home FAQ email sign-up search contact us
Headlines Email Alert Sign-up
HealthCast Calendar
Daily Reports Health Poll Search
Issue Spotlight
<a href="http://www.kaisernetwork.org/daily_reports/rep_index.cfm"><img src="http://www.kaisernetwork.org/images/index_flash_headlines.gif" width="437" height="42" border=0></a>
Daily Reports
Daily Health Policy Report
Daily HIV/AIDS Report
Daily Women's Health Policy Report
Weekly Health Disparities Report
Editorial Policies
First Edition
Email Alert Sign-Up
Search All Daily Reports Archives
 

Site Search

 



GlobalHealthReporting.org


View the GlobalHealthReporting Event Calendar
Daily Reports via RSS
Print the entire report

Monday, May 12, 2008

Tuberculosis

Malaria

HIV/AIDS




Tuberculosis
 

    Botswana Has Not Recorded Increase in XDR-TB, Health Ministry Spokesperson Says
    [May 12, 2008]

      Colo Boitshoko, a spokesperson for Botswana's Ministry of Health, recently denied reports that the country is experiencing an increase in the number of cases of extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis, which is resistant to the two most potent first-line treatments and at least two of the classes of second-line drugs, Mmegi reports.

Boitshoko said that a French Web site recently warned people not to travel to Botswana because of drug-resistant TB and that this information prevented some tourists from traveling to the country. However, Boitshoko said that there are currently two people being treated for XDR-TB at Princess Marina Hospital, adding that a third person has died from the disease. According to Boitshoko, there are slightly more than 100 people with multi-drug resistant TB in the country. Loeto Mazhani, director of health services, said the French Web site's warning is "false and misleading" (Chwaane, Mmegi, 5/8).

In January, the health ministry confirmed the country's first two cases of XDR-TB, in addition to 100 cases of MDR-TB (GlobalHealthReporting.org, 1/17).

Email this story to a friend Link to this story.
Print this story. Save this story in my saved links.

Malaria
 

    SADC To Submit Global Fund Proposal For Malaria Funding
    [May 12, 2008]

      Members of the South African Development Community are expected to submit a proposal for malaria funding to the Global Fund To Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria by June 1, Kaka Madambo, coordinator for the Roll Back Malaria Zambezi Malaria Expedition, said recently, the Herald/AllAfrica.com reports. "The move is meant to intensify regional interventions in eliminating the disease and mosquito breeding sites, which cause malaria in the region," Madambo said.

Madambo did not give an estimate of the proposal amount but said the money would be used to help purchase boats as a means of reaching remote communities. "We are diverting from the use of vehicles to boats in order to reach distant communities," he said, adding, "There are other areas which are not reachable by road but by boats."

The grant proposal is being submitted by the region, rather than just one country, because cooperation is needed to eliminate malaria, Madambo said, adding that working together was one of the themes of this year's World Malaria Day. He encouraged SADC national coordinating committees to make a joint effort to develop a proposal (Herald/AllAfrica.com, 5/9).

Email this story to a friend Link to this story.
Print this story. Save this story in my saved links.

HIV/AIDS
 

    No-Cost Antiretrovirals at Clinic in Rural Malawi Reduces AIDS-Related Deaths, Study Says
    [May 12, 2008]

      No-cost antiretroviral drugs have significantly decreased HIV/AIDS-related deaths in rural areas of Malawi, according to a study recently published in the journal Lancet, Health-e reports. Researchers from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine examined mortality rates in a population of 32,000 people in northern Malawi between August 2002 and February 2006. An HIV/AIDS clinic opened in the area in June 2005. The researchers found that overall adult mortality rates declined by 10% eight months after the clinic opened. Mortality also decreased by 35% among adults living near the area's only main road, where deaths were highest before the clinic opened (Health-e, 5/9).

Researcher Judith Glynn said, "I think people didn't expect to see an effect that quickly," adding, "Previous clinical studies have shown improved survival, but we have now shown this translates into a clearly measurable effect, even in a rural area, and surprisingly early."

Mattias Egger and Andrew Boulle of the University of Cape Town, who were not involved in the study, said the rapid results seen with the clinic are a result of the fact that the sickest people received antiretrovirals first. They added that less-ill patients would experience fewer benefits as treatment continued. In addition, differences in mortality reductions between people near and far away from the main road show the potential for disparities in treatment access, they said.

About 59% of deaths among people between ages 15 and 59 are attributed to HIV/AIDS in Malawi. However, it has been one of the more successful countries in terms of providing no-cost treatment to HIV-positive people, according to Reuters. Since 2004, Malawi has been able to offer access to no-cost antiretrovirals with funding from the Global Fund To Fight, AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria (Hirschler, Reuters, 5/8). According to Health-e, access to antiretrovirals continues to grow throughout Malawi, which researchers believe will result in continued decreasing mortality rates (Health-e, 5/9).

Online The study is available online.

Email this story to a friend Link to this story.
Print this story. Save this story in my saved links.

 

    HIV/AIDS Cases Increasing Among Commercial Sex Workers in Uganda
    [May 12, 2008]

      HIV/AIDS cases are increasing among women and girls involved in commercial sex work in Kampala, Uganda, HIV/AIDS advocates said recently, Uganda's Monitor reports.

Robert Kanwagi -- coordinator of the Breaking the Ice Project, which is being implemented by the group Reproductive Health Uganda in Kampala -- said a recent survey found that HIV prevalence among the sex workers in the city was as high as 47.2%, compared with the national prevalence of 6.7%. The survey also found that HIV prevalence is as high as 60% among sex workers ages 25 to 29 and that 59.6% of sex workers were found to have other sexually transmitted infections, such as syphilis and gonorrhea.

Kanwagi, who was speaking at a training workshop on HIV and gender issues, said poverty is the primary reason that women become commercial sex workers. He also said that sex workers lack the authority to negotiate safer sex and that those who offer unprotected sex are paid more money than those who use condoms. The Breaking the Ice Project was launched in July 2007 to expand access to HIV/AIDS services among sex workers in Kampala.

RHU National Program Manager Peter Ibembe said HIV/AIDS is spreading among women and girls because of social, economic and cultural factors that deny them access to HIV prevention and treatment services. "A poor woman or girl may not be able to deny a man sex because she needs money," he said, adding, "Because of their lack of decision-making power in matters of sex, as well as other factors like poverty, they become more exposed to the risk of becoming infected than men" (Nafula, Monitor, 5/9).

Email this story to a friend Link to this story.
Print this story. Save this story in my saved links.

 

    Increased Research, Determination Needed in HIV/AIDS Vaccine Efforts, HIV Vaccine Enterprise Head Says
    [May 12, 2008]

      The disappointment that followed the cancellation of a Merck vaccine trial in September 2007 has been replaced by a renewed determination among the scientific community, Alan Bernstein, executive director of the Global HIV Vaccine Enterprise, said ahead of the 25th anniversary of the scientific paper announcing the discovery of HIV, the CP/Yahoo! News reports. "I could not guarantee that one day we'll have a vaccine," Bernstein said, adding, "But not to try is to say to all the 33 million people" who are living with HIV worldwide, as well as the 2.3 million people who contract the virus "every year," that researchers are "giving up."

May 20 is the 25th anniversary of the paper -- published in the journal Science by Luc Montagnier and colleagues at La Pitie-Salpetriere Hospital and the Institut Pasteur -- announcing the discovery of HIV. Science in its current issue has published an editorial by Bernstein, as well as additional articles about HIV/AIDS vaccine and prevention efforts, to mark the anniversary.

Bernstein in the editorial writes that people who use recent vaccine candidate setbacks to argue that such research is misplaced and that a vaccine cannot be developed are "misguided." He added, "The development of new drugs and new vaccines always take time and is never a straight line, and it's always marked by failures."

According to Bernstein, the result of a number of recent conferences to address HIV/AIDS vaccine research is a consensus to focus on more basic and early-stage clinical research. Such research will allow scientists to examine what happens when people contract HIV, as well as how the immune system functions, Bernstein said. "If we do the kinds of research that's needed to understand how we react to HIV, that ultimately will inform a lot of research on other pathogens," he said (Branswell, CP/Yahoo! News, 5/8).

Online A summary of Bernstein's editorial is available online.

Email this story to a friend Link to this story.
Print this story. Save this story in my saved links.

 

    Canadian Drug Company Awarded Rwandan Contract To Provide Combination Antiretroviral
    [May 12, 2008]

      Rwanda recently accepted a bid from the Toronto-based generic drug company Apotex to supply its fixed-dose combination antiretroviral drug Apo-triAvir to the country, the Toronto Star reports (Toronto Star, 5/9). According to the CP/Google.com, securing the contract was the final legal step the company had to take in the process of receiving approval from Canada's Access to Medicines Regime. Apotex is the first company to complete CAMR's approval process, which has been criticized by some HIV/AIDS advocates and generic drug manufacturers, the CP/Google.com reports (CP/Google.com, 5/8).

The World Trade Organization in October 2007 announced it had received notification from the Canadian Intellectual Property Office authorizing Apotex to manufacture the drug. GlaxoSmithKline in August 2007 announced that it had given consent to Apotex to use two of GSK's patented antiretroviral drugs, lamivudine and zidovudine, to manufacture Apo-triAvir -- a combination of lamivudine, zidovudine and nevirapine. Boehringer Ingelheim agreed in July 2007 to allow Apotex to use nevirapine in the combination.

Under an August 2003 waiver to WTO's Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights, known as the "paragraph 6 system," developing countries with a public health crisis are allowed to import generic drugs when they cannot manufacture the drugs themselves. According to WTO, Rwanda is the first country to use the waiver, which would allow it to import generic drugs that are manufactured under compulsory licenses in other countries. The TRIPS waiver submission was made in September 2007 by the Treatment and Research AIDS Centre (Kaiser Daily HIV/AIDS Report, 8/10/07). According to the Star, Apotex plans to send 15.6 million tablets of the drug beginning in October (Toronto Star, 5/9). Apotex will sell the drug for about 19.5 cents per dose, but if purchased separately and from their patent holders, the drugs will total about $6 per dose, the CP/Google.com reports.

Comments
"We're almost there," Elie Betito, director of public and government affairs for Apotex, said, adding, "By October sometime we're hoping that the product will be on a plane on delivery to Rwanda." Betito said that nothing will be final until the drugs are delivered, adding that the patent-holding companies can still withdraw permission for the sale to take place "even on the day we are shipping" (CP/Google.com, 5/8). Betito said that Apotex essentially developed the drug as a goodwill gesture and will not see a return on its development costs at the selling price. He added that the company likely will not go through the CAMR process again unless it is changed (Gandhi, Globe and Mail, 5/8).

Richard Elliott, executive director of the Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network, said Apotex's accomplishment is bittersweet. If Apotex is unwilling to go through the process again, other drug companies are unlikely to attempt to try, Elliott said. He added, "I don't think the experience of Apotex is going to inspire [drug companies] to say, 'OK, yeah, now we'll step up to the plate and do it,' unless of course we fix the system and make it much smoother and easier" (CP/Google.com, 5/8). Jeff Connell, spokesperson for the Canadian Generic Pharmaceutical Association, said none of the group's members is willing to go through the CAMR process in its current form (Globe and Mail, 5/8).

Email this story to a friend Link to this story.
Print this story. Save this story in my saved links.

 

    IRIN/PlusNews Examines Efforts To Increase Access to Safe Drinking Water Among HIV-Positive People in Sudan
    [May 12, 2008]

      IRIN/PlusNews on Monday examined efforts to increase access to safe drinking water among HIV-positive people living in Sudan. According to IRIN/PlusNews, people living with HIV are especially vulnerable to diseases that can be spread through unsafe drinking water because of their weakened immune systems. Although conflict in Sudan officially ended in 2005, government officials in the south of the country have said that they do not have the resources necessary to rebuild the region and deliver services, such as safe water.

Since the end of the conflict, water treatment tablets have become available in some stores, and HIV-positive people who can afford the tablets protect themselves from cholera and other diarrheal diseases common in the region, IRIN/PlusNews reports. PSI this year, with funding from CDC, began including water treatment tablets, called Water Guard, in care packets the group distributes to HIV-positive people every three months. The packets include 90 Water Guard tablets, each of which treats 25 liters of water. The packets also contain cans with taps on the bottom, water containers, condoms, two insecticide-treated nets, and educational materials about malaria and HIV.

According to IRIN/PlusNews, the decision to include Water Guard in the packets in part was a response to pressure from HIV-positive people in the region. "It's a major concern for us: we feel that they must have access to clean water," Angok Kueol, executive director of the Southern Sudan AIDS Commission, said, adding that if HIV-positive people "don't have safe water, they are always prone to infections, such as watery diarrhea." Erin Stuckey, HIV/AIDS technical adviser to PSI in southern Sudan, said that the care-packet program will be expanded to other parts of the region in the future. In addition, other organization, such as UNICEF and Solidarites, are making efforts to raise awareness about hygiene and sanitation (IRIN/PlusNews, 5/12).

Email this story to a friend Link to this story.
Print this story. Save this story in my saved links.


...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... .....

About Us     Privacy Policy      Help      Site Map