Brunswick County Jail has turned up 42 who tested positive for TB. Two persons have the active, contagious form of the disease, said Health Director Don Yousey. One former inmate s chest X-rays were deemed questionable; he is being examined to see if


ILLINOIS: Number of Hepatitis A Cases Now at 30
Quad-City Times (Davenport, Iowa) (08.12.09) - Thursday, August 13, 2009
Deirdre Cox Baker
Thirty cases of hepatitis A have now been reported in an outbreak linked to a McDonald s restaurant, the Illinois Department of Public Health and the Rock Island County Health Department said on Wednesday. The departments confirmed that all the infections involve people who visited the eatery at 400 W. 1st St. in Milan


INDONESIA: Protesters Seek Cheaper Drugs at HIV/AIDS Meeting
Reuters (08.12.09) - Thursday, August 13, 2009
Tan Ee Lyn
Protesters demanding access to cheaper hepatitis C drugs for co-infected HIV patients disrupted the ninth International Conference on AIDS in Asia and the Pacific in Bali on Wednesday. Brandishing a banner proclaiming Hepatitis C + silence = death, the activists accused drug maker Roche AG of overpricing its pegylated


UNITED STATES: Abused, Maltreated Kids Have Sex Earlier: Study
Reuters Health (08.10.09) - Thursday, August 13, 2009
Megan Rauscher
A new study has found that child maltreatment - physical, emotional, and sexual abuse, as well as neglect - raises the risk of early sexual intercourse. All types of mistreatment increase the risk for emotional distress at age 12 and sexual intercourse by age 14 and 16, said study co-author Dr. Maureen M. Black of the


CANADA: Injection Site for Toronto Under Study
Toronto Star (08.12.09) - Thursday, August 13, 2009
Megan Ogilvie
For more than a year, researchers have been assessing the feasibility of supervised injection facilities in Toronto and Ottawa. SIFs provide users a place to inject drugs under medical supervision and care. Toronto s City Council requested the feasibility study based on recommendations from a city drug strategy that me


LEBANON: Younger Generation Must Be HIV-Aware to Prevent Spread
Daily Star (Beirut) (08.10.09) - Thursday, August 13, 2009
Karah Byrns
The facts about HIV/AIDS can be a powerful weapon to thwart its spread. But in Lebanon , where statistics show most new HIV infections occur among people ages 20 to 30, getting the facts out can be difficult, experts say. We are having a sexual revolution in the midst of an AIDS epidemic, said Dr.


ASIA-PACIFIC: After Medical Gains in HIV, the New War Is on Stigma
Inter Press Service (08.11.09) - Thursday, August 13, 2009
Johanna Son
Social intolerance and inequality too often shape which groups are preferentially targeted for HIV prevention and treatment in the region, experts and advocates said Tuesday at the ninth International Congress on AIDS in Asia and the Pacific in Bali, Indonesia . Often-overlooked populations include prisoners, drug user


ARKANSAS: $340,419 Given to Fight AIDS' Spread: State Commission's Grants Go to 7 Groups Targeting the Vulnerable
Arkansas Democrat-Gazette (07.31.09) - Thursday, August 13, 2009
Seven groups will split $340,419 in funding from the Arkansas Minority Health Commission to combat HIV/AIDS. Our goal is to strengthen organizations across the state by building our capacity to implement HIV prevention and awareness programs, said Patricia Minor, a registered nurse and project manager for the commissio


ASIA: Asian Development Bank to Fight HIV Spread in Road Projects
Xinhua News Agency (08.10.09) - Wednesday, August 12, 2009
In a statement Monday acknowledging the role that infrastructure improvements can play in spreading HIV, the Asian Development Bank announced plans to boost interventions to counter the spread of the virus among long-distance truckers. ADB will expand its existing HIV action plans for projects to include pre- and post-


ANGOLA: US, Angola Sign AIDS Agreement During Clinton Visit
Deutsche Presse-Agentur (08.10.09) - Wednesday, August 12, 2009
Stopping in Luanda on Monday during her tour of Africa, US Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton met with Angolan President Jose Eduardo dos Santos, and the two signed an agreement aimed at fighting HIV. The document promises an additional $10 million from the United States to help Angola confront its AIDS epidemic


NORTH CAROLINA: Herpes Healing Comes in Numbers
Charlotte Observer (08.04.09) - Wednesday, August 12, 2009
Alexa Garcia-Ditta
In 2005, Pam Wisniewski started a Charlotte-area herpes and human papillomavirus (HPV) support group, envisioning a group of 50 people who went out to a movie now and then. Today, the group has 1,100 members and continues to grow. For members, the group offers an opportunity to discuss sensitive subjects such as how to


ILLINOIS: Confab Discusses HIV Among African-American MSM
Chicago Free Press (08.06.09) - Wednesday, August 12, 2009
Amy Wooten
Advocates, service providers, and other community members gathered at a July 31 conference in Chicago to respond to a new study showing a large racial disparity in HIV prevalence among local men who have sex with men. The Chicago Department of Public Health (CDPH) study found that more than 30 percent of local black MS


ILLINOIS: Hepatitis A Reporting: No Fault on Rock Island County's Part, Sheriff's Officials Say
Quad-City Times (Davenport, Iowa) (08.10.09) - Wednesday, August 12, 2009
Deirdre Cox Baker
A report by the Rock Island County Sheriff s Department (RICSD) has concluded that the lack of proper disease reporting in the area s recent hepatitis A outbreak does not lie with the Rock Island County Health Department. According to investigators, Trinity Regional Health System did not immediately report a confirmed


SOUTH AFRICA: Diabetes Ups TB Risk in Children and Adolescents
Reuters Health (08.06.09) - Wednesday, August 12, 2009
A new study conducted in the TB-endemic Western Cape province finds almost one in three children and adolescents with type 1 diabetes had positive TB skin tests and are at risk of developing active, infectious TB. Dr. E.A. Webb of the Desmond Tutu Tuberculosis Center in Cape Town and colleagues evaluated the prevalence


GLOBAL: Most Drug-Resistant TB Cases Go Untested - Global Fund Expert
Reuters (08.10.09) - Wednesday, August 12, 2009
Tan Ee Lyn
On Monday in Bali at the ninth International Congress on AIDS in Asia and the Pacific, the executive director of the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB and Malaria warned of the under- diagnosis of multidrug-resistant TB (MDR TB) around the world. Even among those who have been diagnosed with MDR TB, just a fraction are bei


UNITED STATES: New TB Policy Could Disrupt Overseas Adoptions
Associated Press (08.10.09) - Wednesday, August 12, 2009
David Crary
A CDC policy intended to minimize the number of persons immigrating to the United States with multidrug-resistant tuberculosis is drawing fire from advocates for international adoption. In 2007, CDC issued new rules regarding TB testing and treatment for immigrants older than two years, including those being adopted by


WISCONSIN: Rain-Soaked AIDS Riders Raise $300,000
Wisconsin State Journal (Madison) (08.10.09) - Tuesday, August 11, 2009
Judy Newman
Despite periods of driving rain, 140 bicyclists rolled into Madison on Sunday, completing a four-day, 300-mile round-trip in the ACT 7 Wisconsin AIDS Ride. The riders were accompanied by 90 support staff and 150 other volunteers. Shawn Waldron, chair of the steering committee, said the seventh annual ride raised more t


NORTH CAROLINA: TV Stars Draw Teens to Abstinence Session
News and Observer (Raleigh NC) (08.09.09) - Tuesday, August 11, 2009
Ray Martin
Youth Explosion, an abstinence education outreach targeting inner-city youths, drew more than 500 people to Raleigh s Worthdale Community Center on Saturday. The community-based abstinence group Youth Awake paid for the event, which featured TV stars Lil JJ of Nickelodeon and Cee Cee Michaela, formerly of the UPN/CW c


AFRICA: UN Envoy Urges African States to Stiffen Laws on Preventing Rape
Xinhua News Agency (08.10.09) - Tuesday, August 11, 2009
In a statement issued ahead of the third International Conference on the Great Lakes Region, the UN secretary- general s special envoy on HIV/AIDS in Africa called on the region s nine nations to take ownership of efforts to prevent rape and conflict situations. Elizabeth Mataka said rape is still being carried out in


CALIFORNIA: Funding Cuts Threaten AIDS Education and Prevention Programs in Marin
Contra Costa Times (08.04.09) - Tuesday, August 11, 2009
Richard Halstead
Recent reductions in state and private support for the Marin AIDS Project (MAP) have wiped out more than 18 percent of the nonprofit s annual budget, leaving some programs in jeopardy, officials said. MAP received $134,000 from California for prevention and education programming in fiscal 2008-09. However, MAP will rec


UNITED STATES: Both Hepatitis C Drugs Work About the Same: Study
Reuters (07.22.09) - Tuesday, August 11, 2009
Julie Steenhuysen
A large effectiveness study comparing Schering-Plough s pegylated-interferon Pegintron and ribavirin with Roche s Pegasys and ribavirin shows both hepatitis C treatments worked equally well. The study by Dr. Mark Sulkowski of Johns Hopkins University involved 3,000 patients with hepatitis C. Its findings are meant to h


ASIA-PACIFIC: 50 Million Asian Women at Risk of HIV Infection: UNAIDS
Agence France Presse (08.11.09) - Tuesday, August 11, 2009
Nusa Dua
A UNAIDS report released today in Bali at the ninth International Congress on AIDS in Asia and the Pacific shows the impact HIV/AIDS is having on women in the region. More than 1.5 million women with HIV in Asia were infected by their partners, and 50 million more are at risk of infection, according to HIV Transmissio


DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF THE CONGO: Symbol of Unhealed Congo: Male Rape Victims
New York Times (08.05.09) - Tuesday, August 11, 2009
Jeffrey Gettleman
Rape has long been a weapon of war in the extremely complicated conflict that has raged for years in Congo. Now, however, the fighting has entered a new phase as joint Congo- Rwanda forces battle rebels in renewed fighting that has driven a half-million villagers from their homes. And increasingly, aid groups say, rape


DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF THE CONGO: Clinton Demands End to Sexual Violence in Congo
Associated Press (08.11.09) - Tuesday, August 11, 2009
Matthew Lee
US Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton on Tuesday demanded an end to the use of sexual violence as a weapon of war by army and rebel troops fighting in Congo. Clinton spoke in the eastern city of Goma, an epicenter of gang rapes and other sexual assaults in the protracted battle for the country s mineral wealth.


MINNESOTA: State's Only Drop-In Needle-Exchange Program Shuttered by Economy, Anti-Drug Policies
Minnesota Independent (08.03.09) - Tuesday, August 11, 2009
Andy Birkey
Minnesota s only needle-exchange program that operated a drop- in center stopped providing services on July 24, said Access Works! officials. The poor economy hurt the Minneapolis organization more than any other factor, said Executive Director Lauri Wollner, though the ban on federal funding for NEPs was also an obsta


ASIA-PACIFIC: Call for Urgent Government Funding as AIDS Sweeps Through Region
Australian Associated Press (08.09.09) - Monday, August 10, 2009
Data presented in Bali at the ninth International Congress on AIDS in Asia and the Pacific suggest that another 200 men who have sex with men are becoming infected with HIV in the region each day. In response, the Australian Federation of AIDS Organizations has called on Australia s government to provide immediate fund


CALIFORNIA: California Lawmaker to Sue Schwarzenegger over Vetoes
Associated Press (08.08.09) - Monday, August 10, 2009
Judy Lin
State Senate leader Darrell Steinberg (D) on Friday said he plans to file a lawsuit challenging Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger s use of line-item vetoes to slash an additional $489 million from the state budget passed by legislators. Included among those cuts was $52 million for HIV/AIDS services. Steinberg said the govern


COLORADO: Three More Hepatitis C Cases Discovered
Denver Post (08.08.09) - Monday, August 10, 2009
Michael Booth
State health authorities say three more cases of hepatitis C virus infection have been potentially linked to a surgery technician s drug-theft scheme. While working at Rose Medical Center in Denver and later at Audubon Surgery Center in Colorado Springs, the technician is alleged to have stolen syringes containing the


UNITED STATES: Trends in Mortality and Causes of Death Among Women with HIV in the United States: A 10-Year Study
JAIDS Vol. 51; No. 4: P. 399-406 (08..09) - Monday, August 10, 2009
Audrey L. French; Susan H. Gawel; Ronald Hershow; Lorie Benning; Nancy A. Hessol; Alexandra M. Levine; Kathryn Anastos; Michael Augenbraun; Mardge H. Cohen
Toward the goal of assessing trends in mortality and causes of death for HIV-positive women, the authors studied deaths occurring during a 10-year period among participants in the Women s Interagency HIV Study, a representative US cohort. Deaths were ascertained by National Death Index Plus match; death certificates we


CANADA: New Methadone Clinic Will Open Monday
Telegraph-Journal (New Brunswick) (08.06.09) - Monday, August 10, 2009
Sandra Davis
A new methadone clinic set to open in St. John on Aug. 10 already has 177 clients signed up to participate, officials say. Based in St. Joseph s Community Health Center, the clinic does not have a pre-set limit on the number of patients who will be provided methadone maintenance therapy. When administered once-daily in


SOUTH AFRICA: Empower the Home-Based Care Workers
Inter Press Service (08.06.09) - Monday, August 10, 2009
Lucas Ledwaba
With an adult HIV prevalence rate of 21.5 percent, South Africa is struggling to provide AIDS-related services to patients. Those on the front lines of disease-fighting efforts there say the government should embrace and support one often overlooked option - home-based care. Home-based care is probably the only workabl


SOUTH AFRICA: Clinton Urges South Africans to Open Up on AIDS
Agence France Presse (08.08.09) - Monday, August 10, 2009
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and other senior US officials visited an AIDS clinic in South Africa on Friday during a seven-nation tour to highlight development issues on the continent. Located 50 miles west of Johannesburg in Cullinan, the clinic receives support from the South African government as well as a $57


ASIA-PACIFIC: Experts Gather in Bali to Discuss Fight Against AIDS
Agence France Presse (08.09.09) - Monday, August 10, 2009
An estimated 5 million Asians are living with HIV/AIDS, and at any given time about one-fifth of those infected will need treatment, UNAIDS experts told the ninth International Congress on AIDS in Asia and the Pacific in Bali, Indonesia . With just 25 percent of those in the region who need treatment receiving it, We


ILLINOIS: HIV/AIDS Services Survive Quinn's Cut
Windy City Times (Chicago) (08.05.09) - Monday, August 10, 2009
Sam Worley
Under a plan released July 31, Gov. Pat Quinn ensured that state funding for HIV/AIDS services will remain essentially intact in the new fiscal year. The FY 2010 Illinois budget, which passed on July 15, funded HIV/AIDS agencies and other social services at 50 percent of previous levels. It did, however, include $3.4 b


NEW YORK: At Least One Retailer Is Expanding in this Economy
New York Times (07.31.09) - Friday, August 07, 2009
Housing Works, which provides a range of housing and other services to people living with HIV/AIDS, this year is expanding by 50 percent the number of thrift stores it operates. Its TriBeCa store has moved from 72 Warren St. to a much larger facility at 119 Chambers St. In addition, Housing Works opened a new store in


ARKANSAS: Arkansas and Fort Smith Get $37 Million in Grants from HUD
Associated Press (08.05.09) - Friday, August 07, 2009
The US Housing and Urban Development Department has announced $36.6 million in housing and community development grants for Arkansas and the city of Fort Smith. Included in the funds is $797,682 to support Housing Opportunities for People with AIDS projects.


INDONESIA: About 4,000 Indonesian Migrant Women Workers Infected by HIV/AIDS Each Year: Survey
Xinhua News Agency (08.05.09) - Friday, August 07, 2009
Each year some 4,000 female migrant workers come home to Indonesia infected with HIV, the Bali Health Foundation (Yakeba) reported on Wednesday. Most of the women worked in manufacturing, on plantations or as housemaids, said Bob Monthouse, the foundation s director. The data were obtained from a migrant workers arriv


UNITED STATES: Screening Male Prisoners for Chlamydia trachomatis: Impact on Test Positivity Among Women from Their Neighborhoods Who Were Tested in Family Planning Clinics
Sexually Transmitted Diseases Vol. 36; No. 7; P. 425-429 (07..09) - Friday, August 07, 2009
Thomas A. Peterman; Daniel R. Newman; Martin Goldberg; Greta L. Anschuetz; Melinda Slamon; Catherine L. Satterwhite; Stuart M. Berman
Chlamydia trachomatis screening test positivity among women in the United States has remained high, leading researchers to suggest that programs should also screen men, explained the authors of the current study. Philadelphia prisons have screened male inmates since 2002. Similar to jails in other jurisdictions, the P


AFRICA: Early Antiretroviral Therapy - A Stitch in Time
Inter Press Service (07.31.09) - Friday, August 07, 2009
Miriam Mannak
Recent studies have shown that HIV patients live longer when they begin taking antiretrovirals (ARVs) before their CD4 cell count falls below 350 - a finding that supports starting therapy earlier. But most resource-limited countries, especially in Africa, struggle even to comply with the less- aggressive approach curr


SOUTH ASIA; ASIA-PACIFIC: Indonesia, South Asia New Flashpoints in AIDS Fight: Experts
Agence France Presse (08.07.09) - Friday, August 07, 2009
Arlina Arshad
Delegates from 65 countries are expected at next week s International Congress on AIDS in Asia and the Pacific, which will be held in Bali, Indonesia . The congress will focus on strategic responses, especially preventing HIV among intravenous drug users (IDUs) and expanding treatment to the 75 percent of HIV patients


GLOBAL: Drug Makers to Supply Cheap HIV Treatments
Agence France Presse (08.06.09) - Friday, August 07, 2009
Under a deal announced Thursday by former President Bill Clinton, US drug companies Mylan and its subsidiary Matrix will cut their prices for second-line HIV/AIDS drugs in developing nations. Atazanavir , ritonavir , tenofovir , an


ARIZONA: 2 Resign from Women's Health Panel
Arizona Republic (Phoenix) (08.02.09) - Friday, August 07, 2009
Matthew Benson
Two state Planned Parenthood representatives have resigned from the 23-member Governor s Commission on Women s and Children s Health, citing conflicts with Republican Gov. Jan Brewer s policies. In a letter, Planned Parenthood Arizona Chairperson Dr. Candace Lew and President and CEO Bryan Howard accused Brewer of favo


COLORADO: Surgery Tech Pleads Not Guilty in Hepatitis Case
Associated Press (08.06.09) - Friday, August 07, 2009
P. Solomon Banda
On Thursday, a former surgery technician pleaded not guilty to federal charges involving a syringe-swapping scheme that prosecutors say potentially exposed patients at two Colorado hospitals to hepatitis C virus. Prosecutors say the HCV- infected technician switched out saline-filled syringes for ones containing Fentan


GERMANY: German High Court Rejects Sex Education Opt-Out
Deutsche Presse-Agentur (08.06.09) - Thursday, August 06, 2009
On Thursday, Germany s high court ruled that parents cannot exclude their children from sex education lessons on religious grounds. The case involved parents from East Westphalia who were fined ?80 (US $115) for keeping their children at home to prevent their participation in a school theater project on sexual abuse, a


CALIFORNIA: Hundreds Rally in San Francisco Against AIDS Cuts
Bay Area Reporter (San Francisco) (08.06.09) - Thursday, August 06, 2009
Matthew S. Bajko
At noon Wednesday, several hundred people gathered across from the state office building in San Francisco to protest $82 million in cuts to state AIDS programs under the new budget for the fiscal 2009-10 period. The cuts include $52 million in general-fund support to AIDS programs that Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger excise


CALIFORNIA: Legal Opinion Adds to Flap over Governor's Vetoes
Los Angeles Times (08.06.09) - Thursday, August 06, 2009
Eric Bailey
Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger overstepped his constitutional powers when he used line-item vetoes last week to cut more than $487 million from the state budget, legal counsel for California s Legislature said Wednesday. The governor cut funding from numerous programs including for HIV testing and prevention, children s he


UNITED STATES: HIV-Infected Women Often Skip Pap Tests: Study
Reuters Health (07.30.09) - Thursday, August 06, 2009
Nearly a quarter of HIV-positive women have not had a Pap exam in the previous year, a new study finds. Noting it is important to remember that HIV-positive women are at higher risk of infection with human papillomavirus, the main cause of cervical cancer, and for abnormal Pap findings, Dr. Alexandra M. Oster and colle


UNITED STATES: Scientists Decode HIV Genome Structure: Study
Agence France Presse (08.06.09) - Thursday, August 06, 2009
In a development with potential implications for treating not only AIDS but also other viral infections like hepatitis C and the common cold, US scientists have successfully completed the first map of the entire genome of HIV. We are beginning to understand the tricks the genome uses to help the virus escape detection


UNITED KINGDOM: Free Condoms Dispensed to Young
BBC (08.03.09) - Thursday, August 06, 2009
In December, the National Health Service primary care trust in Hull launched a condom vending machine program to encourage young people who are sexually active to use protection. The first machine was installed in a pilot run at Hull College, and it proved so successful that more machines are being placed at other coll


AUSTRALIA: More Women Can Now Access Anti-Cancer Vaccine
Australian Associated Press (08.04.09) - Thursday, August 06, 2009
Danny Rose
On Tuesday, Australia s Therapeutic Goods Administration gave approval for the human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine Gardasil to be administered in women up to age 45. Until now, Gardasil, which protects against four HPV strains linked to most cases of cervical cancer and genital warts, was approved for use in women up to


AFRICA: HIV Laws Do More Harm than Good
Inter Press Service (07.30.09) - Thursday, August 06, 2009
Miriam Mannak
Twenty countries in Africa have or are considering criminal HIV transmission laws. But advocates working to prevent the virus spread say such measures can hurt more than help the fight against HIV/AIDS. If being HIV-positive is being regarded as a crime, people will be less likely to get themselves tested, said Johanna


DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA: D.C. to Offer STD Tests in Every High School
Washington Post (08.05.09) - Thursday, August 06, 2009
Darryl Fears; Nelson Hernandez
A pilot program in eight Washington high schools last year found that 13 percent of some 3,000 students tested were positive for an STD. Now the District plans to expand the effort and offer STD testing to all the city s approximately 12,000 high school students. The program tells us that a lot of students in the publi


NEW JERSEY: AIDS Awareness Event Set in Asbury Park
Asbury Park Press (07.31.09) - Wednesday, August 05, 2009
Nancy Shields
On Aug. 8, a free AIDS awareness event is scheduled for noon at the West Side Community Center, 115 DeWitt Ave. Clarissa Samuel, Ryan White case manager with the Visiting Nurse Association of Central Jersey in Asbury Park, will conduct HIV/AIDS education and perform HIV testing. Other topics will include gang violence,


KANSAS: Health Officials Confirm TB Case at Kansas State University
Associated Press (07.29.09) - Wednesday, August 05, 2009
State health officials have confirmed a case of infectious pulmonary TB in a student at Kansas State University. Kansas Health and Environment officials said they are working with the university to evaluate anyone who may have come in close contact with the student, who is responding to treatment and is expected to mak


NEW MEXICO: State Trains Inmates in Preventing Hepatitis C
Associated Press (07.28.09) - Wednesday, August 05, 2009
New Mexico health and corrections officials are training 10 male inmates on how to educate their peers about hepatitis C, a disease that affects roughly 38 percent of the state prison population. The inmates will receive 32 hours of training on the blood-borne virus and other infectious diseases. As of June, New Mexico


TEXAS: Number of HIV Cases in East Texas on the Rise
Lufkin Daily News (08.02.09) - Wednesday, August 05, 2009
Jessica Cooley
Health Horizons in Nacogdoches has expanded its free HIV testing outreach efforts in the 12-county Deep East Texas region it serves. As a result, the proportion of people testing HIV-positive at the organization has increased, said Executive Director Wilbert Brown. More people have tested HIV- positive at Health Horizo


MICHIGAN: City Defends Release of Private Health Information
Lansing State Journal (08.04.09) - Wednesday, August 05, 2009
Susan Vela
Lansing Mayor Virg Bernero has written a letter requesting that Michigan Attorney General Mike Cox independently investigate whether the city acted improperly in a case involving the disclosure of an individual s HIV status. In May, Lansing police working undercover at the Fenner Nature Center arrested a man on a charg


UNITED STATES: AIDS Patients at Increased Risk for HPV-Related Cancers
Reuters Health Medical News (07.31.09) - Wednesday, August 05, 2009
People with AIDS have a statistically significant higher risk of human papillomavirus (HPV)-associated cancers, with risks increasing along with immunosuppression, according to a new study. Dr. Anil K. Chaturvedi of the National Cancer Institute and colleagues analyzed 499,230 AIDS diagnoses from the beginning of the e


MAURITANIA: Fighting AIDS in a Conservative Country
Inter Press Service (08.04.09) - Wednesday, August 05, 2009
Ebrima Sillah
AIDS activists in Mauritania say they must be content with delivering watered-down prevention messages in order to avoid creating offense in the highly conservative Muslim nation. By talking about condom use or safe sex openly, you are likely going to generate negative reactions even from moderate groups, said Malayai


AUSTRALIA: Teenagers Want Sex - But a Third Get Unwanted Sex
The Age (Melbourne) (08.04.09) - Wednesday, August 05, 2009
Farah Farouque
In a national survey of Australian high school students, one- third said they have experienced unwanted sex, often due to being pressured or being drunk. The prevalence of reports of unwanted sex suggests that sex education classes should emphasize how underage drinking can result in poor sexual decision making, said P


DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA: D.C. Report Card on AIDS Shows Some Improvement
Washington Post (08.05.09) - Wednesday, August 05, 2009
Darryl Fears
The District has made several recent advances in addressing its HIV/AIDS epidemic, notes a report released today by the D.C. Appleseed Center for Law and Justice. In its fifth Report Card on the District s response to HIV, the center gave the city its highest marks for expanding HIV testing in the general population an


ZAMBIA: Zambia Rejects Batch of Holed Condoms
Agence France Presse (08.03.09) - Tuesday, August 04, 2009
The Zambia Bureau of Standards (ZABS) on Monday halted sales of two brands of condoms -- Evolution and Hot -- after testing revealed holes in them. The two brands of condoms have been withdrawn for failing to meet the critical electrical freedom from holes test, said bureau spokesperson Dingase Makumba. He said a consi


SOUTH AFRICA: South Africa Minister Says World Cup May Increase HIV/AIDS
Reuters (07.31.09) - Tuesday, August 04, 2009
Michael Georgy
As South Africa prepares to host the next World Cup -- June 11-July 11, 2010 -- the nation s health minister has warned that the huge event could further the spread of HIV/AIDS. Speaking before the national AIDS council, Aaron Motsoaledi said, 2010 is going to come with good things but it may also come with dangerous t


COLORADO: 18 Hepatitis C Cases Now Appear Linked to Infected Tech
Denver Post (08.01.09) - Tuesday, August 04, 2009
Eighteen hepatitis C infections now appear to be linked to a fired Colorado surgical technician with the virus. State health officials revised the total, previously reported as 15 cases, based on test results received from Rose Medical Center and Audubon Surgery Center, where the technician was employed. All but one of


MASSACHUSETTS: Caution for and from Teens; Safer-Sex Campaign Makes Use of Peers on Facebook, YouTube, Cable
Boston Globe (08.04.09) - Tuesday, August 04, 2009
Stephen Smith
Today, Boston health officials are debuting a new safer-sex campaign aimed at reducing high STD rates among city teenagers. The initiative will reach teens via their preferred modes of communication: Facebook, YouTube and cable channels like MTV and BET. The Boston Public Health Commission (BPHC) is devoting its entire


UNITED STATES: Prechewed Infant Food May Transmit AIDS Virus
Reuters Health (07.21.09) - Tuesday, August 04, 2009
A new medical report offers evidence of infants being infected with HIV by eating premasticated food chewed by HIV-positive caregivers. Prechewing food for infants, usually during the weaning period, has been documented in various parts of the world, including the United States . The new study involves three babies wit


INDONESIA: Indonesia's Drug Fight Pushing Prison AIDS Explosion
Agence France Presse (08.03.09) - Tuesday, August 04, 2009
Aubrey Belford
Indonesia s war on drugs has overwhelmed its prisons, concentrating injecting drug users (IDUs) in a setting where drug use is rife and blood-borne diseases can be spread easily, advocates say. Of Indonesia s nearly 12,000 prisoners, almost 6,900 were arrested for drug crimes. Inside Jakarta s Salemba prison, an inject


MOZAMBIQUE: Mozambicans Protest Overhaul of HIV Care
Agence France Presse (08.03.09) - Tuesday, August 04, 2009
Hundreds of protesters marched to the Health Ministry in Maputo on Monday, demanding better treatment and more privacy for HIV patients. Some 16 percent of adults in Mozambique are HIV-infected, making it one of the world s worst-affected countries. In February, health authorities closed specialized HIV centers, or day


CALIFORNIA: Advocates Fear Spike in HIV Due to California Budget Cuts
Bay Area Reporter (San Francisco) (07.30.09) - Tuesday, August 04, 2009
Matthew S. Bajko
As a result of cuts passed by the Legislature as well as those invoked as line-item vetoes by Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, the state Office of AIDS budget was slashed from $167.3 million to $82.4 million for fiscal 2009-10. Advocates worry the state is setting itself up for failure after years of keeping new HIV infecti


CHINA: Abortions Surge in China; Officials Cite Poor Sex Education
New York Times (07.31.09) - Monday, August 03, 2009
Mark McDonald
Inadequate sex education among Chinese youths is resulting in many unplanned pregnancies that end in abortion, Chinese health officials said in the state-run China Daily on Thursday. More than 13 million abortions are performed annually in China - a significant increase from 2003, when the


INDIA: Testing Shows 2,000 Percent Rise in Child HIV Cases
CNN.com (07.29.09) - Monday, August 03, 2009
India s health minister told parliament on Wednesday that HIV infections among children grew from 2,253 cases in November 2006 to 52,973 in May 2009 - an increase of more than 2,000 percent. Ghulam Nabi Azad attributed the jump to expanded testing. India now has 5,155 sites offering HIV testing and counseling, and 217


TENNESSEE: Coalition Protests Planned Parenthood's Move
Knoxville News-Sentinel (08.01.09) - Monday, August 03, 2009
Kristi L. Nelson
Planned Parenthood s Knoxville Health Center (KHC) is scheduled to relocate to a larger space at 4928 Homberg Dr. in Bearden from its current site in a small strip mall at 8078 Kingston Pike. But the move is being criticized by the Pro-Life Coalition of East Tennessee, which says the blueprints Planned Parenthood submi


MISSISSIPPI: HIV, TB Prompt Hinds Jail Upgrades
Clarion-Ledger (Jackson) (07.23.09) - Monday, August 03, 2009
Heather Civil
In a letter sent to Hinds County Sheriff Malcolm McMillin, the Mississippi Department of Health outlined upgrades needed at the county jail to lower infection risk and improve health screenings. Following positive TB tests in two inmates at the jail, the Health Department in June screened some 800 inmates. So far, 41 i


MARYLAND: Religions Unite in AIDS Fight
Baltimore Sun (07.22.09) - Monday, August 03, 2009
Angela J. Bass
On July 21, 11 churches across Baltimore converted their event rooms, basements and kitchens into HIV testing sites where more than 40 volunteers administered oral swab tests with results in 20 minutes. Organizers of Project Shalem - which means peace or safe place in the Christian, Islamic and Jewish faiths - expected


FLORIDA: HIV on the Rise - Minorities Hit Hard
Orlando Sentinel (07.30.09) - Monday, August 03, 2009
Erik Maza
In the four-county Central Florida region, almost 800 new HIV cases were recorded in 2008, says a new report by the Health Council of East Central Florida. While African Americans account for only 15 percent of the population of Lake, Orange, Osceola and Seminole counties, they represent 39 percent of residents living


FRANCE; CAMEROON: New HIV Strain Leapt to Humans from Gorillas: Study
Agence France Presse (08.02.09) - Monday, August 03, 2009
French researchers have identified a human case of a new HIV subtype that is closely related to gorilla simian immunodeficiency virus (SIVgor). Until now, HIV strains in humans have been linked to similar viruses in chimpanzees. In 2004, soon after moving to Paris, a Cameroon-born woman was tested for HIV. While HIV-1


DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA: D.C. Races to Rescue Needle Funding
Washington Post (07.31.09) - Monday, August 03, 2009
Darryl Fears
Del. Eleanor Holmes Norton (D-D.C.) and District officials are working to convince House members to eliminate a proposed amendment that would effectively reinstate a ban on using D.C. tax dollars for needle-exchange programs (NEPs). The amendment to the D.C. appropriation bill for 2010 would prohibit the District from


ILLINOIS: International Mr. Leather Bans Barebacking
Windy City Times (Chicago) (07.29.2009) - Friday, July 31, 2009
International Mr. Leather organizers recently announced that starting with next year s event, they will no longer allow vendors who promote barebacking, or unprotected anal sex. The annual gathering and contest in Chicago has attracted thousands of gay men since its 1979 launch. Vendors will also not be permitted to di


ILLINOIS: New Hepatitis A Case Found in Henry County
Quad-City Times (Davenport, Iowa) (07.29.2009) - Friday, July 31, 2009
Deirdre Cox Baker
Henry County has reported another case of hepatitis A linked to a McDonald s restaurant in Milan, Ill., bringing the total number of cases in the Quad-City region to at least 26. Rock Island County has logged 15, Mercer County five, one each in Warren and Woodford counties, and two in Scott County, Iowa. To date, publi


CALIFORNIA: HIV State Cuts Could Lead to More Infections, Advocates Say
Desert Sun (Palm Springs) (07.29.2009) - Friday, July 31, 2009
Nicole C. Brambila
Desert AIDS Project (DAP) officials are wondering how a $52 million cut to state AIDS prevention and treatment efforts, ordered Tuesday by Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, will impact testing efforts in the Palm Springs area. HIV/AIDS is a particularly critical issue in Palm Springs, which boasts one of the largest gay popu


ILLINOIS: Frank Talk from the Sex Doctor
Chicago Tribune (07.27.2009) - Friday, July 31, 2009
Megan Twohey
Hyde Park sexologist Dr. Rachael Ross, who dispenses advice about sex and reproductive health on radio stations B96 and Power 92, as well as the BET cable channel, has developed a growing fan base among young people in Chicago and beyond. Ross mission is to address the misguided attitudes and dangerous sexual behaviors


PENNSYLVANIA: Girlfriends Project Uses Novel Idea to Teach Black Women in Three Communities About Risks of HIV
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette (07.29.2009) - Friday, July 31, 2009
Pohla Smith
The Pittsburgh AIDS Task Force is bringing an HIV prevention and domestic-violence prevention program into African-American women s homes in Duquesne, Clairton, and Braddock. We expected we might get 50 to 60 women participating each year, said Daphne Parker, PATF s prevention services director. From January through Ju


UNITED STATES: HIV Infection and Chronic Drinking Have a Synergistic, Damaging Effect on the Brain
Science Daily (07.24.2009) - Friday, July 31, 2009
Chronic heavy alcohol use in HIV patients is highly prevalent, though the potentially compounded effect of these conditions is seldom considered, noted Edith V. Sullivan of Stanford University and colleagues. In their study, researchers examined components of working and episodic memory in HIV infection and chronic alc


NAMIBIA: Plan Slashes Mother-to-Child HIV Infections
Inter Press Service (07.28.2009) - Friday, July 31, 2009
Servaas Van Den Bosch
Despite huge challenges, vast and sparsely populated Namibia s early infant diagnosis (EID) program is making significant progress in reducing the number of babies with HIV. Ministry of Health figures indicate that since the program s launch in 2006, the proportion of newborns with HIV has fallen from 13 percent to 2 p


ILLINOIS: Steamy TV, No Discussion Lead to More STDs
State Journal-Register (Springfield) (07.27.2009) - Friday, July 31, 2009
Dean Olsen
Each year in Illinois, state-funded public health clinics screen more than 170,000 people for STDs, according to Charlie Rabins, chief of the STD program at the Illinois Department of Public Health (IDPH). New cases of chlamydia in Illinois reached an all-time high in 2008 - 59,169. Popular culture glamorizes sex. Ther


CHINA: Chinese Lesbians Petition for Right to Donate Blood
Agence France Presse (07.28.09) - Thursday, July 30, 2009
At least 540 lesbians have signed an online petition asking the Chinese government to allow them to donate blood. China s estimated 30 million homosexuals include some 10 million lesbians, according to health ministry data cited by the China Daily. We just hope the authorities respect our kind intention to donate blood


UGANDA: HIV on the Rise Again in Uganda as Complacency Sets In
Deutsche Presse-Agentur (07.16.09) - Thursday, July 30, 2009
A new government report shows some 90,000 Ugandans became infected with HIV in 2008, increasing the country s overall infection rate to 6.4 percent from 6 percent four years ago. Of the new infections among those ages 15-49, 43 percent occurred in people who reported being in a monogamous relationship over the past 12


CALIFORNIA: Needle Exchange Ban Could Be Lifted
Bay Area Reporter (San Francisco) (07.30.09) - Thursday, July 30, 2009
Seth Hemmelgarn
If approved, legislation winding through Congress that authorizes federal funding of syringe-exchange programs could eventually help local SEPs. In San Francisco, SEPs have been credited with keeping HIV incidence down among injection drug users (IDUs). If the federal ban is lifted, it gives jurisdictions much more fle


LOUISIANA: AIDS Rate High in the Baton Rouge Area
The Advocate (Baton Rouge) (07.26.09) - Thursday, July 30, 2009
Steven Ward
CDC data show that in 2007, the nine-parish Baton Rouge Metropolitan Statistical Area ranked third in prevalence of AIDS cases (31.4 cases per 100,000 population) after New Orleans (31.5) and Miami (33.1). Insiders cite several factors that may be contributing to the MSA s high AIDS rate: *Poor access to care. Some in


UGANDA: Preventive Service Needs of Young People Perinatally Infected with HIV in Uganda
AIDS Care (06.09) Vol. 21; No. 6: P. 725-731 - Thursday, July 30, 2009
Harriet Birungi; Francis Obare; John Frank Mugisha; Humphres Evelia; Juliana Nyombi
Toward the goal of identifying the preventive service needs of young people born with HIV, the current study examines the sexual expressions and experiences -- as well as the preventive practices -- of 732 males and females, ages 15 to 19, who were perinatally infected with the virus. The data come from a 2007 project


SOUTH AFRICA: A Window of Dignity for Those Imprisoned by TB
New York Times (07.29.09) - Thursday, July 30, 2009
Celia W. Dugger
Under an approach authorized by South Africa s current policy, patients with multidrug-resistant TB can be forced into long- term hospitalization for treatment and isolation behind concertina wire. But in the crowded township of Khayelitsha in Cape Town, Doctors Without Borders (DWB) is piloting a program to treat MDR-


SOUTH AFRICA: South Africa's Population Growth Slows as AIDS Deaths Increase
Bloomberg News (07.27.09) - Thursday, July 30, 2009
Nasreen Seria
HIV/AIDS deaths are a driving factor behind a slowing of South Africa s population growth rate for the second year in a row, Statistics South Africa (SSA) said Monday. Over a one-year period ending June 2009, the population rose 1.07 percent, compared with 1.1 percent during the previous 12 months. In 2001-02, the grow


TEXAS: Fresh Start Grant to Help Ex-Prisoners Get HIV/AIDS Care
Austin American-Statesman (07.26.09) - Thursday, July 30, 2009
Andrea Ball
In Texas, federal funds are helping recently released African- American prisoners at risk of HIV become reintegrated into society. With the help of a $1.6 million grant from the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, AIDS Services of Austin is offering ex-prisoners education, street outreach, counse


CALIFORNIA: Dr. Joel D. Weisman, 1943-2009; Among the First Doctors to Detect AIDS
Los Angeles Times (07.23.09) - Wednesday, July 29, 2009
Elaine Woo
One of the physicians who documented cases of Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia among five young gay men in California in 1981, the first report of AIDS, died July 18 in Los Angeles. In 1980, Dr. Joel D. Weisman noticed a troubling pattern of similar symptoms in three seriously ill male patients of his general practice in


NORTHERN NEW ENGLAND: NNE Receiving HIV/AIDS Housing Assistance
Associated Press (07.23.09) - Wednesday, July 29, 2009
The US Department of Housing and Urban Development has announced more than $3.8 million in housing grants to help low-income families living with HIV/AIDS in Northern New England. Allocations include: $1.3 million for the Frannie Peabody Center in Portland, Maine; $1.4 million for the city of Portland; $716,000 for New


UNITED NATIONS: UN Allows Gay, Lesbian Group to Join Debates
Associated Press (07.27.09) - Wednesday, July 29, 2009
Bradley S. Klapper
The UN Economic and Social Council s decision on Monday to grant official status to the Brazilian Association of Gays, Lesbians and Transsexuals gives that organization the right to participate in UN meetings on a range of topics. This is the third consecutive year the council has overturned a committee ruling blocking


KENYA: The Structure and Outcomes of a HIV Post-Exposure Prophylaxis Program in a High HIV Prevalence Setup in Western Kenya
JAIDS Vol. 51; No. 1: P. 47-53 (05..09) - Wednesday, July 29, 2009
Abraham M. Siika, MMed; Winston M. Nyandiko, MMed; Ann Mwangi, MSc; Michael Waxman, MD; John E. Sidle; Sylvester N. Kimaiyo, MD; Kara Wools-Kaloustian, MD
In 2001, HIV post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP) was initiated in western Kenya , explained the authors of the current study, which sought to describe the design, implementation, and evolution of the program. Patient data were analyzed for reasons, time to initiation, and PEP outcome. Occupational PEP was initiated fir


CANADA: An Integrated Supervised Injecting Program Within a Care Facility for HIV-Positive Individuals: A Qualitative Evaluation
AIDS Care Vol. 21; No. 5: P. 638-644 (05..09) - Wednesday, July 29, 2009
Andrea Krusi; Will Small; Evan Wood; Thomas Kerr
Little study has been devoted to the potential role that supervised injecting programs could play in increasing access to prevention and care services for injection drug users (IDUs) who are HIV-positive. The authors of the current report conducted 22 semi-structured interviews with HIV-positive IDUs regarding a superv


CAMBODIA: HIV Families Relocated to Cambodia's 'AIDS Colony'
CNN.com (07.28.09) - Wednesday, July 29, 2009
Representatives of more than 100 global HIV/AIDS and social justice organizations have signed a letter protesting the Cambodian government s relocation of a number of HIV/AIDS- affected families into a settlement that locals have dubbed the AIDS colony. Last month, the government began moving the families out of the Bo


SOUTH AFRICA: New Effort to Fight AIDS Unveiled
Independent Online (Cape Town) (07.28.09) - Wednesday, July 29, 2009
South African Press Association
South Africa s government on Tuesday launched a new research and development program to fight HIV/AIDS. South Africa is investigating every possible avenue to beat the virus, said Naledi Pandor, the science and technology minister. The South African HIV/AIDS Research and Innovation Platform (SHARP) will focus on the de


SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA: Alarming Africa Male Gay HIV Rate
BBC (07.20.09) - Wednesday, July 29, 2009
A new report finds high rates of HIV infection among widespread networks of men who have sex with men (MSM) across Africa, and it suggests these networks may be closely associated with predominantly heterosexual networks in the general population. Even so, most African MSM have no safe access to prevention information


CALIFORNIA: Governor Signs, Slashes Budget
San Francisco Chronicle (07.29.09) - Wednesday, July 29, 2009
Wyatt Buchanan
On Tuesday, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger approved an $84 billion state budget, exercising line-item vetoes to slash an additional $489 million that affect many health programs including HIV prevention. Democratic leaders say they will challenge the legality of most of the new cuts, contending the particular funding lines


ALABAMA: Birmingham Awarded $9.8 Million in HUD Grants
Birmingham News (07.24.09) - Tuesday, July 28, 2009
Jeremy Gray
The US Department of Housing and Urban Development has announced an award of more than $9.8 million in housing- related grants to Birmingham, including $554,848 for people with HIV/AIDS. The money will help provide rental assistance and support for individuals and families affected by HIV, and it will help communities


TOGO: Global Fund Grants Togo $108 Million to Fight AIDS
Agence France Presse (07.17.09) - Tuesday, July 28, 2009
Togo is receiving a $108 million grant from the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB and Malaria, according to the Western African nation s health ministry. Antiretrovirals have been available for free since November in Togo, whose HIV prevalence rate is estimated at 3.2 percent. The national HIV prevention agency says abou


AFRICA: Branson Proposes Public Health Agency for Africa
Associated Press (07.22.09) - Tuesday, July 28, 2009
According to a statement released on July 22, British billionaire Richard Branson and South African President Jacob Zuma are discussing the foundation of a public health agency - described as being similar to the US CDC - to address Africa s health needs. Saying such an agency will ultimately help save millions of live


OHIO: Teens Spread the Word About Abstinence
Akron Beacon Journal (07.26.09) - Tuesday, July 28, 2009
Kim Hone-McMahan
Ohio teenagers calling themselves CATS ( Concerned About Teen Sexuality ) are encouraging others to follow their lead in abstaining from sex before marriage. CATS is an effort of Akron s Abstinence the Better Choice (ABC), which for more than 20 years has encouraged teens to steer clear of sex, drugs, and alcohol. We


GEORGIA: SisterLove Marks 20 Years
Atlanta Journal-Constitution (07.25.09) - Tuesday, July 28, 2009
Shelia M. Poole
SisterLove, an Atlanta-based nonprofit focusing on HIV/AIDS and reproductive issues for women, particularly women of color, celebrated its 20th anniversary on Saturday with a special program at Spelman College. The group also honored 20 women who have lived with HIV/AIDS for at least 20 years. At the time they were dia


UNITED STATES: Depressive Symptoms and Sexual Risk Behavior in Young, Chlamydia-Infected, Heterosexual Dyads
Journal of Adolescent Health Vol. 45; No. 1: P. 63-69 (07..09) - Tuesday, July 28, 2009
Lydia A. Shrier, MD, MPH; Julia A. Schillinger, MD, MSc; Parul Aneja, ScM; Peter A. Rice, MD; Byron E. Batteiger, MD; Phillip G. Braslins, MD, FRACP, MPHTM; Donald P. Orr, MD; J. Dennis Fortenberry, MD, MS
The current study examined the associations between depressive symptoms and dyad-level sexual risk behavior in young heterosexual dyads with sexually transmitted infection (STI). An assessment that included demographics, past and current STI risk behaviors, and the Beck Depression Inventory was administered to chlamydi


UNITED STATES: Longitudinal Association of Alcohol Use with HIV Disease Progression and Psychological Health of Women with HIV
AIDS Care Vol. 21; No. 7: P. 834-841 (07..09) - Tuesday, July 28, 2009
Musie Ghebremichael; Elijah Paintsil; Jeannette R. Ickovics; David Vlahov; Paula Schuman; Robert Boland; Ellie Schoenbaum; Janet Moore; Heping Zhang
The association of alcohol consumption and depression, and their effects on HIV disease progression among women with HIV, were the subjects of the current study. The participants were 871 HIV-positive women recruited in four US cities between 1993 and 1995. The participants underwent physical examination, medical recor


UGANDA: Uganda Investigates HIV Patients' Deaths
Associated Press (07.27.09) - Tuesday, July 28, 2009
Godfrey Olukya
Uganda s Health Ministry is investigating reports of HIV patients dying due to a shortage of antiretroviral drugs. In the north, Apac district health officials have said 17 patients previously receiving treatment died in the past month when they lacked access to ARVs, Dr. Zainab Akol, manager of the ministry s HIV/AIDS


UNITED STATES: Vets Affected by VA Hospital Errors to File Claims
Associated Press (07.27.09) - Tuesday, July 28, 2009
Bill Poovey
An attorney representing about 60 veterans will ask the US Department of Veterans Affairs to pay disability benefits and damages for mistakes that may have exposed them to blood-borne infections. Mike Sheppard of Nashville said he expects other affected veterans will join the complaint. Sheppard s clients are among the


CALIFORNIA: Walkers Raise $3.5 Million for Bay Area AIDS Organizations
Contra Costa Times (07.19.09) - Monday, July 27, 2009
Sean Maher
More than 25,000 people participated in the 23rd annual AIDS Walk San Francisco, raising over $3.5 million for the San Francisco AIDS Foundation and many other Bay Area HIV/AIDS service organizations. While the amount was down by about $900,000 from the 2008 walk, it s still really gratifying given this economy, said D


NEW YORK: Port Chester Schools to Offer Pregnancy, STD Tests
Journal News (White Plains) (07.26.09) - Monday, July 27, 2009
Theresa Juva
Under a measure recently approved by the Port Chester School Board, Open Door Family Medical Centers will expand the services it provides in elementary, middle, and high schools to include STD and pregnancy testing. Students who test positive for pregnancy or infection can receive counseling and are referred for treatm


INDIA: Bill Gates Wins Indira Gandhi Prize in India
Associated Press (07.25.09) - Monday, July 27, 2009
Ashok Sharma
On Saturday, Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates was awarded India s Indira Gandhi Prize for Peace, Disarmament and Development. Gates was recognized for his work with the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, which has committed nearly $1 billion for health and development projects in India, a government statement said. Mo


CALIFORNIA: Syphilis Cases on the Rise in Sacramento County; Officials Worried by the Number of Pregnant Women with the Disease
Sacramento Bee (07.22.09) - Monday, July 27, 2009
Marissa Lang
Sacramento County is coping with a spike in the number of reported cases of syphilis, particularly among pregnant women. In 2008, the county reported 91 cases of syphilis, up from 63 in 2007 and 30 in 2006. In the early 1990s, the county reported no new cases of syphilis, says Dr. Glennah Trochet, public health officer


CALIFORNIA: HIV/AIDS Still a Scourge for African Americans
Contra Costa Times (07.25.09) - Monday, July 27, 2009
Angela Hill, Oakland Tribune
Bay area activists hope a community seminar held Saturday in San Leandro will refocus attention on the impact of HIV/AIDS among black women. Infection from HIV is the leading cause of death among black women between the ages of 25-34, according to CDC. The one-day seminar, The Real Conversation: Sistahs Getting Real Ab


ILLINOIS: 17 Percent of Gay Men Here HIV-Positive, New Stats Confirm
Chicago Sun-Times (07.25.09) - Monday, July 27, 2009
Monifa Thomas
A new Chicago Public Health Department study found that 17.4 percent of city men who have sex with men (MSM) tested for HIV were infected, and 50 percent were unaware of their infection at the start of the survey. The study was conducted last year and included data from 524 MSM in randomly selected venues in the Nation


UNITED STATES: Correlates of Heterosexual Anal Intercourse Among At-Risk Adolescents and Young Adults
American Journal of Public Health (06..09) - Monday, July 27, 2009
Celia M. Lescano, PhD; Christopher D. Houck, PhD; Larry K. Brown, MD; Glenn Doherty, BA; Ralph J. DiClemente, PhD; M. Isabel Fernandez, PhD; David Pugatch, MD; William E. Schlenger, PhD; Barbara J. Silver, PhD
In the current study, the researchers sought to identify factors associated with anal sex among adolescents and young adults. Among members of this population reporting recent unprotected sex, the authors examined demographic, behavioral, relationship context, attitudinal, substance use and mental health correlates of


UNITED STATES: Phone Gadget to Diagnose Disease
BBC (07.22.09) - Monday, July 27, 2009
US researchers report that they have built a mobile phone- mounted light microscope with a resolution of just over one micron that can be used to identify TB in samples. The snap- on CellScope fluorescence microscope could be particularly useful in the developing world, where mobile phone access and coverage are common


UNITED STATES: House Bill Lifts Ban on Needle Exchanges
Washington Post (07.25.09) - Monday, July 27, 2009
Darryl Fears
On Friday, the US House passed by 264 to 153 a measure that would allow federal funding of needle-exchange programs (NEPs), easing the way for the District of Columbia and other cities to fight local epidemics among intravenous drug users. This is the first time in over 20 years that we are on the verge of recognition


PHILIPPINES: UNDP to Help Philippines Fight Rise of AIDS Threat
Agence France Presse (07.21.09) - Friday, July 24, 2009
The UN Development Program and the Philippine government are launching a three-year anti-AIDS project. All the main ingredients for an epidemic are present in the country, UNDP said Tuesday. First, HIV transmission through unprotected sex accounts for 89 percent of reported cases. Among those most at risk - men who hav


ILLINOIS: More than 4,500 Get Shots in Hepatitis A Outbreak
Associated Press (07.23.09) - Friday, July 24, 2009
More than 4,500 people have received preventive hepatitis A vaccines that were offered free to people who ate at a McDonald s restaurant in Milan, Ill., between July 6-10 and July 13-14. Two employees at the restaurant were among 22 people who ultimately got sick. More than 4,400 people were vaccinated at a clinic Mond


COLORADO: Prosecutors Tie Colorado Tech to 19 Hepatitis Cases
Associated Press (07.24.09) - Friday, July 24, 2009
P. Solomon Banda
On Thursday, a grand jury in Colorado indicted a surgical technician with hepatitis C for allegedly injecting herself with painkillers intended for patients, then refilling the syringes with saline, putting patients at risk for infection. Federal prosecutors maintain that at least 19 patients at Denver s Rose Medical C


SOUTH AFRICA: Glaxo AIDS Drug Has 'Spectacular' Results in Study
Bloomberg News (07.21.09) - Friday, July 24, 2009
Simeon Bennett
Data from the first human trial of GlaxoSmithKline Plc s experimental AIDS drug S/GSK1349572 showed it quickly reduced HIV to undetectable levels in 70 percent of patients. Trial results were presented Tuesday at the 5th International AIDS Society Conference on HIV Pathogenesis, Treatment and Prevention in Cape Town,


UNITED STATES: Risk Factors Driving the Emergence of a Generalized Heterosexual HIV Epidemic in Washington, District of Columbia, Networks at Risk
AIDS Vol. 23; No. 10: P. 1277-1284 (06.19.09) - Friday, July 24, 2009
Manya Magnus; Irene Kuo; Katharine Shelly; Anthony Rawls; James Peterson; Luz Montanez; Tiffany West-Ojo; Shannon Hader; Flora Hamilton; Alan E. Greenberg
Noting that Washington, D.C., has the highest HIV/AIDS rate in the United States , with heterosexual transmission a leading mode of acquisition and African-American women disproportionately affected, the study authors sought to examine risk factors driving the local epidemic using National HIV Behavioral Surveillance d


INDIA: Gates Foundation Increases Funding, Defends AIDS Initiative in India
Seattle Times (07.23.09) - Friday, July 24, 2009
Kristi Heim
Bill Gates on Thursday announced an $80 million grant to Avahan, an HIV prevention initiative in India his foundation launched in 2003. The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation has already invested $258 million in Avahan, which means call to action in Sanskrit. The program includes more than 100 nonprofits in six Indian


AFRICA: Where to Find a Million New Nurses?
Inter Press Service (07.21.09) - Friday, July 24, 2009
Kristin Palitza
At the 5th International AIDS Society (IAS) Conference on HIV Pathogenesis, Treatment and Prevention in Cape Town, South Africa , experts discussed ways to improve health systems and boost health care personnel in Africa. There are serious deficiencies in our health systems and without addressing the weaknesses, we can


ZIMBABWE: Researchers: Zimbabwe's Crisis Driving HIV Decline
Associated Press (07.24.09) - Friday, July 24, 2009
Michelle Faul
The incidence of HIV has taken a sharp drop in Zimbabwe , a development that is being explained by everything from a battered economy to safer sex practices, experts said at the 5th International AIDS Society Conference on HIV Pathogenesis, Treatment and Prevention in Cape Town, South Af


ALABAMA: Once for HIV Only, Alabama Re-Entry Program Expands
Associated Press (07.22.09) - Friday, July 24, 2009
Desiree Hunter
Since 2000, the Alabama Prison Initiative has offered state inmates with HIV/AIDS specialized services to assist with their return to the general population. In the voluntary program, inmates enroll in classes up to three months before leaving prison and receive help obtaining licenses and other important documents, as


GEORGIA: Emory to Take Part in New HIV Clinical Trials
Atlanta Journal-Constitution (07.16.09) - Thursday, July 23, 2009
Craig Schneider
To support its participation in the National Institutes of Health s HIV Prevention Trials Network, Emory University will receive a $4.8 million grant over three years. The Emory HIV Clinical Trials Unit will take part in two studies. One will estimate the overall HIV incidence rate among at-risk US women and determine


ILLINOIS: National LGBTI Health Summit Here Aug. 14-18
Windy City Times (Chicago) (07.08.09) - Thursday, July 23, 2009
The Chicago Hilton and Towers will be the site of the 2009 National Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Intersex Health Summit Aug. 14-18. Organizers have announced that the event, in collaboration with the Bisexual Health Summit, will offer nearly 100 workshop, plenary, and town hall sessions. Topics will include HIV


ILLINOIS: HUD Puts $5 Million Toward Illinois Families Living with AIDS
Associated Press (07.23.09) - Thursday, July 23, 2009
Shaun Donovan, secretary of the US Department of Housing and Urban Development, on Wednesday announced that HUD is awarding more than $5 million in grants to assist low-income families living with HIV/AIDS in Illinois. Chicago s Department of Public Health will received some $1.4 million to continue funding 37 rental u


LOUISIANA: Sex Education in New Orleans Schools
Times-Picayune (New Orleans) (07.21.09) - Thursday, July 23, 2009
David Hammer
In response to recent data showing HIV/AIDS cases growing in New Orleans, two City Council members on Monday called for more extensive sex education in city public schools. Council members Stacy Head and Cynthia Willard-Lewis brought the topic for discussion after hearing testimony from a faith-based HIV/AIDS outreach


SOUTH AFRICA: Treating HIV Earlier Could Save 76,000 Lives in South Africa
Bloomberg News (07.20.09) - Thursday, July 23, 2009
Simeon Bennett
A new study finds that starting treatment when CD4 cells drop below 350 per cubic millimeter of blood could save 76,000 lives in South Africa alone over the next five years. Mathematical modeling also showed that starting South African patients on treatment sooner could prevent around 66,000 cases of HIV-related diseas


TANZANIA: Wild Chimpanzees Get AIDS-Like Illness
Nature News (07.22.09) - Thursday, July 23, 2009
Erika Check Hayden
US researchers have shown for the first time that chimpanzees can fall ill and die from infection by the HIV-like simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV), overturning a decade-old consensus that chimps were immune to it. The discovery suggests that scientists will not find the solution to HIV immunity in the chimp genome.


ZIMBABWE: AIDS Prevention Trial in Zimbabwe Targets Women
Reuters (07.22.09) - Thursday, July 23, 2009
Wendell Roelf
The US-funded Microbicide Trials Network is about to launch an AIDS prevention trial in Zimbabwe that will evaluate a microbicide and oral tablets in a single study. The goal of the research is to determine whether certain antiretrovirals can be used to prevent HIV infection when given as a vaginal microbicide gel or a


UNITED STATES: FDA Warns Abbott on Magic Johnson DVD for HIV Drug
Reuters (07.22.09) - Thursday, July 23, 2009
Bill Berkrot
The Food and Drug Administration has asked Abbott Laboratories to immediately cease dissemination of a promotional DVD about its AIDS drug Kaletra , citing what FDA calls serious violations. In a letter, FDA said the DVD featuring HIV-positive basketball great Earvin Magic Johns


MISSISSIPPI: Mississippi Teens at Risk: Youth HIV, Pregnancy on Rise
Clarion Ledger (Jackson) (07.21.09) - Thursday, July 23, 2009
Chris Joyner
A recent CDC report analyzing sexual and reproductive health measures among people ages 10-24 shows Mississippi continues to rank at or near the top in some troubling categories. The state has the highest birth rate in the nation for mothers ages 10-14, 15-17, and 20-24, and it ranks second behind Arkansas for mothers


ILLINOIS: Health Department Launches TB Web Site
News-Sun (Waukegan) (07.22.09) - Wednesday, July 22, 2009
A new Web site launched by the Lake County Health Department aims to educate residents and the business community about TB. In addition to information about screening and the population groups most at risk of TB, the site includes resources developed by CDC. The department is also making a compact disc with the informa


WISCONSIN: Swine Flu Cases Cancel Summer Camp Session
Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel (07.18.09) - Wednesday, July 22, 2009
The news that two of its counselors had tested positive for swine flu prompted a Milwaukee-based charity to cancel a session of a summer camp for children and families affected by HIV/AIDS. One Heartland s camp is located in Willow Run, Minn.; the weeklong retreat was to have started Friday. There are no known cases of


CANADA: Incidence of HIV in Alberta Babies Decreasing Thanks to Screening
CBC News (07.06.09) - Wednesday, July 22, 2009
A program to screen pregnant women in Northern Alberta, implemented by the provincial government in late 1998, is being credited for a big drop in the number of mothers transmitting HIV to their infants. The rate of transmission dropped from more than 30 percent before the screening effort to less than 1 percent, accor


NEW JERSEY: More Rely on Free Needles
Courier-Post (Cherry Hill) (07.20.09) - Wednesday, July 22, 2009
Deborah Hirsch
Camden s needle-exchange program has grown from just five clients when it opened some 18 months ago to 976 registered users today. Every Tuesday, the NEP distributes free sterile syringes, antiseptic wipes, alcohol swabs, and other supplies from a van in Camden s industrial Waterfront South neighborhood. About 40 clien


ILLINOIS: Sex Education Takes a New Turn
Chicago Tribune (07.17.09) - Wednesday, July 22, 2009
Kristen Kridel
This fall, Chicago Public Schools and the Department of Public Health will offer students educational forums about STDs as well as a free screening and treatment program for gonorrhea and chlamydia. The pilot initiative will target juniors and seniors in up to six high schools. It s just one additional tool we think is


AFRICA: WHO May Change ARV Guidelines for Pregnant Mothers
Reuters (07.21.09) - Wednesday, July 22, 2009
Wendell Roelf
Prompted by results from a new study showing that giving mothers prolonged antiretroviral treatment during breastfeeding significantly reduces mother-to-child HIV transmission, the World Health Organization (WHO) has announced it will publish new guidelines on the matter by the end of this year. The study, conducte


UGANDA: For Women, Circumcised Partner May Be Better Lover
ABC News (07.20.09) - Wednesday, July 22, 2009
Michael Smith, MedPage Today
A landmark study - presented at the 5th International AIDS Society Conference on HIV Pathogenesis, Treatment and Prevention in Cape Town, South Africa - finds that almost 40 percent of women reported their sexual satisfaction improved after their male partner underwent circumcision. The results will likely help popular


AFRICA: UNAIDS Chief Promises African Drug Agency Soon
Voice of America News (07.21.09) - Wednesday, July 22, 2009
Darren Taylor
The head of UNAIDS is urging African leaders to create a centralized agency to manufacture, regulate, stockpile, and distribute cheaper medicines. Michel Sidibe recently met with leaders from the African Union and New Partnership for African Development to discuss the proposal, which would include HIV and TB drugs. The


UNITED STATES: HIV Travel Ban May Be Lifted for Infected Visitors
MSNBC.com (07.17.09) - Wednesday, July 22, 2009
JoNel Aleccia
CDC has received a high volume of public feedback on the proposal to remove HIV from the list of diseases that keep non-citizens from entering the United States . The public comment period runs through Aug. 17. We re trying to end the stigma and the discriminatory practice for a disease that doesn t warrant exclusion f


INDIA: India's Top Court Refuses to Temporarily Suspend Ruling that Made Gay Sex Legal
Canadian Press (07.20.09) - Tuesday, July 21, 2009
Ashok Sharma
India s Supreme Court on Monday refused to temporarily suspend a ruling by the Delhi High Court that struck down a law making sex between consenting adults of the same gender illegal. The Supreme Court said the lower court s July 2 ruling will remain in effect while it reviews a petition to reverse it. Hearings on that


SPAIN: Some 35,000 Spaniards Could Be Infected with HIV Without Awareness
Xinhua News Agency (07.20.09) - Tuesday, July 21, 2009
In Madrid on Monday, the Spanish government kicked off a new AIDS awareness campaign entitled Leave your doubts behind, and the general director of the Spanish public health authority warned that 35,000 Spaniards may carry HIV without knowing it. Half of the new infections are down to people who do not know they are ca


CALIFORNIA: Inland HIV/AIDS Agency May Face Funding Challenges
Press Enterprise (07.18.09) - Tuesday, July 21, 2009
Lora Hines
On Monday, the Inland Empire HIV Planning Council began a three-day summit to determine HIV/AIDS funding priorities for Riverside and San Bernardino counties. The council will have to contend with the fallout from California s ongoing fiscal crisis, including $80 million in proposed cuts to HIV/AIDS programs and elimin


MASSACHUSETTS: Fenway and the Multicultural AIDS Coalition Launch Study on Black Gay Men and HIV
Bay Windows (Boston) (07.08.09) - Tuesday, July 21, 2009
Ethan Jacobs
Fenway Health and the Multicultural AIDS Coalition are looking to recruit 330 black men who have sex with men (MSM) for a study that seeks to better understand their sexual health and determine effective HIV prevention strategies. Boston is one of six cities participating in Project Saving Ourselves ; the others are Ne


GERMANY: Boehringer's HIV Drug Has Edge over BMS' Reyataz
Reuters (07.20.09) - Tuesday, July 21, 2009
Ludwig Burger
A study of 569 patients indicates that Boehringer Ingelheim s drug Viramune suppressed HIV as well as Bristol Myers Squibb s drug Reyataz but had a more favorable effect on cardiovascular risks. The results were presented over the weekend at the 5th International AIDS Society Conference on HIV Pathogenesis, Treatment a


ZIMBABWE; UGANDA: Africa HIV City Care Questioned
BBC (07.21.09) - Tuesday, July 21, 2009
More people with HIV//AIDS in Africa could be treated if routine laboratory testing to monitor the disease were dropped in favor of clinically driven monitoring, according to new research. More than 6 million people in Africa need AIDS treatment, but just 2.2 million receive it. The cost savings of switching to clinica


AFRICA: Container AIDS Labs Could Work Across Africa: US Company
Reuters (07.21.09) - Tuesday, July 21, 2009
Wendell Roelf
The head of global health for a US medical equipment supplier is touting a plan to convert shipping containers into HIV/AIDS diagnostic labs in resource-limited settings in Africa and elsewhere. I think it s a very exciting concept and I think it is one that can be replicated across Africa, Krista Thompson of Becton Di


INDIAN COUNTRY: Prescription Drugs 'Newest Monster' in Indian Country
Great Falls Tribune (07.10.09) - Tuesday, July 21, 2009
Eric Newhouse
Prescription drug misuse is becoming more common in Indian Country, and some health care providers are linking it to increases in hepatitis C infections. When Erma Skunkcap began working as a substance abuse counselor at Crystal Creek, a Browning, Mont., treatment center, it was all alcohol, she recently told a local f


GEORGIA: Free LGBT Health Fair Set for July 25
Southern Voice (Atlanta) (07.17.09) - Monday, July 20, 2009
Laura Douglas-Brown
The gay community is invited to take part in a special program of free health screenings on July 25 sponsored by the Atlanta Lesbian Health Initiative with assistance from Piedmont Hospital. Procedures offered on a drop-in basis will include HIV, body mass index, blood pressure, glucose, cholesterol and breast health s


ILLINOIS: Business Returns to Normal After Hepatitis A Outbreak
Quad-City Times (Davenport, Iowa) (07.19.09) - Monday, July 20, 2009
Linda Cook
As of the end of last week, public health authorities had logged 19 confirmed cases of hepatitis A in Western Illinois, 11 of which required hospitalization. On July 13, the Rock Island County Health Department notified the McDonald s restaurant at 400 W. 1st St. that one of its employees had been diagnosed with the vi


COLORADO: More than 500 Tested and Cleared for Hepatitis C in Springs
The Gazette (Colorado Springs) (07.17.09) - Monday, July 20, 2009
Brian Newsome
So far, 544 people have tested negative for hepatitis C at Audubon Surgery Center in Colorado Springs, where a surgical technician with the virus is alleged to have stolen syringes filled with the painkiller Fentanyl and replaced them with used syringes filled with saline solution. The facility identified 1,200 patient


MINNESOTA: Changes Recommended After Ramsey County Workhouse's Tuberculosis Outbreak Last Year
St. Paul Pioneer Press (07.10.09) - Monday, July 20, 2009
Jeremy Olson
The Ramsey County Workhouse s ventilation system needs upgrades, according to a review prompted by a TB outbreak last year at the facility that involved eight active and 118 latent cases. Dr. Robert Greifinger, a contractor hired to conduct the review, also called for an overhaul of the county s response to correctiona


UNITED STATES: Accessing Social Networks with High Rates of Undiagnosed HIV Infection: The Social Networks Demonstration Project
American Journal of Public Health Vol. 99; No. 6: P. 1093-1099 (06..09) - Monday, July 20, 2009
Lisa W. Kimbrough, MS; Holly E. Fisher, PhD; Kenneth T. Jones, MSW; Wayne Johnson, MPH; Sekhar Thadiparthi, BS; Samuel Dooley, MD
The study authors evaluated the use of social networks to reach persons with undiagnosed HIV infection in ethnic minority communities and link them to medical care and HIV prevention services. In seven cities, CDC funded nine community-based groups in an effort to enlist persons with HIV to refer others from their soci


SOUTH AFRICA: South Africa Is Seen to Lag in HIV Fight
New York Times (07.20.09) - Monday, July 20, 2009
Celia W. Dugger
At a French-financed clinic in Orange Farm, South Africa , thousands of young men are flocking to be circumcised. The surgical procedure can reduce the chance of female-to-male HIV transmission by up to 60 percent, and two years ago the World Health Organization recommended it especially for countries facing genera


SOUTHERN AFRICA: AIDS Drugs Shortage Threatens Africa
Associated Press (07.18.09) - Monday, July 20, 2009
Michelle Faul
Progress in the fight against AIDS could be reversed in six African countries due to chronic shortages of AIDS drugs, Doctors Without Borders warned Saturday in Cape Town at the opening of the 5th International AIDS Society Conference on HIV Pathogenesis, Treatment and Prevention. DWB s report focused on


SOUTH AFRICA: South Africa Tests AIDS Vaccine
Associated Press (07.20.09) - Monday, July 20, 2009
Michelle Faul
The first AIDS vaccine created by a developing nation will undergo safety trials in 36 healthy South African volunteers this month, Anthony Mbewu, president of the country s Medical Research Council, announced Sunday on the sidelines of an international AIDS conference in Cape Town. Despite nearly a decade of political


DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA: Amendment on Needle-Exchange Program Worries AIDS Activists
Washington Post (07.16.09) - Monday, July 20, 2009
Darryl Fears
Two years after Congress lifted a ban on the use of local government funds to support syringe exchange in the District, a newly proposed measure seeks to limit that support. Rep. Jack Kingston (R-Ga.) submitted an amendment to the District s federal appropriation for 2010 that would prohibit the use of federal funds to


TEXAS: Official: State to Cover City STD Tracking
Avalanche-Journal (Lubbock) (07.11.09) - Friday, July 17, 2009
Sarah Nightingale
A Department of State Health Services official confirmed on July 10 that Texas will pay to continue the work of two STD prevention specialists whose jobs had been targeted for elimination by Lubbock city staff. While the two positions themselves may still be cut, the work of the STD investigators will be picked up by f


NEVADA: Health Summit Scheduled
Associated Press (07.14.09) - Friday, July 17, 2009
New requirements for reporting and responding to health care- associated infections will be the topic of a July 22-23 summit in Las Vegas sponsored by the state Health Division. The topic has received renewed attention since last year, when more than 40,000 patients of two Las Vegas ambulatory surgical centers were pot


UNITED STATES: Feds: HIV Doesn't Block Barber, Masseuse Licenses
Associated Press (07.16.09) - Friday, July 17, 2009
In guidance issued Thursday, the Justice Department advised state authorities that aspiring barbers, masseuses or home health care aides cannot be denied professional licenses or admission to occupational training schools on the basis of having HIV/AIDS. People with HIV or AIDS should not be denied access to their chos


MISSOURI: Petition Urges CVS to Unlock Condoms in Stores Nationwide
Kansas City Star (07.13.09) - Friday, July 17, 2009
Matt Erickson
Calvary Community Outreach Network (CCON), a nonprofit arm of Calvary Temple Baptist Church in Kansas City, has joined more than 200 groups in signing a national petition asking CVS Caremark Corp. to unlock condoms in all CVS pharmacies. According to petition sponsor Change to Win, a labor group representing about 8,00


UGANDA: HIV: Male Circumcision Does Not Shield Women
Agence France Presse (07.16.09) - Friday, July 17, 2009
While several trials in recent years have found foreskin removal reduces men s risk of HIV infection by up to 65 percent, a new study shows the procedure has no protective benefit for their female partners. Researchers led by Maria Wawer of Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health enrolled 922 uncircumcised, HIV


RHODE ISLAND; CONNECTICUT: Planned Parenthood to Merge Rhode Island, Connecticut
Providence Journal-Bulletin (07.15.09) - Friday, July 17, 2009
Paul Davis
Later this summer, Planned Parenthood organizations in Rhode Island and Connecticut will merge to become Planned Parenthood of Southern New England. The boards of the two organizations, which have a combined budget of nearly $25 million, approved the merger as a way to cut costs and consolidate services. Rhode Island r


CALIFORNIA: County Sued over Porn Industry STDs
Los Angeles Times (07.17.09) - Friday, July 17, 2009
Kimi Yoshino
The AIDS Healthcare Foundation on Thursday asked a court to order the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health to enforce rules requiring the use of condoms during the production of adult movies, or to take other reasonable steps to prevent STD transmission in the industry. AHF s petition to the Los Angeles Count


UNITED STATES: Gilead, Johnson & Johnson to Develop Once-Daily HIV Pill
Reuters (07.16.09) - Friday, July 17, 2009
Deena Beasley
A new once-daily pill to treat HIV will be developed under a deal announced Thursday by Gilead Sciences and Johnson & Johnson . The new antiretroviral would contain J&J s experimental non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor, TMC278, and Gilead s T


UNITED STATES: US Teens Get Sex Education, but Not From Parents
Reuters (07.16.09) - Friday, July 17, 2009
A new CDC report on data from numerous studies shows the sexual and reproductive health of young people ages 10-24 remains a key public health concern. Among the report s findings: *Among girls ages 15-17, 30 percent reported they had engaged in sex, rising to 70.6 percent for girls ages 18-19. *For boys, 31.6 percent


LOUISIANA: Thursday's Calendar
Times-Picayune (New Orleans) (07.16.09) - Thursday, July 16, 2009
More than 30 restaurants in New Orleans are donating a quarter of their proceeds today to benefit the NO/AIDS Task Force. Those who make an additional donation above that will be entered into a drawing for a special prize. For more information about Dining Out For Life and participating restaurants, visit www.noaidstas


NORTH CAROLINA: Tests Show TB Outbreak Contained at Brunswick Jail
Star-News (Wilmington) (07.14.09) - Thursday, July 16, 2009
Vicky Eckenrode
Follow-up chest X-rays taken of 35 inmates and staff at the Brunswick County jail show no signs of active TB, county health officials said Tuesday. Last week, the county tested all inmates and workers at the jail after a former inmate and his cellmate tested positive for TB. Both are now being treated for active diseas


NEW YORK; TEXAS: New York, Texas Fear Hepatitis C Cases from Same Tech
Denver Post (07.15.09) - Thursday, July 16, 2009
Greg Griffin
Health officials are investigating whether a surgical technician in Colorado accused of a drug-theft scheme that potentially exposed patients to hepatitis C may also have exposed patients in facilities in New York and Texas. The technician, who has the virus, is accused in federal court of injecting herself with painki


MASSACHUSETTS: HPV Vaccine Subsidy to End July 31
Harvard Crimson (07.13.09) - Thursday, July 16, 2009
Arianna Markel
A two-year initiative that reduced the cost of the human papillomavirus vaccine Gardasil from $154 to $25 per shot for Harvard students will end July 31. A coalition of more than 15 Harvard student groups pushed for a subsidy of the then-newly available vaccine in early 2007. That summer, University Health Services (UH


NEW YORK: NYC Religious Leaders Pledge to Fight HIV/AIDS
Edge News (Boston) (07.15.09) - Thursday, July 16, 2009
Scott Stiffler
More than 50 faith-based entities and AIDS service organizations are partnering on Interfaith for HIV/AIDS: A Call to Take Action in 2009, a campaign to support HIV prevention and testing efforts across the five boroughs of New York City. Clergy, elected officials, and community representatives came together on the ste


CALIFORNIA: Open Door Clinics Drop Needle Exchange
Times Standard (Eureka) (07.13.09) - Thursday, July 16, 2009
Thadeus Greenson
The Open Door Community Health Centers clinics in Arcata and Eureka this month ceased administering the needle-exchange program they have run for nearly a decade. Humboldt County is exploring its options for another way to administer the NEP, but that may prove difficult without a reliable funding stream, said Barbara


UNITED STATES; MEXICO: Men from US, Mexico Report 'Risky' Sex with Tijuana Prostitutes, Study Finds
Los Angeles Times (07.11.09) - Thursday, July 16, 2009
Tony Perry
A new binational study finds a large proportion of men who frequent female sex workers in Tijuana do not use condoms and have a history of drug and alcohol abuse - behaviors that could spread HIV and other STDs on both sides of the border. Researchers from Mexico and the University of California-San Diego (UCSD) recrui


AUSTRALIA: Risky Sex and Drugs Take Toll Inside Prisons
Sydney Morning Herald (07.14.09) - Thursday, July 16, 2009
Joel Gibson
A new survey of inmates offers fresh insight into the demographics and risk behaviors of detainees in New South Wales prisons. Among key findings: *The average prisoner was male, age 35, and an English speaker. *Indigenous people were disproportionately represented among inmates. *Only one of 996 inmates surveyed was H


DELAWARE: Talking Sex with Teens
News Journal (Wilmington) (07.14.09) - Thursday, July 16, 2009
Kelly Bothum
Several programs are available to help mitigate the impact of early sexual activity in Delaware, a state whose rate of teenage sexual involvement is higher than the US average. According to the 2007 Youth Risk Behavior Survey, 59.3 percent of Delaware high school students have had intercourse, compared to the national


GLOBAL: Post Offices Launch HIV Education Program
Deutsche Presse-Agentur (07.07.09) - Wednesday, July 15, 2009
UNAIDS will partner with 16,000 post offices in seven countries in a new HIV education and prevention effort. The campaign - with assistance from other UN agencies, the Universal Postal Union, the International Labor Organization and other trade unions - will take place in Brazil ,


COLORADO: Colorado Hepatitis Update Will Be Weekly
Denver Post (07.14.09) - Wednesday, July 15, 2009
The Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment says it will report new cases of hepatitis C connected to the Rose Medical Center only once weekly, on Fridays. The weekly updates are due to staffing issues and to the fact the situation poses no risk of the disease spreading in the community, said department sp


UNITED STATES: Dr. Benjamin's AIDS Experience
Advocate (07.14.09) - Wednesday, July 15, 2009
Michelle Garcia
The director of government affairs for AIDS Project Los Angeles expects the nomination of Dr. Regina Benjamin as US surgeon general will bring a new ally in the fight against HIV/AIDS. Benjamin acknowledged in her nomination acceptance speech her familiarity with the disease, having lost her brother to it. Such a perso


ALABAMA: Montgomery County's HIV Rate Leads State
Montgomery Advertiser (07.11.09) - Wednesday, July 15, 2009
Kym Klass
Alabama had 839 HIV/AIDS diagnoses in 2008, with Montgomery County reporting 122 - the highest number in the state per capita. And though African Americans represent just 26 percent of state residents, they accounted for 70 percent of diagnoses in 2008 and 64 percent of cumulative cases, according to the state HIV/AIDS


UNITED STATES: Parkinson's Drugs Show Promise in Resistant TB
Reuters (07.02.09) - Wednesday, July 15, 2009
Julie Steenhuysen
Computer modeling and lab experiments suggest that a drug for Parkinson s disease could be used to treat multidrug- and extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis. Sarah Kinnings, a graduate student at the University of California-San Diego, and colleagues looked for established drugs that might be of use in treating drug


CANADA: Aboriginal HIV/AIDS Task Force Setting Up as a Society
Prince George Citizen (07.08.09) - Wednesday, July 15, 2009
Bernice Trick
A task force to address the HIV/AIDS epidemic among British Columbia s aboriginal people is working to become an official entity under the province s Societies Act. The move would give the group control of its own funding, which is now administered by Carrier Sekani Family Services, and make it eligible for other types


UNITED KINGDOM; SOUTH AFRICA: GlaxoSmithKline Agrees to Royalty-Free Licensing Deal for HIV Drug
The Guardian (London) (07.14.09) - Wednesday, July 15, 2009
Julia Kollewe
GlaxoSmithKline has announced it will allow cheaper, generic copies of its AIDS drug abacavir ( Ziagen ) to be made royalty- free by the South African drug firm Aspen Pharmacare. GSK CEO Andrew Witty made the announcement on a visit to


UNITED KINGDOM: UK Health Booklet's Message: Teen Sex Can Be Fun
Associated Press (07.15.09) - Wednesday, July 15, 2009
Gregory Katz
A new pamphlet written for parents, teachers, and youth workers seeks to change the tone of sex education by discussing Pleasure - the publication s title - instead of just biology and STDs. So far, the booklet is generating mixed reactions. Produced by the Center for HIV & Sexual Health (CHSH) of the National Heal


WISCONSIN: Health Program Expands to Men; State to Offer Family Planning Services, Contraceptive Coverage
Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel (07.10.09) - Wednesday, July 15, 2009
Stacy Forster
Under a two-year budget signed recently by Gov. Jim Doyle, low-income men will be offered family planning services, pharmacies will be required to have someone on site available to dispense prescribed birth control drugs and devices, and commercial health insurance plans and self-insured government health plans must in


CALIFORNIA: San Francisco AIDS Walk Retools Its Message
Bay Area Reporter (San Francisco) (07.09.09) - Tuesday, July 14, 2009
Cynthia Laird
With billboard tag lines like Tough times won t break our stride, this year s AIDS Walk San Francisco is acknowledging the economic challenges facing AIDS service organizations and the general public. We recognize this is a difficult year, said Debra Holtz, spokesperson for the San Francisco AIDS Foundation, one of abo


NEW YORK: 'Mandela Day' a Hoped-For Tradition
Washington Times (07.12.09) - Tuesday, July 14, 2009
New York City will mark the 91st birthday of former South African President Nelson Mandela with an all-star Radio City Music Hall concert on July 18. Artists scheduled to appear include Aretha Franklin, Stevie Wonder, Josh Groban, Gloria Gaynor, Jesse McCartney, Susan Sarandon, Whoopi Goldberg, Queen Latifah, Matt Damo


FLORIDA: Breaking Barriers: Language, Religion Hinder Frank Talk About AIDS
The Ledger (Lakeland, Florida) (06.26.09) - Tuesday, July 14, 2009
Robin Williams Adams
HIV prevention outreach workers targeting Latinos in Polk County face a number of challenges. Fear of deportation is a big problem, said Catalina Mondragon, a Hispanic HIV outreach worker with the Polk County Health Department. Many Latino residents are poor and lack transportation to centralized HIV testing sites.


UNITED STATES: Characteristics and Behaviors Associated with HIV Infection Among Inmates in the North Carolina Prison System
American Journal of Public Health Vol. 99; No. 6: P. 1123-1130 (06.09.09) - Tuesday, July 14, 2009
David L. Rosen, PhD; Victor J. Schoenbach, PhD; David A. Wohl, MD; Becky L. White, MD; Paul W. Stewart, PhD; Carol E. Golin, MD
The study authors identified factors associated with testing HIV-positive in a prison system performing voluntary HIV testing on inmates and estimated the number of undetected HIV cases to evaluate the efficacy of risk-factor-based HIV testing. Logistic regression was employed to estimate associations between HIV seros


UNITED STATES: Condoms Offer Partial Protection Against Herpes
Reuters (07.13.09) - Tuesday, July 14, 2009
Anne Harding
Consistent condom use is an important tool in preventing genital herpes , according to Dr. Emily T. Martin of Children s Hospital Research Institute and the University of Washington- Seattle. Though condoms effectiveness in stopping the spread of HIV, chlamydia, gonorrhea, and others STDs is well-established, Martin an


UGANDA: Burden of HIV Disclosure Falls on Uganda's Women
Toronto Star (07.06.09) - Tuesday, July 14, 2009
Craig Kielburger; Marc Kielburger
Uganda s Parliament is debating a bill that would give a person six weeks after testing positive for HIV to tell his or her partner before the government does. Adopted in much of West Africa, the law seeks to curb infection rates and empower victims of rape or abuse, say supporters. But others note the measure dispropo


AFRICA: Gender Finally Moving to Forefront of AIDS Fight
Inter Press Service (07.07.09) - Tuesday, July 14, 2009
Danielle Kurtzleben
A recently released report examines the intersection of HIV/AIDS and gender in three African countries and the role three major donors play in fighting the epidemic. Moving Beyond Gender As Usual scrutinizes the efforts of the US President s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief program; the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB and


UNITED STATES: Obama Names Surgeon General
Washington Post (07.14.09) - Tuesday, July 14, 2009
Alexi Mostrous; Michael D. Shear
In a Rose Garden ceremony at the White House on Monday, President Obama named Dr. Regina M. Benjamin as his nominee for US surgeon general. Benjamin is a family physician practicing in Bayou La Batre, Ala., a rural shrimping village where more than 40 percent of the 2,500 residents have no health insurance. A graduate


NEW MEXICO: Former Inmate Tests Positive for TB
Portales News-Tribune (07.09.09) - Monday, July 13, 2009
Sharna Johnson
A contact investigation was launched at the Curry County Detention Center when a former inmate tested positive for infectious TB after a transfer to another jail. The Curry County facility is working with the state health department to determine who was in contact with the inmate. County Manager Lance Pyle said the man


KANSAS: Leavenworth Police Issue Alert About Unlicensed Tattoo Operators
Kansas City Star (07.08.09) - Monday, July 13, 2009
Dawn Bormann
Responding to reports that illegal operators recently tattooed at least four juveniles without parental consent, the Leavenworth Police Department has issued a warning to the public. Although three suspects have been identified, no arrests have been made. Still, the police thought the matter serious enough to issue the


CALIFORNIA: Magnet Celebrates Sixth Birthday
San Francisco Bay Times (07.09.09) - Monday, July 13, 2009
The Magnet health clinic in San Francisco s Castro neighborhood has been open for six years, providing the gay community with rapid HIV screening, STD testing and treatment, and hepatitis A and B vaccinations. Clients, friends, and Magnet staff gathered to celebrate its anniversary on July 7. At first, some community m


UNITED STATES: Papanicolaou Screening Behavior in Mothers and Human Papillomavirus Vaccine Uptake in Adolescent Girls
American Journal of Public Health Vol. 99; No. 6: P. 1137-1142 (06..09) - Monday, July 13, 2009
Chun Chao, PhD; Jeff M. Slezak, MS; Karen J. Coleman, PhD; Steven J. Jacobsen, PhD
The study authors assessed whether maternal attitude toward prevention, as indicated by history of Papanicolaou (Pap) screenings and contracting sexually transmitted infections (STIs), influenced uptake of the human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine among their adolescent daughters. A total of 148,350 mother-daughter pairs


CANADA: Insite Drug-Injection Facility Awaits Fate amid Controversy
The Province (Vancouver) (07.07.09) - Monday, July 13, 2009
Elaine O'Connor
Vancouver s supervised drug-injection facility Insite opened in 2003, and since then 30 peer-reviewed studies have found it helps reduce disease and overdose deaths. But its political future is far from secure. There s really no academic debate about Insite anymore, said Dr. Thomas Kerr, a researcher with the British C


UNITED KINGDOM: Minister Urges Firms to Pool HIV Patents
The Guardian (London) (07.13.09) - Monday, July 13, 2009
Sarah Boseley
By 2030, an estimated 50 million people with HIV/AIDS will need newer treatments to keep them alive, according an all- party parliamentary report due out this week. To prevent millions of AIDS deaths in poor countries, pharmaceutical firms holding patents on HIV/AIDS drugs should release these drugs patent rights, Mike


WASHINGTON: Pharmacists Lose Pill Ruling
Spokesman-Review (Spokane) (07.09.09) - Monday, July 13, 2009
Carol J. Williams; Los Angeles Times
A federal court recently lifted an injunction that would have shielded Washington pharmacists who refused on religious grounds to obey a state law requiring they dispense Plan B, the emergency morning after contraception pill. Any refusal to dispense - regardless of whether it is motivated by religion, morals, conscien


UNITED STATES: US House Democrats Eye Funding for Needle Exchanges
Reuters (07.10.09) - Monday, July 13, 2009
Jeremy Pelofsky
In a draft $160.7 billion measure to fund the Departments of Labor and Health and Human Services (HHS) for fiscal 2010, Democrats in the House of Representatives on Friday omitted a ban on federal funding for needle-exchange programs (NEPs). The ban has been in place for more than 20 years. Most health experts agree NE


DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA: Police: 26 Arrested in AIDS Protest at Capitol
CNN.com (07.10.09) - Friday, July 10, 2009
Capitol police said they arrested 26 demonstrators at the US Capitol during a Thursday protest of federal AIDS policy. The activists had gathered for a 10 a.m. demonstration to call for increased funding of AIDS programs, timing the event to coincide with this week s congressional talks over the financing of a health c


UNITED STATES: FDA OKs Widened Use of Merck's Isentress HIV Drug
Reuters (07.09.09) - Friday, July 10, 2009
Ransdell Pierson
The Food and Drug Administration on Thursday expanded its approval of Merck & Co. s Isentress to include HIV patients not previously receiving treatment. FDA approved Isentress in October 2007 for patients who were failing to achieve results with other HIV drugs. Isentress and standard treatment were about twice as


FLORIDA: Health District Cuts $400,000 Grant that Helped HIV Sufferers Stay on Medications, Navigate Insurance System
Palm Beach Post (07.08.09) - Friday, July 10, 2009
Stacey Singer
On Wednesday, the Palm Beach County Health Care District board unanimously approved a planned $400,000 cut to the Comprehensive AIDS Program s case management services despite testimony from 10 patients and providers that the services are vital. Case management helps patients to stay on complex drug regimens, navigate


UNITED KINGDOM: GlaxoSmithKline Says HPV Vaccine Worked in Study
Associated Press (07.07.09) - Friday, July 10, 2009
Reporting the results of a study published in the Lancet, GlaxoSmithKline PLC (GSK) said Tuesday that its human papillomavirus vaccine Cervarix was effective not only against HPV strains most likely to cause cervical cancer but also other strains of the STD. The subjects of the late-stage trial were 18,644 females ages


SOUTH AFRICA: Rape Linked to Manhood in South Africa
Associated Press (07.10.09) - Friday, July 10, 2009
Celean Jacobson
Male sexual assaults on women in South Africa are deeply embedded in ideas about manhood, according to a survey presented Thursday at a sexual-violence conference outside Johannesburg. Nearly 28 percent of men surveyed reported they had forced a woman or girl to have sexual intercourse against her will. The survey incl


GLOBAL: WHO Approves Cervical Cancer Vaccine Cervarix
Associated Press (07.09.09) - Friday, July 10, 2009
The World Health Organization has approved GlaxoSmithKline s (GSK) Cervarix, paving the way for UN agencies and partners to buy the human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine for poor countries worldwide. Certain HPV strains are responsible for most cases of cervical cancer. Of the 280,000 cervical cancer deaths globally, more


UNITED STATES: When Teens Are Having Sex
Detroit Free Press (06.21.09) - Friday, July 10, 2009
Cassandra Spratling
How parents respond to the news that their teen is having sex can open communication lines, or sever them, at a key time in the child s life, according to Maureen Lyon, a clinical psychologist at Children s National Medical Center in Washington. Lyon and Christina Breda Antoniades recently wrote a guide that aims to st


COLORADO: Bail Denied for Surgery Technician in Hepatitis C Scare
Associated Press (07.09.09) - Friday, July 10, 2009
P. Solomon Banda
In Denver on Thursday, a judge denied bail for a surgical technician accused of a drug-theft scheme that potentially exposed nearly 6,000 patients to her hepatitis C infection. The technician is alleged to have stolen syringes filled with the powerful narcotic Fentanyl, then replaced them with dirty syringes filled wit


INDIA: India Supreme Court Steps Into Gay-Sex Law Dispute
Associated Press (07.09.09) - Thursday, July 09, 2009
Vijay Joshi
India s Supreme Court on Thursday said it will hear a petition to annul the July 2 Delhi High Court decision decriminalizing gay sex. UNAIDS welcomed the High Court ruling, which overturned parts of Section 377 of India s colonial-era penal code pertaining to gay sex, saying the ruling would make it easier for HIV prev


CHINA: Beijing's HIV/AIDS Cases Up 21 Percent on Year in First Five Months
Xinhua News Agency (07.09.09) - Thursday, July 09, 2009
In the first five months of 2009, Beijing recorded 501 new HIV/AIDS diagnoses, an increase of 90 cases (21 percent) over the same period last year. Among this year s new cases, 221 (44 percent) were men who have sex with men, said Deng Ying, director of Beijing s Disease Control and Prevention Center. Last year, MSM co


NORTH CAROLINA: 33 TB Cases Logged at Brunswick County Jail
Sun News (Myrtle Beach) (07.03.09) - Thursday, July 09, 2009
Steve Jones
A Brunswick County jail inmate has been diagnosed with tuberculosis and transferred to a medically secure cell in Raleigh, said officials. Since that case was discovered June 29, screening of 465 inmates and jail personnel revealed 33 positive tests. Don Yousey, county health director, said those patients have been iso


MASSACHUSETTS: Dental Care Providers Can Help in Early Detection of HIV
Bay Windows (Boston) (07.02.09) - Thursday, July 09, 2009
Michael Goldrosen; Helene Bednarsh
The dental community can join [the fight against AIDS] by being the first line of defense in identifying possible signs of HIV. Dental teams have a unique opportunity to identify individuals who may be HIV-positive and unaware of their status. There are oral conditions which may indicate the existence of HIV and, if i


VIRGINIA: AIDS/HIV Care Gap Is Filled
Washington Post (07.09.09) - Thursday, July 09, 2009
Ibby Caputo
The Whitman-Walker Clinic in Arlington County, which served the Northern Virginia HIV/AIDS community for more than a decade, closed earlier this year due to financial constraints. Now a new clinic, just two blocks away from the old WWC site, has opened to take its place. The sixth regional location of the Inova Juniper


AUSTRALIA: Self-Reported Sexual Difficulties and Their Association with Depression and Other Factors Among Gay Men Attending High HIV-Caseload General Practices in Australia
Journal of Sexual Medicine Vol. 6; No. 5: P. 1378-1385 (05.09.09) - Thursday, July 09, 2009
Limin Mao, PhD; Christy E. Newman, PhD; Michael R. Kidd, MD; Deborah C. Saltman, MD; Gary D. Rogers, PhD; Susan C. Kippax, PhD
In the current study, the researchers investigated gay men s self-reports of several sexual problems. While it is known that sexual expression affects physical, mental, and social well-being, there is a lack of understanding of sexual dysfunction in homosexually active men. The survey subjects were 542 men in


GLOBAL: TB Vaccine Too Dangerous for Babies with AIDS Virus, Study Says
New York Times (07.07.09) - Thursday, July 09, 2009
Donald G. McNeil Jr.
The World Health Organization is recommending that the Bacille Calmette-Guérin vaccine against tuberculosis be delayed until infants can be tested for HIV. A new WHO study finds BCG, which is routinely given to 75 percent of babies worldwide, is too risky for those born infected with the virus. In use since 1921, B


TOGO: Small Loans Change Lives of Togolese HIV/AIDS Victims
Voice of America News (06.15.09) - Thursday, July 09, 2009
Fid Thompson
A unique project partnering Sweden s Save the Children, the Togolese micro-finance institute Investir Dans l Humanite, and the Lomé-based HIV/AIDS organization Jade is providing 50 families affected by HIV with small business loans, training, and support. The program has proved successful, giving the families tools tha


COLORADO: Hepatitis C Falls Under US Disability Law
Denver Post (07.08.09) - Thursday, July 09, 2009
Michael Booth
In the wake of the developing case of a Colorado surgical technician charged with stealing drugs in a scheme that potentially exposed thousands of patients to hepatitis C, some observers are asking why anyone with the virus was allowed to work in a hospital operating room. The technician s employer, Denver s Rose Medic


COLORADO: Hepatitis C Victims May Sue
Denver Post (07.08.09) - Thursday, July 09, 2009
Jason Blevins; Jennifer Brown
Attorneys report they are beginning to hear from persons interested in pursuing their legal options after potentially being exposed to hepatitis C at two Colorado medical facilities. An infected surgical technician is accused of stealing syringes filled with the painkiller Fentanyl, then replacing them with saline-fill


GLOBAL: Bruni-Sarkozy Urges G8 to Maintain Africa Health Programs
Agence France Presse (07.07.09) - Wednesday, July 08, 2009
French first lady Carla Bruni-Sarkozy, an ambassador for the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB and Malaria, called on Group of Eight leaders meeting Wednesday in Italy to uphold their pledged support for health initiatives in Africa. Writing in Britain s Guardian newspaper, Bruni-Sarkozy said great progress has been made a


MISSOURI: Sen. Bond Announces $36 Million in Housing Funds
Associated Press (07.07.09) - Wednesday, July 08, 2009
Sen. Kit Bond (R-Mo.) said Monday the city of St. Louis and St. Louis County will receive $36 million in federal funds for emergency shelter, housing assistance for people living with HIV/AIDS and assistance to buy, build or rehabilitate housing that can be sold or rented. In announcing the funding, Bond, the ranking m


UNITED STATES: Abbott Wins Ruling on HIV Drug Price
Chicago Tribune (07.08.09) - Wednesday, July 08, 2009
Bloomberg News
On Tuesday, a federal appeals court in San Francisco dismissed claims that Abbott Laboratories created a monopoly and overcharged for its HIV drug Norvir . Abbott quadrupled the price of the protease inhibitor in 2003. Patients, advocacy groups, and drug-benefit providers sued, claiming the company was trying to creat


FLORIDA: Faith-Based Group Gets Grant to Fight HIV/AIDS
Gainesville Guardian (06.25.09) - Wednesday, July 08, 2009
Cleveland Tinker
Faith Inc. has received the first-ever state grant to teach pastors how to start HIV/AIDS ministries in their churches. The three-year, $159,000 Florida Department of Health grant will allow Ruby Davenport, Faith Inc. s executive director, and the Rev. Dr. Andrew McRae of Faith Tabernacle Baptist Church to travel acros


MICHIGAN: Release of Lansing Sex Sting Police Report Raises Concerns About Disclosure of HIV Status
Michigan Messenger (07.06.09) - Wednesday, July 08, 2009
Todd A. Heywood
Advocates are asking why the Lansing Police Department s report of a May 22 sex sting included the information that one of the arrested men is HIV-positive. According to the report, the man, whose identity was withheld by the Michigan Messenger, was arrested at Fenner Nature Center after agreeing to a sexual encounter


UNITED STATES: Adolescents' Perceived Death Risk Linked to Health Status and Behavior
Reuters Health (06.30.09) - Wednesday, July 08, 2009
Michelle Rizzo
A study of more than 20,000 adolescents found that a considerable number believed they were likely to die prematurely, a perception that predicted involvement in risk behaviors and poor health outcomes over time. Dr. Iris Wagman Borowsky of the University of Minnesota- Minneapolis and colleagues analyzed data from the


CANADA: Landmark Needle-Exchange Program Closing Down
Globe and Mail (Toronto) (07.08.09) - Wednesday, July 08, 2009
Robert Matas
Launched 21 years ago, North America s first needle-exchange program (NEP) is closing after Vancouver health officials cut its funding amid allegations of mismanagement. The Downtown Eastside Youth Activities Society (DEYAS)-operated exchange distributed about 10 percent of the 1.9 million needles dispensed in the city


TEXAS: Texas Drops Health Education Requirement
Associated Press (07.07.09) - Wednesday, July 08, 2009
April Castro
Texas will no longer require high school students to take a health class before graduating, causing worry that some may miss lessons on sex education, alcohol awareness, and basic nutrition. The decision makes Texas one of the few states lacking the requirement, officials said. Education Commissioner Robert Scott recen


INDONESIA: Government Distributes 1.8 Million Condoms in W. Java
Jakarta Post (06.26.09) - Tuesday, July 07, 2009
The West Java branch of the Family Planning Coordinating Agency has announced plans to distribute 1.8 million free condoms this year to sexually mature couples through local community health centers. Only 6 million of the province s 8.2 million sexually mature couples have been taking part in a family planning program


CANADA: Human Trials Sought for AIDS Vaccine
United Press International (07.01.09) - Tuesday, July 07, 2009
An AIDS vaccine candidate - SAV001-H - is ready for the first phase of human trials, according to scientists at the University of Western Ontario. The university and Sumagen Co. Ltd., the vaccine s manufacturer, have secured patents for the product in more than 70 nations. Sumagen has submitted an investigational new d


GLOBAL: Economic Crisis Hurts HIV Fight: World Bank, UN
Agence France Presse (07.06.09) - Tuesday, July 07, 2009
In a report released Monday, UNAIDS and the World Bank detailed how the global economic crisis is affecting HIV/AIDS prevention and treatment efforts. The report compiled responses from 71 nations where 3.4 million people are receiving HIV medications. Eight countries are already experiencing antiretroviral drugs short


FLORIDA: Worry over AIDS Hides Rising STD Infections
The Ledger (Lakeland, Florida) (06.26.09) - Tuesday, July 07, 2009
Robin Williams Adams
While HIV may take the spotlight in terms of media coverage and attention to sexual health, other STDs deserve equal consideration, says Dr. John Toney, a professor at the University of South Florida College of Medicine s infectious- diseases division. STD prevention and control efforts face similar challenges to those


CANADA: The Impact of Incarceration Upon Adherence to HIV Treatment Among HIV-Positive Injection Drug Users: A Qualitative Study
AIDS Care doi:10.1080/09540120802511869 (06.01.09) - Tuesday, July 07, 2009
HIV-positive injection drug users (IDU) often do not derive the full benefits of highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART). Among IDU, recent incarceration has been associated with discontinuation of HAART for non-clinical reasons, explained the study authors. In order to identify factors influencing treatment adhe


JAMAICA: Most HIV/AIDS Carriers Don't Know They Are Infected
Jamaica Observer (Kingston) (07.02.09) - Tuesday, July 07, 2009
Patrick Foster
Highlighting the need for increased voluntary HIV testing, the Ministry of Health (MOH) says two-thirds of the estimated 27,000 Jamaicans living with HIV/AIDS are unaware they are infected. A recent testing event sponsored by MOH and Scotiabank was held in recognition of the second annual Regional Testing Day, an initi


GLOBAL: Failure to Circumcise Men 'May Have Cost Millions of AIDS Deaths'
The Guardian (London) (07.05.09) - Tuesday, July 07, 2009
Alex Renton
Years of failing to translate into practice the results of research showing the protective effects of male circumcision may have cost millions of lives, especially in Africa, say AIDS experts. Properly performed, the procedure can reduce the risk of female-to-male HIV transmission by up to 60 percent, studies have show


COLORADO: Hepatitis C Link in Colorado Cases Not Found for Weeks
Denver Post (07.07.09) - Tuesday, July 07, 2009
Jennifer Brown; Michael Booth; Allison Sherry
On Monday in Denver, a former surgical technician faced federal charges in a drug-theft scheme that potentially exposed thousands of patients to hepatitis C over a six-month period. Last Thursday, state officials announced that up to 5,700 patients at two surgical facilities should seek free blood screenings for hepati


MISSOURI: HIV Cases on Upswing
Columbia Daily Tribune (07.05.09) - Tuesday, July 07, 2009
T.J. Greaney
Mid-Missouri has seen an 18 percent increase in persons seeking treatment for HIV/AIDS over the past year, many of them young people, according to regional experts. Cale Mitchell, executive director of RAIN, which provides HIV/AIDS case management in the area, said the agency added 58 clients in the 12-month period tha


MYANMAR: Nearly 80,000 HIV Patients Need Antiretroviral Treatment in Myanmar: Ministry
Xinhua News Agency (06.28.09) - Monday, July 06, 2009
Only about 15 percent of the estimated 80,000 HIV patients who need antiretrovirals in Myanmar are receiving the drugs, the Health Ministry said recently. UNAIDS estimated the total number of Myanmar residents living with HIV/AIDS in 2007 at 240,000, down from 300,000 in 2001. With the assistance of the UN Population F


ILLINOIS: Better Existence with HIV Moves All Services to Chicago
Windy City Times (Chicago) (06.17.09) - Monday, July 06, 2009
Better Existence with HIV (BEHIV) has closed its office in Evanston and now runs all its programs from its Chicago facility at 1224 W. Thorndale. The times and locations for some BEHIV services have changed; for more information, visit www.behiv.org.


MONTANA: Results of 2009 Survey of Montana High School Students
Associated Press (07.03.09) - Monday, July 06, 2009
Montana s Office of Public Instruction has released the results of the 2009 Youth Risk Behavior Survey, which it conducted in collaboration with CDC. The survey polled 1,800 high school students. The YRBS revealed that the proportion of students reporting having had sexual intercourse rose from 46 percent in 1997 to 48


TENNESSEE: Infected and Untreated, Prostitutes Behind Knox County Syphilis Outbreak
Knoxville News-Sentinel (06.30.09) - Monday, July 06, 2009
J.J. Stambaugh
Knoxville health officials say an upsurge in street prostitution is to blame for a three-year syphilis outbreak. A sharp spike in cases was first documented in 2006, and the numbers have climbed nearly 30 percent since then. Last year, Knox County saw more than 200 new syphilis cases, said Gary Messer, who does public


CALIFORNIA: Chlamydia Infections Rise in Monterey County in 2008
Monterey County Herald (07.01.09) - Monday, July 06, 2009
Jim Johnson
A new report by the Monterey County Health Department shows increases in reported cases of chlamydia and hepatitis C in 2008, while cases of AIDS and hepatitis A and B have declined. Last year, the county logged an 18 percent jump in chlamydia, to 1,359 cases from 1,153 in 2007. Though the number of infections in 2008


UNITED STATES: Racial Mixing and HIV Risk Among Men Who Have Sex with Men
AIDS and Behavior doi:10.1007/s10461-009-9574-6 (05.29.09) - Monday, July 06, 2009
H. Fisher Raymond; Willi McFarland
In the United States , HIV disproportionately affects black residents. In the current study, the authors from the San Francisco Department of Public Health conducted a cross- sectional survey of men who have sex with men (MSM) in San Francisco through time-location-sampling, analyzing the dynamics of racial mixing and


SWAZILAND: African Couples Urged to Get HIV 'Love Test'
CNN.com (06.16.09) - Monday, July 06, 2009
Anouk Lorie
Population Services International, UNICEF, and UNAIDS since April have been conducting a nationwide, free HIV testing campaign targeting Swazi couples. Though approximately 26 percent of Swaziland s population have HIV, just one in four people, mostly women, knows his or her HIV status. If partners get tested sepa


HAITI: From Haiti, a Surprise: Good News About AIDS
Associated Press (07.05.09) - Monday, July 06, 2009
Jonathan M. Katz
Haiti s HIV infection rate has stayed in the single digits and dropped since the early 1980s, progress that advocates and public health officials attribute to cooperation among organizations there and the creation of programs that suit the country s particular challenges. Among the entities cited by public health offic


UNITED STATES: New Global AIDS Chief Gets to Work Right Away
San Francisco Chronicle (07.06.09) - Monday, July 06, 2009
Jim Doyle
Hours after his Senate confirmation, the new US global AIDS coordinator flew from the Bay Area to Geneva. Dr. Eric Goosby was sworn in as soon as his plane landed and got directly to work leading the US delegation in a meeting with the UNAIDS coordinating committee. Goosby commands a $6.3 billion annual budget to fight


ILLINOIS: Test Positive Aware Network Receives $331K Grant
Windy City Times (Chicago) (06.24.09) - Thursday, July 02, 2009
The Chicago Department of Family and Support Services has awarded the Test Positive Aware Network a $331,000 grant to expand its existing programs addressing mental health and substance abuse. Launched in March 2008, TPAN s POWER ( Positive Outcomes for Wellness, Education and Recovery ) outreach serves African-America


NEW YORK: AIDS Commission Hosts Forum on Epidemic
Buffalo News (06.28.09) - Thursday, July 02, 2009
Ja'Nay Carswell
Buffalo s Black Leadership Commission on AIDS marked last Saturday s National HIV Testing Day by holding a town hall meeting to discuss the epidemic. Every segment of our community must get involved, said Donna Chapman, affiliate services coordinator for BCLA. Abstinence, personal responsibility, and the role of faith-


SOUTH AFRICA: State Short 1 Billion Rand for AIDS Drugs
Business Day (South Africa) (06.23.09) - Thursday, July 02, 2009
Wilson Johwa
The deputy chair of the South African National AIDS Council has warned that the nation could face a 1 billion rand (US $128 million) shortfall for HIV/AIDS drugs this year. It s vital that the government is able to fund and sustain the treatment program, so the question is, where will the money come from? asked Mark He


AFRICA: Economic Crisis a 'Major Threat' to AIDS Fight in Africa: UN
Agence France Presse (07.02.09) - Thursday, July 02, 2009
Speaking today on the sidelines of an African Union summit in Libya , UNAIDS chief Michel Sidibe called the global economic crisis a major threat that could drive aid mechanisms toward collapse. He noted that the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB and Malaria has a $4 billion deficit, and if the fund doesn t remain solvent


OHIO: Cleveland Sex Education Program Working, Study Finds
Associated Press (06.23.09) - Thursday, July 02, 2009
Students who participated in the Cleveland Metropolitan School District s sex education program displayed more knowledge and better attitudes about safer-sex practices than non- participants, according to a new study. Since 2006, the district has offered a graduated K-12 sex education program, initially teaching studen


FLORIDA: Book Gives Those Affected by HIV/AIDS an Emotional Outlet: Publication also Raises Awareness
South Florida Sun-Sentinel (06.27.09) - Thursday, July 02, 2009
Erika Pesantes
An anthology published by the Palm Beach County Health Department is helping raise awareness about HIV/AIDS in the black community, one of the groups hit hardest by the disease. Twenty-five contributors created essays, photos, and poems for Unleashed Voices: Silence is Death, which was edited by Lorenzo Robertson, PBCH


UTAH: HIV Rates Increasing in Salt Lake County
Deseret Morning News (Salt Lake City) (06.29.09) - Thursday, July 02, 2009
Clayton Norlen
Salt Lake Valley Health Department officials are alarmed by the steady increase in HIV rates over the past three years, a trend preliminary 2009 data suggest is continuing. A lack of concern and education, particularly among young people, is driving the rise, experts say. Rates grow because there is a lack of conversat


UNITED STATES: Associations Between Substance Use, Sexual Risk Taking and HIV Treatment Adherence Among Homeless People Living with HIV
AIDS Care Vol. 21; No. 6: P. 692-700 (06..09) - Thursday, July 02, 2009
Mark S. Friedman; Michael P. Marshal; Ron Stall; Daniel P. Kidder; Kirk D. Henny; Cari Courtenay-Quirk; Study Group The Project START; Angela Aidala; Scott Royal; David R. Holtgrave
The interconnections between substance use, HIV risk, and lack of adherence to HIV medications are particularly strong among homeless individuals, as has been noted in earlier research. In the current study, the authors described patterns of alcohol and drug use, associations between substance use and taking part in hi


INDIA: India's Gay Sex Ruling Could Set Precedent: UN
Agence France Presse (07.02.09) - Thursday, July 02, 2009
In a ruling issued Thursday, the New Delhi High Court legalized homosexual sex, a landmark move UNAIDS says could both pave the way for better HIV prevention and treatment in India and set an example for the approximately 80 countries that still outlaw gay sex. We think this will set an important precedent through


UNITED STATES: Farrah Fawcett's Anal Cancer: Fighting the Stigma
ABC News (06.27.09) - Thursday, July 02, 2009
Dan Childs; Radha Chitale
Because she went public with her battle against anal cancer, doctors are hopeful that Farrah Fawcett s legacy will be an increased awareness of the illness and an end to the stigma that surrounds it. The actress and 1970s sex symbol died of the disease on June 25. While the exact cause of anal cancer is unknown, the Am


ILLINOIS: 2009 HIV Directory Now Available
Windy City Times (Chicago) (06.17.09) - Wednesday, July 01, 2009
The latest edition of the Illinois HIV Services Directory is now available from Test Positive Aware Network. Produced with funding from the Illinois Department of Public Health, the book lists 722 agencies and professionals across the state providing services to people affected by HIV/AIDS. For a free copy, telephone 7


ILLINOIS: CDC to Launch New HIV Testing Program During Black Pride
Chicago Free Press (06.25.09) - Wednesday, July 01, 2009
Amy Wooten
At the Chicago Windy City Black LGBT-SGL [lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender- same gender loving] Pride celebration July 1-6, CDC will offer a new program that aims to increase awareness about routine rapid HIV testing. Dubbed BART, which stands for both Behavioral Assessment and Rapid HIV Testing as well as Being Abo


GEORGIA: New Laws
Atlanta Journal-Constitution (07.01.09) - Wednesday, July 01, 2009
Aaron Gould Sheinin
Among 89 new laws taking effect July 1 in Georgia is SB 64. The measure states that the Department of Corrections shall implement an HIV testing program whereby any state inmate who has been in the custody of a state penal institution for one year or longer and who has not previously tested positive for HIV shall be te


FLORIDA: Class Will Dispel Myths and Educate Citizens
Gainesville Guardian (06.25.09) - Wednesday, July 01, 2009
Cleveland Tinker
A free workshop will be held July 11 at Dayspring Missionary Baptist Church, 1945 NE 8th Ave., for individuals and organizations interested in combating HIV/AIDS in Gainesville s African-American community. Teresa White, regional minority AIDS coordinator for the Alachua County Health Department, said people often ask


TEXAS: Hip-Hop Concert to Serve as Lure for HIV Screenings
Houston Chronicle (06.22.09) - Wednesday, July 01, 2009
Cindy George
In the coming weeks, the Houston health department and partner agencies will attempt to test a record 15,000 people for HIV. At sites across the city, including Planned Parenthood and St. Hope Foundation, everyone who receives the test, one hour of education, and their results will get tickets to a July 11 hip-hop conc


ILLINOIS: Chicago Public Schools to Test Teens for STDs
Chicago Sun-Times (06.26.09) - Wednesday, July 01, 2009
Maudlyne Ihejirika
The Cook County Department of Public Health (CCDPH) is planning to launch a pilot STD education, testing, and treatment project in six Chicago high schools. The county will conduct testing for 11th- and 12th-graders at no cost to Chicago Public Schools (CPS). The plan was approved by the Board of Education in late June


UNITED STATES: A Randomized Controlled Trial for Reducing Risks for Sexually Transmitted Infections Through Enhanced Patient-Based Partner Notification
American Journal of Public Health Vol. 99; No. S1: P. S104- S110 (04..09) - Wednesday, July 01, 2009
Tracey E. Wilson, PhD; Matthew Hogben, PhD; Edmond S. Malka, MPH; Nicole Liddon, PhD; William M. McCormack, MD; Steve R. Rubin; Michael A. Augenbraun, MD
The current study assessed the effectiveness of approaches targeting improved sexually transmitted infection (STI) sexual partner notification through patient referral. From January 2002 to December 2004, the researchers recruited 600 patients with Neisseria gonorhoeae or Chlamydia trachomatis from STI clinics. Partici


NAMIBIA: African Women with HIV 'Coerced into Sterilization'
The Guardian (London) (06.23.09) - Wednesday, July 01, 2009
David Smith
The International Community of Women Living with HIV/AIDS (ICW) is preparing later this year to sue the Namibian government after documenting several cases of HIV-positive women being forcibly sterilized before being provided vital medical care. ICW says the practice is widespread, and it alleges that Namibia s governm


UNITED STATES: American Medical Association Meeting: US Needs National HIV/AIDS Strategy
American Medical News (06.29.09) - Wednesday, July 01, 2009
Victoria Stagg Elliott
The United States should have a national HIV/AIDS strategy, developed through the White House Office of National AIDS Policy and relevant stakeholder groups, declared a resolution passed at the recent 158th annual American Medical Association (AMA) meeting in Chicago. Still, 25 percent of patients with HIV don t k


DELAWARE: Sussex AIDS Group Closes After 28 Years
News Journal (Wilmington) (06.25.09) - Tuesday, June 30, 2009
Mary Daisey Shockley
June 30 is the final day of operations for the Sussex County AIDS Committee, which has provided HIV prevention and patient assistance programs for 28 years. We just ran out of money, said Curt Barrows, president of the SCAC board. Over time, we have seen less and less aid and the demand has been greater. Steve Elkins o


MONTANA: Montana Reports Increase in HIV Diagnoses
Associated Press (06.25.09) - Tuesday, June 30, 2009
Nineteen new HIV cases have been reported in Montana so far this year, according to the state Department of Public Health and Human Services. For the last several years there has been an average of about 20 newly diagnosed cases a year, said Anna Whiting Sorrell, the department s director. To already have 19 new cases


NEBRASKA: Nebraska Officials Emphasize Need for HIV Testing
Associated Press (06.27.09) - Tuesday, June 30, 2009
Jean Ortiz
The Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services is promoting this week as HIV Testing Week, and sites across the state are offering free testing and expanded hours. CDC data indicate that 800 Nebraskans are HIV-positive and do not know it, said Chief Medical Officer Dr. Joann Schaefer. One challenge that must be o


CALIFORNIA: Sheriff May Expand Jail's Condom Program
Los Angeles Times (06.29.09) - Tuesday, June 30, 2009
Ari B. Bloomekatz
Since 2001, Ron Osorio of the nonprofit Center for Health Justice has handed out condoms to inmates at the Men s Central Jail s segregated gay unit under a program approved by Los Angeles County Sheriff Lee Baca. Osorio has made almost weekly visits to the jail. Not all inmates take the condoms, but he talks to those w


LOUISIANA: New HIV Cases Jump in New Orleans
Times-Picayune (New Orleans) (06.27.09) - Tuesday, June 30, 2009
Amber Sandoval-Griffin
New Orleans has experienced a disturbing increase in HIV cases among men since 2006. According to the state Office of Public Health, the rate of HIV diagnoses in New Orleans-area men jumped by 9 percent from 2007 to 2008, with African Americans especially impacted. Among city black men of all ages, new HIV diagnoses in


UNITED KINGDOM: HPV Testing in Combination with Liquid-Based Cytology in Primary Cervical Screening (ARTISTIC): A Randomized Controlled Trial
Lancet Oncology doi:10.1016/S1470-2045(09)70156-1 (06.18.09) - Tuesday, June 30, 2009
Prof. Henry C. Kitchener, MD, and others
Human papillomavirus (HPV) DNA testing is reportedly more sensitive for detecting high-grade cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN) than cytology, observed the authors of the current study. The research team assessed the efficacy of HPV testing by comparing liquid-based cytology (LBC) combined with HPV DNA testing ve


UNITED STATES: Campaign Spurs Parents to Talk About Sex
United Press International (06.08.09) - Tuesday, June 30, 2009
An advertising campaign aimed at encouraging US parents to initiate conversations about sex and abstinence proved successful, according to a study by researchers at George Washington University and RTI International. The Parents Speak Up National Campaign, launched in June 2007, included public service announcements as


CHINA: China Tightens Restrictions for Web Sites on Sexual Health
Wall Street Journal (06.26.09) - Tuesday, June 30, 2009
Jeremy Chan
Starting July 1, China will enforce new rules that will allow only government-sanctioned medical institutions to provide sexual health-related content on Web sites, with all such sites requiring approval by provincial-level health authorities. The Ministry of Health said the guidelines are designed to improve the accur


UNITED STATES: US May Lift Ban on HIV Visitors
Newsday (Melville) (06.30.09) - Tuesday, June 30, 2009
Sumathi Reddy
The US Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) is expected to issue a proposal this week to remove HIV from the list of communicable diseases of public health significance that preclude entry by foreign nationals. The policy has been in effect since 1987. About a dozen countries, including


TAIWAN: Taiwan Moves to Decriminalize Prostitution
Agence France Presse (06.24.09) - Monday, June 29, 2009
Taiwan may revise its laws that criminalize sex work and allow regional governments and councils to decide whether to establish red-light districts, the cabinet said Wednesday. Under current laws, sex workers face detention of three days and a fine of up to $30,000 (US $888) if they are caught providing sexual servic


GLOBAL: Discrimination in Visa Laws Poses Risk to Those with AIDS, Rights Group Says
New York Times (06.23.09) - Monday, June 29, 2009
Donald G. McNeil Jr.
Visa restrictions on people with HIV/AIDS are needlessly discriminatory and can be dangerous to patients health, the advocacy group Human Rights Watch recently announced in a report. About one-third of all nations limit the right of people with HIV to enter or stay, even if their virus is controlled with medicine. Addi


UNITED STATES: Obama Urges Americans Get Tested for HIV
Agence France Presse (06.27.09) - Monday, June 29, 2009
Noting that one in five Americans infected with HIV does not know it, President Barack Obama on Saturday called on all US residents to get tested for the virus. On this 14th commemoration of National HIV Testing Day, I urge Americans to take control of their own health, and protect those they love, by getting tested fo


FLORIDA: Hip-Hop Concert Headlines South Florida Events for Saturday's HIV Testing Day
South Florida Sun-Sentinel (06.26.09) - Monday, June 29, 2009
Bob Lamendola
Organizers of the Show U Know concert on Saturday, National HIV Testing Day, aimed for a large turnout of young people by booking acts like Miami-based rapper Pitbull, hip-hop artist Trick Daddy, and national radio host Ricky Smiley as emcee. We re trying to do something to get through to the next generation, said Dono


FLORIDA: Health Fair Focuses on Hispanics
Orlando Sentinel (06.28.09) - Monday, June 29, 2009
Erik Maza
Orlando s largest health fair for Latinos was held at the Central Florida Fairgrounds on Saturday. Organized by the nonprofit Hispanic Health Initiatives (HHI) to help uninsured and underinsured Hispanics, the event offered residents vision, cholesterol and blood sugar screenings, as well as HIV testing. This year s ni


CALIFORNIA: State Budget Crisis Threatens County's AIDS Program
Ventura County Star (06.23.09) - Monday, June 29, 2009
Jacky Guerrero
Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger s proposal to cut more than $80 million from HIV/AIDS programs, including the AIDS Drug Assistance Program, could be disastrous for Ventura County s only community-based HIV/AIDS center, officials say. You will also see many HIV/AIDS centers closing all over the state, predicts Jay Richards,


DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF CONGO: Antiretroviral Therapy Reduces Incident Tuberculosis in HIV-Infected Children
International Journal of Epidemiology doi: 10.1093/ije/dyp208 (05.15.09) - Monday, June 29, 2009
Andrew Edmonds; Jean Lusiama; Sonia Napravnik; Faustin Kitetele; Annelies Van Rie; Frieda Behets
The researchers designed the current study to estimate the effect of antiretroviral therapy (ART) on incident TB in a cohort of children with HIV. Data were analyzed from ART-naïve children without TB who were enrolled in an HIV care program in Kinshasa between December 2004 and April 2008. A Cox proportional hazards m


ILLINOIS: AIDS Advocate on State Budget: 'Prepare for the Worst'
Chicago Free Press (06.18.09) - Monday, June 29, 2009
Amy Wooten
A temporary state budget passed on May 31 calls for a 50 percent or higher cut to social service programs, leaving the future of many HIV/AIDS initiatives in Illinois uncertain. With the fiscal year starting July 1, lawmakers in Springfield attempted to close a multi-billion dollar deficit by slashing state departments


NORTH CAROLINA: Sex Education Bill Ready for Perdue to Sign
Winston-Salem Journal (06.26.09) - Monday, June 29, 2009
James Romoser
Following months of debate and numerous revisions, a bill to revamp sex education in North Carolina has cleared its final hurdle in the Legislature and now heads to Gov. Bev Perdue (D), who is expected to sign it. On Thursday, the House voted 60-55 to accept changes the Senate made in the measure. For more than a decad


ILLINOIS: Text Message Can Reveal Nearest HIV Test Center
Associated Press (06.18.09) - Friday, June 26, 2009
The Illinois Department of Public Health has introduced a text message service that directs users to the nearest HIV testing center. To access Text 2 Survive, mobile phone customers can send a text with the message IL and their five-digit ZIP code to the number 89183; they will receive a confidential text message in re


DETROIT: AIDS Is a Highlight of Baptist Meeting's First Day
Detroit Free Press (06.23.09) - Friday, June 26, 2009
Niraj Warikoo
The annual Congress of Christian Education of the National Baptist Convention USA - the oldest and largest African- American religious group - got underway Monday in Detroit, and HIV/AIDS received special attention. Black folk, we got to get rid of the stigma, Simone Phillips of the St. Louis chapter of the Red Cross t


TENNESSEE: No Bliss Ignoring the Risk of HIV
Commercial Appeal (Memphis) (06.25.09) - Friday, June 26, 2009
Wendi C. Thomas
It s been nearly 30 years since what was then called Gay- Related Immune Deficiency was identified, and by 2006, 1.1 million Americans were living with [HIV/AIDS]. Once seen as a death sentence, people can now, with the advent of drug cocktails, live decades with the disease, as if it were a chronic illness. But [Pla


GEORGIA: AIDS Rate Prompts Push for HIV Tests
Atlanta Journal-Constitution (06.26.09) - Friday, June 26, 2009
Sharise M. Darby
Organizations including AID Atlanta, a nonprofit HIV/AIDS education and support organization, are providing free HIV testing this week to mark National HIV Testing Day. Georgia has one of the highest AIDS rates in the nation, with 19.7 cases per 100,000 population in 2007, ranking ninth- highest among the states, accor


FLORIDA: Miami-Dade Launches Broad-Based HIV Test Campaign
Miami Herald (06.26.09) - Friday, June 26, 2009
Susana Montes-Delgado
The Miami-Dade County Department of Health (MDCDH) on Thursday launched Test Miami, a large-scale campaign aimed at making HIV testing a routine part of medical care. The effort targets physicians, at-risk communities, and pregnant women. A major emphasis of the campaign is to train and educate physicians, particularly


UNITED STATES: Few Sexually Active Teens in U.S. Get HIV Test: CDC
Reuters (06.25.09) - Friday, June 26, 2009
Julie Steenhuysen
Just 22 percent of sexually active US students ages 14-18 are tested for HIV, and almost half of adolescents and young adults who are positive for the virus are unaware of their infection, CDC said Thursday. The analysis of data from the 2007 Youth Risk Behavior Survey of students in grades nine through 12 found older


UNITED STATES: HIV Testing in United States Often Performed Late
Reuters Health (06.25.09) - Friday, June 26, 2009
A substantial proportion of people are diagnosed with HIV late in the course of their infection, when they are more immunosuppressed and treatments may have limited effectiveness, a new CDC study has found. Three years after being diagnosed with HIV, 45 percent of people had developed AIDS, according to CDC s analysis


DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA: High-Profile Help Offered Against AIDS in the District
Washington Post (06.25.09) - Friday, June 26, 2009
Darryl Fears
In an announcement on Capitol Hill on Wednesday, the Global Business Coalition on HIV/AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria (GBCHTM) said Washington is one of three cities where it will roll out a major campaign to combat HIV. The coalition - comprising Pfizer , the NBA, Facebook, Nike, Nokia, and others - said New York and O


CALIFORNIA: HIV Testing, Health Screenings Begin Today in Oakland
Contra Costa Times (06.24.09) - Thursday, June 25, 2009
Katherine Jarvis
Through Monday, the California Prevention and Education Project is conducting free HIV testing and health screenings from fixed and mobile van sites, primarily focusing on West and East Oakland. For more information about CAL-PEP s National HIV Testing Day events, call 510-874-7850.


HAWAII: Department of Health Urges Individuals to Take Test for HIV
Honolulu Advertiser (06.24.09) - Thursday, June 25, 2009
The state Department of Health is offering free HIV testing on all islands as part of National HIV Testing Day. An estimated 2,300-3,200 people have HIV/AIDS in Hawaii. For more information about testing, go to http://hawaii.gov/health/healthy-lifestyles/std- aids/index.html or http://www.hivtest.org/.


NEW YORK: Mobile Unit Travels City to Test People for HIV/AIDS
Daily News (New York) (06.29.09) - Thursday, June 25, 2009
Michael Roberts
Gay Men s Health Crisis will be involved in a mobile HIV testing campaign in New York City to mark Saturday s National HIV Testing Day. Instead of people coming to [a health center], you can go to Bed-Stuy, the Bronx or Queens, said Karen Gooden of GMHC. On Thursday, mobile units will be in Queens 4-8 p.m. at Roosevelt


FLORIDA: Saturday Is HIV Testing Day
Gainesville Guardian (06.25.09) - Thursday, June 25, 2009
Cleveland Tinker
On Saturday, National HIV Testing Day, several Gainesville- area groups will offer free screenings as a way to help residents learn their serostatus. The most important thing about this disease is knowing your status, said Teresa White, regional minority AIDS coordinator at the Alachua County Health Department. Knowing


NEW YORK: Progress Is Reported in Bronx HIV Testing Campaign
New York Times (06.24.09) - Thursday, June 25, 2009
Sewell Chan, City Room Blog
New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene officials on Wednesday marked the one-year anniversary of The Bronx Knows HIV initiative, and they credited the effort with a significant increase in HIV testing. More than 60 local partners are participating in the outreach, including all the borough s hospitals an


CANADA: Delayed Application of Condoms with Safer and Unsafe Sex: Factors Associated with HIV Risk in a Community Sample of Gay and Bisexual Men
AIDS Care Vol. 21; No. 6: P. 775-784 (06..09) - Thursday, June 25, 2009
Dan Allman; Kunyong Xu; Ted Myers; Jeffrey Aguinaldo; Liviana Calzavara; John Maxwell; Ann Burchell; Robert S. Remis
Delayed condom application (DCA) has been implicated in HIV transmission among gay and bisexual men, noted the authors. The current study examines the prevalence of DCA in a gay population and explores factors associated with condom use among two groups: those who practice only safer sex and those who report at least s


MOZAMBIQUE: Scant Progress with Pediatric HIV
Inter Press Service (06.15.09) - Thursday, June 25, 2009
Ruth Ayisi
UNICEF s 2009 State of the World s Children Report finds more than 10 percent of Mozambican babies will die before their first birthday - one of the world s highest infant mortality rates. The main cause of death is malaria, followed closely by HIV/AIDS, according to the report. However, the country has made some strid


UNITED STATES: Top Senator Calls for Structural Changes at VA
Associated Press (06.24.09) - Thursday, June 25, 2009
Ben Evans
On Wednesday at a hearing called in response to revelations of poor infection-control practices at three VA medical facilities, the chair of the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee said the VA s medical system needs more centralized control. True quality assurance has to be managed across the system and that means centra


MASSACHUSETTS: Health Agency Urges Routine HIV Screening
Boston Globe (06.25.09) - Thursday, June 25, 2009
Elizabeth Cooney
Written consent for HIV testing as required by state law can be included in the general permission forms patients sign for medical treatment, according to a directive issued Wednesday by the Massachusetts Department of Public Health (DPH). The agency also called for routine testing of people ages 13-64 in all health ca


CALIFORNIA: Saturday Is National HIV Testing Day
Daily Democrat (Woodland) (06.22.09) - Wednesday, June 24, 2009
Saturday is National HIV Testing Day and although Yolo County has no formal events planned, its Health Department sponsors ongoing testing programs. Several sites in the county offer free, confidential HIV testing. With funding for HIV/AIDS programs in jeopardy of drastic cuts from the state, it is important for people


MICHIGAN: Test for HIV on Saturday
Grand Rapids Press (06.23.09) - Wednesday, June 24, 2009
As part of National HIV Testing Day on Saturday, area health departments are offering free screenings. On Friday, testing is available at the Ottawa County Health Department s Grand Haven office, 16920 Ferris St., from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m.; telephone 616-846-8360 to make an appointment. On Saturday, the Allegan Medical


NORTH CAROLINA: N.C. Senate Approves Changing Public School Sex Education
Associated Press (06.23.09) - Wednesday, June 24, 2009
By a 25-21 vote on Tuesday, the state Senate approved a bill that would teach seventh-, eighth- and ninth-grade public school students about the use of contraceptives to prevent STDs and pregnancy. The measure added details to what students should be taught about disease infection rates and the effectiveness of Food an


COLORADO: HIV/AIDS Services Lacking
Journal Advocate (Sterling) (06.17.09) - Wednesday, June 24, 2009
Callie Jones
Local health group Rural Solutions recently hosted a Community HIV/AIDS Education and Action Conference where attendees discussed new data from an HIV/AIDS prevention needs assessment for northeast Colorado. The assessment, which included surveys of people and agencies in a 10-county region, was conducted by Rural Solu


FLORIDA: 'Sistas' Spread AIDS Message
Orlando Sentinel (06.21.09) - Wednesday, June 24, 2009
Eloísa Ruano González
The Sistas Organizing to Survive (SOS) gathered on Saturday at Orlando s Plaza Theatre to mark one year of sounding the alarm about HIV/AIDS in the African-American community. The more than 50 women who attended heard a renewed call for prevention, testing, and treatment. Even though AIDS has been a leading cause of de


UNITED STATES: Game for HIV-Positive Youth Developed
Science Daily (06.23.09) - Wednesday, June 24, 2009
Researchers have reported positive results from pilot testing of a Web-based sexual risk reduction intervention that targets prevention messages toward HIV-positive youths. The game, +CLICK, was designed as an adjunct to traditional clinic- based, self-management education for the youths. We wanted to create +CLICK so


MOZAMBIQUE: Mozambique Factory to Sell HIV Drugs by December: Officials
Agence France Presse (06.23.09) - Wednesday, June 24, 2009
Mozambique will open its first antiretroviral drugs (ARVs) factory by December, a project supported by the Brazilian government. The idea is to reduce the health ministry s costs, said Francisco Luz, an official with the Brazilian embassy. The process is already in motion and began with the training of local technici


CANADA: Avoid Unapproved Home HIV Test Kits, Could Yield False Results: Health Canada
Canadian Press (06.22.09) - Wednesday, June 24, 2009
Health Canada on Monday issued an advisory warning consumers not to use any HIV home test kits, as the products are not licensed medical devices and can provide false results. In particular, Health Canada cited the Clean Testing HIV Home Test Kit being sold online. This kit is unlicensed and has not been evaluated by H


UNITED STATES: Panel Sets Guidelines for Fighting Prison Rape
Washington Post (06.23.09) - Wednesday, June 24, 2009
Carrie Johnson
The National Prison Rape Elimination Commission on Tuesday released its report on preventing sexual assault behind bars, which includes a set of recommendations for state corrections officials. Panel members are preparing to send the report to Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr., who will have one year to formulate nat


MARYLAND: HIV/AIDS Walk to Be Held
Frederick News Post (06.16.09) - Tuesday, June 23, 2009
Adrienne Lawrence
The Frederick AIDS Awareness 5K Walk will be held Saturday to coincide with National HIV Testing Day. Registration begins at 10 a.m. at the Church of the Brethren on Fairview Avenue; the walk steps off at 10:30 a.m.; and free HIV testing will be administered from 10 a.m. until 2 p.m. In addition to the church, the even


MISSISSIPPI: Free HIV Tests Offered June 27
Clarion Ledger (Jackson) (06.16.09) - Tuesday, June 23, 2009
Jackson-based My Brother s Keeper Wellness Center will administer free HIV testing Saturday from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at 500 E. Woodrow Wilson Ave. The event will include food and amusements for kids, and everyone who takes the rapid-result HIV test will be entered in a drawing to win a Nintendo Wii. Telephone 601-500-766


FLORIDA: County Health Department Planning HIV Test Day
South Florida Sun-Sentinel (06.23.09) - Tuesday, June 23, 2009
Erika Pesantes
The Palm Beach County Health Department will mark Saturday s National HIV Testing Day by administering free HIV tests at 15 area locations. Visit www.pbchd.com or telephone 561-804-7600 or 211 (locally).


CALIFORNIA: Free HIV Testing this Week in Los Angeles County
Los Angeles Times (06.22.09) - Tuesday, June 23, 2009
Nicole Santa Cruz
Free HIV testing is being offered this week at venues - including parks, music stores, banks, and clinics - across Los Angeles. The county is aiming to test 2,000 people this week in the run-up to Saturday s National HIV Testing Day. For a listing of testing sites, telephone 800-367-2437 or visit http://www.hivla.org/s


NEW YORK: Campaign to Get Staten Islanders Tested for HIV
Staten Island Advance (06.18.09) - Tuesday, June 23, 2009
To advance its goal of reaching the 56 percent of residents who have never been tested for HIV, the Staten Island Ryan White HIV CARE Network is distributing Status Check postcards with information on free testing locations. Staten Island may have the lowest HIV rates, but is has the highest HIV-related mortality rates


CALIFORNIA: San Mateo County Leaders Promote Importance of HIV Testing
Contra Costa Times (06.22.09) - Tuesday, June 23, 2009
Kyveli Diener
Representatives from county and local governments, faith-based groups, and community organizations met recently ahead of National HIV Testing Day to boost awareness of the June 27 event. All of us at a community level can respond to this epidemic by getting tested, knowing your status, and getting treatment, said Darry


SOUTH CAROLINA: Join Together to Fight Teen Dating Abuse
The State (Columbia, S.C.) (06.23.09) - Tuesday, June 23, 2009
Traci Young Cooper; Stephanie Burgess
On Thursday, a teen pregnancy and dating-violence prevention symposium will be held at Crayton Middle School in Columbia. More than 400 participants are expected to take part in plenary and breakout sessions, which will bring together mentors, community activists, faith groups, health and service organizations, and sta


CANADA; UNITED STATES: Researchers Discover New Weapon in HIV Fight; Study Shows Targeted Chemotherapy Has Potential to Kill Disease 'Forever'
Ottawa Citizen (06.22.09) - Tuesday, June 23, 2009
Amy Minksy, Canwest News Service
A new study raises hopes that researchers may be closer to solving the mystery of why HIV persists in the body even when antiretroviral therapy (ART) is successful. For 15 years, we haven t had a clue, said Dr. Rafick-Pierre Sekaly, a University of Montreal professor, director of the Vaccine and Gene Therapy Institute


SOUTH AFRICA: HIV 'Cure' on Our Web Site Not a Problem - African National Congress
Cape Times (06.19.09) - Tuesday, June 23, 2009
Sonya Bell
Advertisements for an herbal supplement for HIV/AIDS patients have been running on the bottom of the Web site for the African National Congress Party s Youth League. However, ANC representatives say they outsourced the advertising and that site visitors can best evaluate such claims. On June 18, a Revivo advertisement


UNITED STATES: Web Map Details HIV Data by State
San Francisco Chronicle (06.22.09) - Tuesday, June 23, 2009
Victoria Colliver
On Monday, the Washington, D.C.-based National Minority Quality Forum (NMQF) launched a new online tool for tracking HIV/AIDS in all 50 states, plus the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico , and the US Virgin Islands . Although New York City is the only region with data searchable by ZIP code, users can view prevalence d


NORTH CAROLINA: Free HIV, Syphilis Testing
Charlotte Observer (06.16.09) - Monday, June 22, 2009
The Regional HIV/AIDS Consortium and the Mecklenburg County Health Department will observe National HIV Testing Day by offering free testing for HIV and syphilis from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Friday at Carolinas Medical Center-North Park, 251 Eastway Dr. in Charlotte. For more information, telephone 704- 531-2467, 704-432-8


FLORIDA: Health Department to Offer Free HIV Testing on June 26
St. Augustine Record (06.18.09) - Monday, June 22, 2009
The St. Johns County Health Department will mark National HIV Testing Day by offering free HIV testing on Friday. The test will be available from 8:30 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. at the St. Johns County Health Department, 1955 US 1 S., Ste. 100; and from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Public Health Mobile Center at the Main Branch Libr


NEW YORK: Free HIV Testing to Be Offered in Newburgh
Times Record Herald (Middleton) (06.17.09) - Monday, June 22, 2009
Saturday is National HIV Testing Day, and in recognition the Greater Hudson Valley Family Health Center Inc. will administer free HIV tests on Thursday from noon to 4 p.m. In addition to testing, the event at 3 Washington Center in Newburgh will include food, entertainment, counseling, and information on low- or no-cos


DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA: HIV/AIDS Campaign to Give Out Non-FDA Approved Kits
Washington Business Journal (06.22.09) - Monday, June 22, 2009
Tierney Plumb
On June 24, the national HIV testing campaign Don t? Guess? Test! will distribute self-administered rapid-result HIV test kits in Washington. Made by Africa-based Salamander Concepts, the kits are currently available in Europe, Africa, and the Far East. The initiative is controversial, however, because the kit is not a


CALIFORNIA: Wiggins HPV Vaccine Bill Approved
Redwood Times (Garberville) (06.18.09) - Monday, June 22, 2009
By a 10-6 vote, the Assembly Health Committee has approved SB 158, which would require health insurers and health maintenance organizations in California to cover the cost of vaccination against human papillomavirus upon a doctor s referral. The vaccine Gardasil targets the HPV strains linked to 70 percent of cervical


WISCONSIN: City Staff: STD Case Outsourcing Was 'Horrible Public Health'
Journal Times (Racine) (06.18.09) - Monday, June 22, 2009
Alex Campbell; Stephanie Brien; Paul Sloth
The outsourcing of STD treatment in Racine led to horrible public health practices before it was ultimately suspended, according to some city health department officials. From January 2008 to May 29, 2009, the city contracted STD treatment out to the Racine Family Medicine Center, which does not specialize in STDs.


TEXAS: Baylor's French Connection: Country Gives $8 Million for HIV Therapy Research
Dallas Morning News (06.17.09) - Monday, June 22, 2009
Jason Roberson
Baylor Health Care System announced Tuesday it has received $8 million from the French government to develop a therapeutic method of controlling HIV without drugs. The project represents France s first US research unit, and it is credited in part to Dr. Jacques Banchereau, director of Baylor s Institute of Immunology R


UNITED STATES: Fewer US Teens Report Being Sexually Active
Reuters (05.29.09) - Monday, June 22, 2009
Anne Harding
A new analysis of data from the 2002 National Survey of Family Growth for 1992, 1997, and 2002 finds a dramatic drop in the percentage of US teens having sex between 1992 and 2002, concurrent with a noticeable rise in contraceptive use by those who were sexually active. But very recent increases in teen pregnancy, afte


INDIA: India's Isolated HIV Victims Find Solace in Marriage
Agence France Presse (06.15.09) - Monday, June 22, 2009
Rupam Jain Nair
Many of India s some 2.5 million people living with HIV/AIDS are ostracized by their communities, prompting some to establish marriage agencies. The Gujarat Marriage Bureau for People Living with AIDS was the first of its kind when it started in 2005; eight similar agencies now exist across India. Those who register wi


UNITED STATES: University of California-San Francisco Nominee Confirmed AIDS Chief
San Francisco Chronicle (06.20.09) - Monday, June 22, 2009
Jim Doyle
On Friday, the Senate confirmed Dr. Eric Goosby as the new US global AIDS coordinator, an ambassador-at-large post based in the State Department. Goosby, a professor of clinical medicine at the University of California-San Francisco, will be responsible for overseeing the President s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEP


UTAH: Utah Pride Offers Free HIV Tests in Salt Lake County
Salt Lake Tribune (06.18.09) - Friday, June 19, 2009
Andrew Maddocks
June 27 is National HIV Testing Day, and in recognition Utah Pride Counseling will offer free HIV testing on Monday from 4 to 8 p.m. at 231 E. 400 S., Ste. 208, Salt Lake City; telephone 801-595-0666.


MISSOURI: Two Missouri University Health Care Workers Test Positive for Latent TB
Columbia Missourian (06.19.09) - Friday, June 19, 2009
Christine Lesicko
Two Missouri University Health Care workers have tested positive for latent TB in testing conducted after an employee was found to have an active TB infection. MUHC identified 290 people whose exposure to the initial case may have put them at risk; results are now available for 190 people and are pending for the remain


CANADA: Whyte Avenue Tattoo Shop Closed over Health Concerns
Edmonton Sun (06.18.09) - Friday, June 19, 2009
Sun Media
Alberta Health Services has shuttered an Edmonton tattoo parlor and is advising its recent customers to be tested for blood-borne diseases. Zipp s Tattoo & Museum, 10028 Whyte (82) Ave., was closed by authorities on June 5. Infractions cited on the closure order include: instruments used on clients were not in clea


AFRICA: WHO Says Africa Accounts for 30 Percent of Global TB Cases
Xinhua News Agency (06.17.09) - Friday, June 19, 2009
Africa accounts for only 10 percent of the world s population but 30 percent of the global TB burden, according to a World Health Organization statement reported Wednesday by the News Agency of Nigeria . The new focus is the implementation of the Stop TB strategy in its entirety in all the countries of the region, incl


AUSTRALIA: Nonoccupational Postexposure Prophylaxis, Subsequent Risk Behavior and HIV Incidence in a Cohort of Australian Homosexual Men
AIDS Vol. 23; No. 9: P. 1119-1126 (06.01.09) - Friday, June 19, 2009
I. Mary Poynten; Fengyi Jin; Limin Mao; Garrett P. Prestage; Susan C. Kippax; John M. Kaldor; John Imrie; Andrew E. Grulich
The current prospective analysis investigated the relationship between nonoccupational postexposure prophylaxis (NPEP) use, future risk behaviors, and HIV infection in a cohort of HIV- negative homosexual men in Sydney. Participants in the Health in Men study were questioned annually about NPEP use and tested for HIV i


MYANMAR: Prevalence of HIV in Drug Users Increases in Myanmar
Xinhua News Agency (06.12.09) - Friday, June 19, 2009
Myanmar has announced a rise in HIV prevalence last year among drug users and says it will expand prevention services for migrant workers. Among drug users surveyed in Yangon and Myitkyinar, HIV prevalence tripled from 2007 to 2008, with most infected persons ages 30-34, the Health Ministry reported. Last year, M


SOUTH AFRICA: Quarter of Men in South Africa Admit Rape, Survey Finds
The Guardian (London) (06.18.09) - Friday, June 19, 2009
David Smith
A study commissioned by South Africa s Medical Research Council finds sexual violence in the country is endemic. Professor Rachel Jewkes and colleagues interviewed a representative sample of 1,738 South African men from the Eastern Cape and KwaZulu-Natal provinces, using computer- assisted collection to ensure anonymit


GLOBAL: Companies Work Together on TB Drugs
Seattle Times (06.18.09) - Friday, June 19, 2009
Sandi Doughton
At the Pacific Health Summit in Seattle this week, 250 experts from 25 nations focused on the growing threat of drug- resistant TB. No new TB drugs have emerged in the past 40 years, and the standard regimen requires patients to undergo six months of treatment with antibiotics. Cases of multidrug-resistant TB, which ca


GLOBAL: Anti-Disease Funds Could Be Harming Health Systems
The Guardian (London) (06.19.09) - Friday, June 19, 2009
Sarah Boseley
The world s commitment to global health initiatives in low- and middle-income countries, which quadrupled since 1990, saved many lives but also had some adverse effects for health systems in poor countries, a new study suggests. Funding for health assistance ballooned from $5.6 billion in 1990 to $21.8 billion in 2007,


UNITED STATES: Labor Group Takes On CVS over Locked-Up Condoms
The Tennessean (Nashville) (06.17.09) - Friday, June 19, 2009
Getahn Ward
A coalition of labor and community groups this month launched the Cure CVS: Unlock the Condoms Initiative to pressure the nation s largest drugstore chain to make condoms easier to access. According to the Change to Win group, its survey of more than 2,200 CVS stores nationwide identified 19 markets where condoms are k


ILLINOIS: Hear Program on HIV/AIDS Act
Chicago Daily Herald (06.17.09) - Thursday, June 18, 2009
On June 24, the Open Door Clinic in Sugar Grove will present a program on the Ryan White HIV/AIDS Modernization Treatment Act featuring Jeanne White-Ginder, mother of the Indiana teenager for whom the act is named. First enacted in 1990, the Ryan White program is the largest federal effort focused exclusively on HIV/AI


MISSISSIPPI: TB Tests Planned for Jail at Raymond
Clarion Ledger (Jackson) (06.18.09) - Thursday, June 18, 2009
Kathleen Baydala
Follow-up testing is planned for 25 inmates at the Hinds County Detention Center in Raymond, where two active TB cases were diagnosed earlier this spring. Last month, the Mississippi State Department of Health tested 800 inmates at the jail and prison farm for TB. While no new active cases were found, 25 prisoners test


AUSTRALIA: Free Cervical Cancer Vaccine Soon to End
The Age (Melbourne) (06.12.09) - Thursday, June 18, 2009
Time is running out for women who wish to take advantage of the Australian government s program offering free vaccination against human papillomavirus (HPV). All women ages 18 to 26, as well as females ages 12 to 18 who are not at school, are eligible to receive the free inoculation; however, they must get the first of


UNITED KINGDOM: Will I? Won't I? Why Do Men Who Have Sex with Men Present for Post-Exposure Prophylaxis for Sexual Exposures?
Sexually Transmitted Infections Vol. 85: P. 206-211 (06..09) - Thursday, June 18, 2009
C. Sayer; M. Fisher; E. Nixon; K. Nambiar; D. Richardson; N. Perry; C. Llewellyn
Failures of post-exposure prophylaxis following sexual exposure (PEPSE) to prevent seroconversion have been reported and are often associated with ongoing risk exposure, the authors wrote. Understanding why men who have sex with men (MSM) access PEPSE on some occasions and not others may lead to more effective health


CANADA: Tattoo Parlors Go Unchecked
Toronto Star (06.13.09) - Thursday, June 18, 2009
Kenyon Wallace
A Toronto Star investigation has found that no Toronto-area public health unit has consistently performed all the required annual inspections of tattoo and piercing parlors. The province has required such inspections since 1997. The Star investigation, which follows a tattoo parlor-related health scare in the Peel heal


JAPAN: Online Novel Teaches Young Brazilians Safe Sex
Daily Yomiuri (Tokyo) (06.08.09) - Thursday, June 18, 2009
Communicating safe sex messages to young Brazilians living in Japan is the goal of a new project by the Tokyo-based nonprofit Assistance Service for Brazilians in Japan (ASBJ). In May, ASBJ began posting online a Portuguese translation of the Japanese novel Love Communication, which was written by obstetrician-gynecolo


AUSTRALIA: Gay Men Most at Risk of HIV: Report
Australian Associated Press (06.18.09) - Thursday, June 18, 2009
Men who have sex with men (MSM) account for the majority of new HIV diagnoses in Australia , according to a report released today by the Australian Federation of AIDS Organizations. Even so, a growing proportion of HIV cases were acquired through heterosexual intercourse, AFAO s report states. Between 2003 and 2007


CALIFORNIA: State Inspects Porn Industry Clinic
Los Angeles Times (06.18.09) - Thursday, June 18, 2009
Kimi Yoshino
California health and occupational safety officials on Wednesday conducted a surprise inspection of a medical clinic that tests adult-film actors for HIV and STDs. Since the disclosure last week of a female performer s positive HIV test result, public health officials and AIDS activists have complained that the Adult I


UTAH: Lawmaker Pushes for Sex Education Reform
Salt Lake Tribune (06.17.09) - Thursday, June 18, 2009
Lisa Schencker
At a legislative meeting held Wednesday, supporters and opponents debated comprehensive sex education. Rep. Lynn Hemingway (D-Holladay) is drafting a measure, modeled after a bill now before legislators in North Carolina, that would require Utah schools to offer two sex education tracks: one that is abstinence-only, an


MICHIGAN: National HIV Testing Day
Port Huron Times Herald (06.15.09) - Wednesday, June 17, 2009
National HIV Testing Day is June 27, and in recognition the St. Clair County Health Department is reminding residents that it offers HIV testing, other than that ordered by a court of law, free of charge. Appointments are available by calling the main office, 3415 28th St., Port Huron, at 810-987-5300, or the teen heal


FLORIDA: Event Aims to Raise HIV/AIDS Awareness
Pensacola News Journal (06.14.09) - Wednesday, June 17, 2009
Sean Dugas
Pensacola s first Health Awareness Festival, sponsored by the Southern Christian Leadership Conference as part of its annual state convention, drew hundreds of people to Hollis Williams Park on Saturday. Among the more than 20 community organizations partnering with SCLC was Positive Healthcare, which tested about 20 p


UNITED STATES: Truth or Consequences: The Intertemporal Consistency of Adolescent Self-Report on the Youth Risk Behavior Survey
American Journal of Epidemiology Vol. 169; No. 11: P. 1388- 1397 (06.01.09) - Wednesday, June 17, 2009
Janet E. Rosenbaum
The author analyzed the consistency of adolescent respondents self-reported health risk behaviors, noting that while surveys are the primary information source about such behaviors, adolescents may not report them accurately. Inaccurate data can undermine the formulation of adolescent health policy, as well as its eval


NAMIBIA: Namibian AIDS Meeting Emphasizes Locally Led Programs
Voice of America News (06.15.09) - Wednesday, June 17, 2009
Joe DeCapua
At the 2009 HIV/AIDS Implementers Meeting held last weekend in Namibia s capital of Windhoek, 1,500 attendees from 55 countries discussed the role of local organizations in developing prevention, treatment, and care strategies. The purpose of the implementers meeting is really to bring together people who actually impl


GLOBAL: Johnson & Johnson, Nonprofit Join to Speed TB Drug Development
Reuters (06.17.09) - Wednesday, June 17, 2009
Deena Beasley
Johnson & Johnson (J&J) announced Wednesday it is teaming with the nonprofit Global Alliance for TB Drug Development to help bring to market the first tuberculosis drug in 40 years with a new mechanism of action. The candidate drug, TMC207, is designed to interfere with an enzyme Mycobacterium tuberculosis ne


GLOBAL: UN General Assembly Meets on Global Response to AIDS
Xinhua News Agency (06.16.09) - Wednesday, June 17, 2009
At a UN General Assembly plenary meeting on Tuesday to discuss progress against HIV/AIDS, senior UN officials urged member states not to falter in their commitments to achieve universal prevention, treatment, care, and support by next year. The goals were adopted by the General Assembly in 2006. As a result of this ong


CALIFORNIA: County Now Says It's Unknown if HIV Cases Tied to Porn Work
Los Angeles Times (06.17.09) - Wednesday, June 17, 2009
Kimi Yoshino
On Tuesday, Los Angeles County health officials corrected their recent assertion that at least 16 unpublicized HIV diagnoses among adult-film performers had been reported to them since 2004. They acknowledged they do not know whether those cases were actively working as porn performers when they tested positive. The co


UNITED STATES: VA Officials Grilled over Botched Colonoscopies
Associated Press (06.16.09) - Wednesday, June 17, 2009
Ben Evans
On Tuesday, Veterans Affairs officials apologized before a House subcommittee looking into the handling of a hepatitis and HIV scare at VA health care centers in Miami, Augusta, Ga., and Murfreesboro, Tenn. A report finding that fewer than half of VA facilities given a surprise inspection last month had proper infectio


ILLINOIS: Ride Raises Funds for AIDS
Windy City Times (Chicago) (06.10.09) - Tuesday, June 16, 2009
About 125 riders took part in the 180-mile 2009 Ride for AIDS Chicago on June 6-7. The event raised about $129,000 for Chicago-area HIV/AIDS service providers. We weren t too sure how this year s ride would do [financially] because of the economic situation, but it turned out great, said Rhett Lindsay of Test Positive


OHIO: Case Western Reserve University Dental School Receives $9.5 Million Federal Grant
Crain's Cleveland Business (06.15.09) - Tuesday, June 16, 2009
The National Institutes of Health s National Institute for Dental and Craniofacial Research has awarded a five-year, $9.5 million grant to the Case Western Reserve University School of Dental Medicine. According to a statement from the school, the 22-member research team will use the grant to unravel changes in the hum


CALIFORNIA: Diminishing the Deficit's Damage
San Francisco Chronicle (06.16.09) - Tuesday, June 16, 2009
Wyatt Buchanan
The Conference Committee on the Budget, a group comprising Democrats and Republicans from the Assembly and the Senate, is developing a plan for dealing with California s $24.3 billion deficit. The committee s proposal is an alternative to the extensive cuts proposed by Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, which would slash $80.


GEORGIA: Officials Urge Citizens to Be Prepared Against HIV
Albany Herald (06.14.09) - Tuesday, June 16, 2009
Jennifer Parks
In observance of National HIV Testing Day on June 27, public health officials will offer free, 20-minute HIV tests at the Dawson Public Safety Building, 432 Crawford St. in Dawson from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. We want to raise awareness, said Southwest District Health Director Dr. Jacqueline Grant. It s very important for peop


NEW YORK: Abstinence Funding at Issue; Falls Youth Advocate Says Federal Cuts Put Lone Program at Risk
Buffalo News (06.11.09) - Tuesday, June 16, 2009
Caitlin Murray
President Obama s proposed budget, which would redirect millions in abstinence-only funding, could make it difficult for one Niagara Falls group to stay in business, says a local youth advocate. Obama s 2010-11 budget favors comprehensive sex education and would reduce abstinence-only funding by $133 million. It s disa


UNITED STATES: Condom Use and Duration of Concurrent Partnerships Among Men in the United States
Sexually Transmitted Diseases Vol. 36; No. 5: P. 265-272 (05..09) - Tuesday, June 16, 2009
Irene A. Doherty, PhD; Victor J. Schoenbach, PhD; Adaora A. Adimora, MD
Concurrent partnerships accelerate dissemination of STIs [sexually transmitted infections]. Most investigations of the features of concurrent partnerships have focused on higher risk subpopulations, the authors of the current study explained. Using data from the 2002 National Survey of Family Growth, they assessed con


CANADA: Judge Slams Criminalization of HIV
Toronto Star (06.13.09) - Tuesday, June 16, 2009
Tracey Tyler
Canada has filed criminal charges against more people with HIV per capita than any other country and is setting a poor example for other nations on how to deal rationally with HIV/AIDS, according to a top South African jurist. Canada has put more than 90 HIV-positive people on trial for having unprotected sex, even w


UNITED STATES: Nonprofit's Clinic Is Crossing Nation
Times-Picayune (New Orleans) (06.16.09) - Tuesday, June 16, 2009
Amber Sandoval-Griffin
The nation s largest nonprofit AIDS medical care provider has begun a 14-city free HIV testing caravan across the southern United States , culminating with a stop in Washington, D.C., for HIV Testing Day on June 27. The AIDS Healthcare Foundation took its AHF/Magic Johnson Mobile HIV Testing Unit to New Orleans on Mond


UNITED STATES: VA Inspections Show Continued Flaws
Associated Press (06.16.09) - Tuesday, June 16, 2009
Kimberly Hefling; Ben Evans
A report by the Veterans Administration s inspector general finds less than half of the VA facilities given a surprise inspection last month had appropriate training and guidelines in place for common endoscopic procedures, suggesting the recently disclosed errors that potentially exposed thousands of veterans to HIV a


INDIANA: Men Turning to Planned Parenthood for Health Care
Associated Press (06.11.09) - Monday, June 15, 2009
Planned Parenthood of Indiana reports the number of men who presented for care at its clinics last year, almost 4,600, was up by almost 5 percent from the year before. June 15-21 has been designated as Men s Health Week, and PPI is taking the opportunity to promote its services for men, including STD testing and treatm


PANAMA: Panama Launches HIV/AIDS Prevention Program
Xinhua News Agency (06.12.09) - Monday, June 15, 2009
Hundreds of young people turned out Friday at the University of Panama for the kickoff of Make the Test, a new HIV prevention campaign launched by the Panamanian Health Ministry. The project provided more than 1,000 free HIV tests. The outreach aims to increase AIDS awareness among sexually active middle-aged people as


AUSTRALIA: Bungle Allows TB Patients to Travel on Qantas Flight
Australian Associated Press (06.15.09) - Monday, June 15, 2009
Queensland health authorities are monitoring passengers who took a flight, the 8 a.m. departure from Cairns to Horn Island on June 11, on which a TB patient was mistakenly allowed to fly. The patient, who had been in treatment for two months at Cairns Base Hospital, should have been sent home on a Flying Doctors Servic


CALIFORNIA: Second Look at Cuts to AIDS Food Programs
Los Angeles Daily News (06.11.09) - Monday, June 15, 2009
Susan Abram
Members of Los Angeles County Commission on HIV voted Thursday to send back to committee a proposal that would cut $350,000 from HIV/AIDS nutritional support services. More than 200 people packed the hearing room, and dozens of clients and staff from potentially affected agencies, including AIDS Project Los Angeles (AP


CHINA: Pharmacy Workers' Sexually Transmitted Diseases/Human Immunodeficiency Virus Knowledge in Fuzhou, China: Implications for Human Immunodeficiency Virus Testing, Treatment and Prevention Strategies
Sexually Transmitted Diseases Vol. 36; No. 4: P. 221-226 (04..09) - Monday, June 15, 2009
Yi Wen, MD; Jihui Guan, MD; Zunyou Wu, MD, PhD; Li Li, PhD; Mary Jane Rotheram-Borus, PhD; Chunqing Lin, MD; Roger Detels, MD, MS; the NIMH Collaborative HIV/STD Prevention Trial Group
Because pharmacies in China play a special role in providing treatment services for STD-infected patients, the authors identified a need to study the STD and HIV knowledge of retail pharmacy workers. The researchers recruited 200 pharmacy workers from 120 randomly selected retail pharmacies in Fuzhou, China. A self- ad


SOUTH AFRICA: Boys Do It More Than Girls
Sowetan (06.10.09) - Monday, June 15, 2009
Pertunia Ratsatsi
The South African government is looking at increasing its budget for condoms in response to reports that young men in the country are more likely to have multiple sex partners, and they are also more likely to use condoms. Last year, 87.4 percent of young men and 73.1 percent of young women used condoms, according to t


SOUTH AFRICA: Scientists Plan Help for HIV Patients with Mental Illness
Inter Press Service (06.08.09) - Monday, June 15, 2009
Kristin Palitza
Scientists at the University of Cape Town s (UCT) psychiatry and mental health department are developing guidelines to help health care professionals identify and care for HIV-positive patients with mental health disorders. The guidelines, being written for nurses and counselors, will address how to manage, treat, and


UNITED STATES: Hearing to Air VA Mistakes with Hospital Equipment
Associated Press (06.14.09) - Monday, June 15, 2009
Bill Poovey
On Tuesday, a congressional panel will hear from top Department of Veterans Affairs officials concerning the possible exposure of 10,000 veterans to HIV and hepatitis. The House Committee on Veterans Affairs oversight and investigation subcommittee will discuss mistakes involving improperly sanitized endoscopy equipmen


ARIZONA: AIDS Medication Program Cuts List of Covered Drugs
Arizona Daily Star (Tucson) (06.11.09) - Monday, June 15, 2009
Stephanie Innes
The state-run AIDS Drug Assistance Program (ADAP) has slashed the list of drugs it pays for from seven to three pages, leaving many low-income recipients to cover the cost of medications that help with side effects of the disease. Critical drugs - antiretrovirals and those for opportunistic infections - will not be aff


GLOBAL: UN AIDS Official Concerned by Economic Crisis
Associated Press (06.11.09) - Friday, June 12, 2009
Rodrick Mukumbira
Low- and middle-income nations need $25 billion to achieve universal access to HIV/AIDS prevention, treatment and care by 2010, but only $14 billion has been raised so far, UNAIDS Deputy Executive Director Paul DeLay said on Thursday. Resources are becoming scarce, but there is a need to ensure their use in an equitabl


ARKANSAS: Purposeful Strides
Arkansas Democrat-Gazette (06.11.09) - Friday, June 12, 2009
The Clinton Presidential Center will be the site of the Arkansas AIDS Foundation s seventh annual AIDS walk on Saturday. The walk steps off at 10 a.m.; it will be followed by a health fair with free HIV testing, food, and entertainment. The entry fee is $20, and all walkers will receive a T-shirt. For more information,


UNITED STATES: AIDS Meeting Demands Lift of US Ban on HIV- Infected Visitors
Science (06.11.09) - Friday, June 12, 2009
Jon Cohen
The International AIDS Society signaled Wednesday it is considering holding its 2012 global conference in Washington, D.C., but only if the US government changes a law banning HIV- positive immigrants and visitors from entering the country. The United States last hosted the IAS conference in 1987 in Washington. The IAS


UNITED STATES: FDA Strengthens Warnings on Gardasil
Wall Street Journal (06.10.09) - Friday, June 12, 2009
Jennifer Corbett Dooren
Responding to reports of patients fainting after receiving injections of Gardasil, the Food and Drug Administration has strengthened its warnings regarding the human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine. To prevent falls and injuries all vaccine recipients should remain seated or lying down and be closely observed for 15 minut


MINNESOTA: Player with a Purpose; Minnesota Lynx Star Guard Candice Wiggins Scores Off-Court Points as an Advocate for Youth AIDS Education
Star Tribune (Minneapolis) (06.01.09) - Friday, June 12, 2009
Kristin Tillotson
WNBA star Candice Wiggins emergence as an HIV/AIDS advocate stems from a deeply personal place: Her father, Major League Baseball player Alan Wiggins, died of the disease in 1991 at age 32. The 22-year-old guard for the Minnesota Lynx was not quite four when her dad passed. I could have gone a totally different way, s


CALIFORNIA: L.A. County Offers Teens Home Delivery of STD Tests
Associated Press (06.11.09) - Friday, June 12, 2009
Shaya Tayefe Mohajer
In Los Angeles County, women soon will be able to take an STD test and get the results without ever going to a clinic. Officials there recently launched a program under which women can request a free home test for chlamydia or gonorrhea. After mailing back a completed test, they can receive a text message to notify the


UNITED STATES: Estimating the Proportion of HIV Transmissions from Main Sex Partners Among Men Who Have Sex with Men in Five US Cities
AIDS Vol. 23; No. 9: P. 1153-1162 (06.01.09) - Friday, June 12, 2009
Patrick S. Sullivan; Laura Salazar; Susan Buchbinder; Travis H. Sanchez
Men who have sex with men (MSM) continue to be the group most heavily impacted by the US HIV epidemic. Since 2000, HIV incidence among US MSM has been increasing. In the current study, the researchers modeled HIV transmissions using data from MSM in five US cities from the National HIV Behavioral Surveillance System, t


CALIFORNIA: More Porn HIV Cases Disclosed
Los Angeles Times (06.12.09) - Friday, June 12, 2009
Kimi Yoshino; Rong-Gong Lin II
Newly released data show that despite pornography industry assurances that the recent diagnosis of HIV in a performer is the first since a 2004 outbreak, at least 16 other cases have been confirmed in adult-film stars. The disclosure brings to 22 the number of HIV cases reported in industry performers over the last fiv


NORTH CAROLINA: N.C. Senate Panel Approves Changes to Sex Education Bill
Associated Press (06.11.09) - Friday, June 12, 2009
Gary D. Robertson
On Wednesday, a sex education bill that would require all state school systems to offer sixth-, seventh-, and eighth- graders information about contraceptives to prevent pregnancy and how to prevent STDs cleared the Senate Mental Health & Youth Services Committee. However, changes made to the measure pleased neithe


MISSOURI: Missouri University Health Care Worker Identified with Active Case of Tuberculosis
Columbia Missourian (06.08.09) - Thursday, June 11, 2009
Emily David
A health care worker at Missouri University Health Care diagnosed with active TB has been removed from clinical duty and is undergoing treatment, Les Hall, MUHC s chief medical officer, told a news conference Monday. MUHC comprises nine sites; officials declined to identify the one where the man worked. The hospital is


ZAMBIA: Zambia Calls for Accelerated Efforts in HIV/AIDS Fight
Xinhua News Agency (06.06.09) - Thursday, June 11, 2009
Despite an increase in the number of people presenting for HIV testing and counseling, Zambia must work harder to fight AIDS, the minister of health said Friday at a meeting of senior cabinet officials. Kapembwa Simbao said condom use remains low, at 40 percent, as does the level of knowledge about HIV among youths. Re


GLOBAL: US Pledges to Put Women, Girls First in AIDS Fight
Associated Press (06.10.09) - Thursday, June 11, 2009
The Obama administration will put women and girls first in the fight against HIV/AIDS, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said Wednesday in a video address to an international AIDS conference in Namibia . The US government will prioritize the prevention of mother-to-child HIV transmission, she said, and it will


HAWAII: HIV Case: Medical Privacy Violator Gets One Year
Honolulu Advertiser (06.10.09) - Thursday, June 11, 2009
Jim Dooley
On Tuesday, Circuit Judge Randal Lee sentenced a woman to one year in prison for posting online the medical records of a person with HIV/AIDS. Rhonda Wong-Fernandez, 22, was also given five years of probation and 200 hours of community service. In passing sentence, Lee said Wong-Fernandez accessed the records while wor


UNITED STATES: AIDS Virus Raises Heart Disease Risk in HIV- Infected People
Bloomberg News (06.03.09) - Thursday, June 11, 2009
Marilyn Chase
HIV infection poses a risk of cardiovascular disease similar to that of smoking, researchers recently reported. The thickening of the carotid artery associated with the increased risk is not caused by HIV medications, said the team headed by Carl Grunfeld, professor of medicine at the University of California-San Franc


UNITED STATES: Determinants of Recent HIV Infection Among Seattle-Area Men Who Have Sex with Men
American Journal of Public Health Vol. 99; No. S1: P. S157- S164 (04..09) - Thursday, June 11, 2009
Hanne Thiede, DVM, MPH; Richard A. Jenkins, PhD; James W. Carey, PhD, MPH; Rebecca Hutcheson, MSW; Katherine K. Thomas, MS; Ronald D. Stall, PhD; Edward White, PhD, MPH; Iris Allen, MPH; Roberto Mejia, PhD; Matthew R. Golden, MD, MPH
The study authors sought to identify HIV infection risk factors related to partner selection and sexual behaviors with those partners among men who have sex with men (MSM) in King County, Wash. Participants were recruited from Seattle-area HIV testing sites. Recent HIV infection was assessed by the Serologic Testing Al


SOUTH AFRICA: South Africa Leads Hunt for Killer TB Vaccine
Reuters (06.05.09) - Thursday, June 11, 2009
Wendell Roelf
Researchers in South Africa next month will begin trials evaluating a vaccine for TB, a disease estimated to affect one in three people globally. The world needs a new TB vaccine because the current one is not really effective in terms of preventing TB and that is manifest in the context of an increasing epidemic, sai


CALIFORNIA: Porn HIV Case Renews Concerns
Los Angeles Times (06.11.09) - Thursday, June 11, 2009
Rong-Gong Lin, II; Kimi Yoshino
State and local health officials said Wednesday they are launching investigations into a newly confirmed HIV case in an actress working in Southern California s pornography industry. According to the Adult Industry Medical Healthcare Foundation (AIMHF), the San Fernando clinic that serves adult-film stars and confirmed


UNITED STATES: The HPV Debate: Majority of Pediatricians Recommend Vaccine, but Opponents Fear Its Use Could Lead to Promiscuity
Daily Gazette (Schenectady, N.Y.) (06.06.09) - Thursday, June 11, 2009
Joanne E. McFadden
A 2006 American Academy of Pediatrics survey found 81 percent of pediatricians were likely to offer the vaccine against human papillomavirus (HPV) to their female patients. As of June 2008, Merck & Co. had distributed 18 million doses of its vaccine Gardasil in the United States . Yet while the health


NEW YORK: Ivy Clinic to Offer Free HIV, Hep