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Risk Of HIV Transmission Heightened By Risky Sexual Behavior Among Male Clients Of Tijuana Sex Workers
A study by a bi-national team of global health researchers at the University of California, San Diego School of Medicine, examining HIV infection among male clients of female sex workers in Tijuana, has found that over half of male clients had recently had unprotected sex. They also reported a high prevalence of drug use.
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Blogs Comment On Planned Parenthood Ad Campaign, Sex-Selective Abortion, Other Topics
The following summarizes selected women"s health-related blog entries.~ "A Radical Notion: Women"s Health Care as Mainstream," Cecile Richards, Huffington Post blogs: "To hammer ... home" the message that "Planned Parenthood and other essential community providers are the affordable, local access to basic preventive care that saves lives," the Planned Parenthood Action Center has introduced advertisements "educating the policy folks involved in fixing our health care system" about "why women"s health care needs to be taken care of in this mega-reform effort," Richards writes. She writes, "From cancer screenings to contraception to immunizations, the majority of women who go to women"s health care centers consider them their primary health care provider," adding, "In fact, more than 90% of what Planned Parenthood health centers do is preventive and primary care." According to Richards, "Essential community providers, including those who provide women"s health care, need to be part of any newly established health care system." She adds that "the three million patients who came to Planned Parenthood health centers last year can testify to it." Richards writes that "[f]amily planning and reproductive health care are unfortunately still not fully part of mainstream health care, even though 98% of women use contraception at some point in their lives -- there"s nothing more universal!" The "fact that women reproduce and, therefore, have different types of health care needs makes some folks on Capitol Hill go pale and start to sweat," Richards writes. She concludes, "Maybe one day we won"t need a special campaign to support women"s health," but "until then, Planned Parenthood is here to make sure women aren"t worse off after health care reform than before" (Richards, Huffington Post blogs, 6/18).~ "The Role of Medical Education in Preserving Abortion Access," Our Bodies, Our Blog: In response to a recent Salon opinion piece that examined whether there will be a next generation of abortion providers, the blog post discusses a few organizations that are "working to increase access to (accurate) abortion-related training." The blog includes links to Medical Students for Choice -- a group that "does student organizing and advocacy to influence medical school curricula, workshops ... and lectures on abortion techniques" -- and The Ryan Program -- which offers "funding, technical expertise, curriculum, workshops and other res to support training opportunities in abortion and contraception for ob-gyn residents." The blog entry also highlights the work of Physicians for Reproductive Choice and Health, which partners with members of the American Medical Student Association "to provide "project in a box" materials for medical students wanting to access and influence their schools" curricula on sexual and reproductive health" (Our Bodies, Our Blog, 6/18). ~ "Regulating Abortion May Be OK But Not To Avoid Sex-Selection," Marianne Mollmann, Huffington Post blogs: "Sex-selective abortion raises a multitude of overlapping ethical concerns regarding eugenics, population control and provider privilege or knowledge," according to Mollmann, advocacy director for the Human Rights Watch"s Women"s Rights Division. Mollmann writes that recent media reports indicating that sex-selective abortion occurs among some ethnic communities in the U.S. "has generated new discussion about what to do -- indeed what to think -- about the practice here." She continues that the "effect of abortion regulations depends on the context and motivation," adding that "[f]rom a human rights perspective, the regulation of medical procedures and interventions is legitimate and indeed often necessary so long as they are based on full respect for the full range of human rights." It is "perhaps tempting to hope that banning sex-selective abortions would safeguard the gender balance of future generations," but the "criminalization of abortion for whatever reason has in the past led only to underground and unsafe prac
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Kidney Atlas In 3-D Created For Researchers And Physicians
Renal diseases shall be diagnosed earlier and treated more successfully in the future. Towards this aim, researchers from nine European countries*, coordinated by the Max DelbrÃøck Center for Molecular Medicine (MDC) Berlin-Buch, Germany, have been working for the past four-and-a half years to create a three-dimensional virtual "Kidney Atlas". It incorporates the latest research findings on the development and diseases of the kidney. The Kidney Atlas was part of the European Renal Genome Project (EuReGene), which the European Union (EU) funded with more than 10 million euros. At the conclusion of the project, the Kidney Atlas was presented at MDC during a two-day symposium from May 15-16, 2009, which was attended by approximately 100 researchers.
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Poorer Countries Need Help With H1N1

Poorer countries in Africa, Asia and Latin America are far from ready to deal with an H1N1 pandemic, and will need help to develop stockpiles of drugs and vaccines, health officials announced on Monday. Senior health officials from 193 member countries are currently attending the 62nd World Health Assembly which opened yesterday in Geneva. While the purpose of the meeting is to review the activities of the World Health Organization and set new priorities for the future, the subject of the new H1N1 outbreaks and preparing for a possible pandemic is likely to dominate the agenda. The meeting will finish early, on Friday, so that ministers can get back and deal with the crisis in their own countries. Tonga"s health minister said it was fortunate in a way that the new H1N1 strain is affecting affluent countries like the United States, Canada, Spain, Britain and Japan first, according to a report from Reuters news agency. "Somehow, somebody decided to start this epidemic in very rich countries ..." said Health Minister Viliami Tangi, who is also deputy prime minister of Tonga. "This helped all of us," he said, explaining that poorer nations don"t have the medical equipment, people, drugs and vaccine capacity to tackle the outbreak as well as the richer nations. African health officials are concerned that if H1N1 starts to spread there it will hit their populations much harder because many people have HIV/AIDS and other chronic diseases. At present fewer than 100 of the thousands of confirmed cases of new H1N1 have resulted in deaths, showing that the current strain is a mild one (unlike the much deadlier H5N1 avian flu), but this ratio could change dramatically if and when H1N1 spreads in poorer nations with a high burden of chronic diseases. In her opening address, Dr Margaret Chan, Director-General of the World Health Organization, also talked about this. She said that today, about 85 per cent of people with chronic diseases are in low and middle income countries, and the "implications are obvious". "The developing world has, by far, the largest pool of people at risk for severe and fatal H1N1 infections," said Chan, explaining that so far, as many as 25 per cent of H1N1 cases have been accompanied by diarrhoea or vomiting, which is unusual. If the virus is shed via fecal matter, this will be especially significant in areas with poor sanitation, such as crowded shanty towns. The world has not seen a pandemic since the emergence of HIV/AIDS, and the resurgence of tuberculosis, including its drug-resistant forms. At present, there are millions of people affected by these diseases, living in countries with overburdened, underfunded and understaffed health systems, said Chan, who then posed two questions: "What will happen if sudden surges in the number of people requiring care for influenza push already fragile health services over the brink?" "What will happen if the world sees the end of an influenza pandemic, only to find itself confronted, say, with an epidemic of extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis?" Chan urged all delegates to look at "anything and everything" that we can all do "to prevent developing countries from, once again, bearing the brunt of a global contagion". She said that while not all people become infected, nearly all people are at risk when a pandemic occurs, and that manufacturing capacity for drugs and vaccines will not be enough to treat a global population of 6.8 billion people. "It is absolutely essential that countries do not squander these precious res through poorly targeted measures," said Chan. Thailand"s delegate said the global financial crisis should not stop the more affluent nations and pharmaceutical companies making sure that antiviral medicines like Tamiflu and Relenza reach the poorer nations. Reuters reported that Nimal Siripala de Silva, health minister for Sri Lanka and president of this year"s WHO assembly said he hoped officials in Geneva would reach an agreement about how vaccine makers should deal with samples of viruses they use to make H1N1 injections. In the case of H5N1 avian flu, developing nations such as Indonesia have been reluctant to provide samples to companies that then patent the injections and sell them at rates poorer countries can"t afford. Siripala de Silva said it was important to reach a "just and fair resolution" on this problem. Chinese Health Minister Chen Zhu also said that international cooperation was essential. "Economic globalization has led to a global transmission of diseases. To address this global challenge, a better way is to take global actions," Chen told the assembly. He called for better cooperation and a demonstration of solidarity. Nations should support each other by sharing information, technology and knowledge and work together to stop the disease from threatening the economic and social development of mankind, reported Xinhua, the Chinese state news agency. "The Chinese government would like to cooperate with other countries and relevant international organizations in sharing information, technology and best practices in outbreak response, to better cope with this challenge to global public health," said Chen. Chen also said China would host an international seminar in Beijing in July to discuss the prevention and control of A/H1N1 influenza, and to share experience and enhance capacity of response in the event of a pandemic, he added. Later this week, WHO Director General Chan and UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon will be meeting with chiefs of the top pharmaceutical companies to talk about vaccine making capacity for H1N1. The current world capacity for flu vaccines lies with about 20 companies around the world, incuding Sanofi-Aventis, Novartis and Baxter International, said a report in the Guardian earlier today. Many health officials are concerned that switching capacity to focus exclusively on H1N1 will cut production of vaccine for seasonal flu, which kills up to half a million people worldwide every year. s: Reuters, Xinhua, WHO, Guardian. Written by: Catharine Paddock, PhD Copyright: Medical News Today Not to be reproduced without permission of Medical News Today


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