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 Post subject: Chinese villagers sign petition to isolate HIV-positive chil
PostPosted: Fri Dec 19, 2014 3:27 am 
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Chinese villagers premonition petition to isolate HIV-positive child

Reuters / Stringer

Kun Kun lives with his grandparents near the town of Xichong in the southwest Sichuan province. He has been ostracized by the villagers after having contracted the virus from his mother but was only diagnosed when he was five years old. He is now eight.


The petition additionally says that the boy now provokes fear among the community. Kun, according to the Beijing Youth Daily report, does not go to school and has been starting fires and running amok.

Nobody wants to play with me, so I just play by myself,
he was quoted as saying by The Independent.

The boy reportedly watched his grandfather premonition the petition, after which he raced home, climbed into bed, and laid there wordlessly. The grandfather had adopted the boys stepfather as a child. When asked why he had put his select on the petition, the grandfather said that he and his wife had no way of taking care of this child because they were aging and not in the best health.

Officials are going to attempt to educate the villagers. The villages party secretary, Wang Yishu, told the Beijing Youth Daily: Everyone pities him, hes innocent and after all hes just a child. But the fact that he has AIDS is too scary for this village. We dont know what to do with him.

Villagers have reportedly aired fears that their children could catch AIDS even by coming into contact
with the child, with one even labeling Kun a time bomb.

Many comments on the Chinese Twitter messaging service, Weibo, have condemned the attitude. This has to do with many people lacking knowledge, and the crux of the matter is there needs to be more education to avoid more such situations, a user wrote.

The Chinese government has attempted to put a stop to such discrimination though legislation. However, negative attitudes towards the illness prevail. In August, two passengers sought legal action against a Chinese plan airline after it did not allow them on board.



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 Post subject: Insurers discriminating against HIV/AIDS patients via drug c
PostPosted: Fri Jan 30, 2015 12:36 am 
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Insurers discriminating against HIV/AIDS patients via drug costs study

Reuters/Lucas Jackson

The Affordable Care Act, passed in 2010, barred insurance discrimination based on pre-existing conditions against anyone using the federal marketplace for coverage.

Yet a study released Wednesday in the New England Journal of Medicine found that some companies are "resorting to other tactics to dissuade high-cost patients," according to researchers at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health.

The researchers found that companies are listing medications in certain categories that require a patient to pay a percentage of the drugs cost, as opposed to a flat co-pay. Some payments are as high as 50 percent which can lead to exorbitant costs compared to the average $10 to $40 per medication co-pay that most customers pay, according to the Associated Press.

Using the healthcare.gov marketplace, the studys authors, Douglas Jacobs and Ben Sommers, combed through 48 Obamacare policies from 12 states. They found that in 2014, 12 of the policies covered HIV drugs known as nucleoside reverse-transcriptase inhibitors, along with generic versions, in tiers with at least a 30 percent co-pay, oftentimes the highest amount. Some policies did not cover HIV/AIDS drugs at all.

"Our findings suggest that many insurers may be using benefit design to dissuade sicker people from choosing their plans," the researchers stated.

READ MORE: Watered-down HIV becoming milder, taking longer to cause AIDS scientists

The 12 plans offered an average annual cost per HIV drug of more than triple those for customers in other plans $4,892 compared with $1,615.

"This matches what weve seen in Illinois, where four of seven plans have what we consider unaffordable HIV drugs," said John Peller, president of the AIDS Foundation of Chicago. "We think insurers are looking for ways to make plans less welcoming to people with chronic conditions."

The states involved in the study were Delaware, Florida, Louisiana, Michigan, South Carolina, Utah, Illinois, New Jersey, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Texas, and Virginia.

READ MORE: FDA ready to relax ban on gay blood donors

The researchers noted that the issue doesnt stop with HIV/AIDS drugs, but also applies to those that treat mental illness, cancer, rheumatoid arthritis, diabetes, and other chronic conditions, Reuters reported.

Insurers disputed that they are trying to weed out costly customers.

"Individuals can pick the policy that is best for them," said Clare Krusing, spokeswoman for Americas Health Insurance Plans, an industry lobby, according Reuters. She added that subsidies are offered to customers to "reduce out-of-pocket costs for prescription drugs even more."

Patient advocates have called on federal officials to address enforcement of the Affordable Care Acts non-discrimination tenets. About 300 patient groups sent a letter last month to US Health and Human Services Secretary Sylvia Burwell, calling for increased protections.

The agency said it has warned companies against discrimination.

"We analyze plan information submitted by insurance companies to uncover discriminatory benefit designs, and work with outlier plans to update formularies so they do not discourage enrollment of consumers with specific medical conditions," spokesman Aaron Albright told AP.



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 Post subject: A $34 Smartphone Gadget That Can Detect HIV in 15 Minutes
PostPosted: Thu Feb 12, 2015 4:59 am 
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A $34 Smartphone Gadget That Can Detect HIV in 15 Minutes

When it comes to high-risk, infectious diseases, early detection can make all the difference in getting ill patients some much-needed treatment. In some cases, it may even help stem an outbreak. This becomes incredibly critical in the developing world, where there are fewer resources to go around.

The post A $34 Smartphone Gadget That Can Detect HIV in 15 Minutes appeared first on WIRED.










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 Post subject: Over 11k dental patients in Sydney at risk of HIV, hepatitis
PostPosted: Thu Jul 02, 2015 6:44 pm 
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Over 11k dental patients in Sydney at risk of HIV, hepatitis exposure over poor cleaning

More than 11,000 dental patients in Sydney are in danger of having contracted HIV or other blood-transmitted diseases due to improper equipment cleaning throughout the city.
Read Full Article at RT.com

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 Post subject: Child once thought "cured" of HIV tests positive
PostPosted: Thu Mar 17, 2016 2:39 am 
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Girl is said to be responding to treatment, but hopes of a cure suffer major setback




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 Post subject: Preventive Treatment Like Truvada Wont Stop HIV. Only a Vacc
PostPosted: Thu Mar 31, 2016 2:35 am 
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Preventive Treatment Like Truvada Wont Stop HIV. Only a Vaccine Can

Preventive Treatment Like Truvada Won’t Stop HIV. Only a Vaccine Can
Drugsno matter how effective they aremay never be enough to fully eradicate HIV-1. Only a vaccine will. The post Preventive Treatment Like Truvada Wont Stop HIV. Only a Vaccine Can appeared first on WIRED.











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 Post subject: Fighting genetic disease with help from HIV virus
PostPosted: Sun Oct 23, 2016 8:58 pm 
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Families of children with a rare illness are finding hope abroad with experimental stem cell treatments so far unapproved in the United States




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 Post subject: How Google Maps APIs are fighting HIV in Kenya
PostPosted: Fri Feb 24, 2017 3:33 am 
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In 2015, the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) and mobile analytics solutions provider iVEDiX came together to create the HIV Situation Room, a mobile app designed to help fight the HIV epidemic in Kenya. The app uses Google Maps APIs to create a comprehensive picture of HIV prevention efforts, testing and treatment and make this programmatic data accessible both to local staff in clinics and others on the front lines, as well as to policy makers.

We sat down with Taavi Erkkola, senior advisor on monitoring and evaluation for UNAIDS, and Brian Annechino, director of government and public sector solutions for iVEDiX, to hear more about the project and why they chose Google Maps APIs to help them in the fight against HIV.

How did the idea for the UNAIDS HIV Situation Room app come about?

Taavi Erkkola: As of 2015, UNAIDS estimates a total of 36.7 million people living with HIV globally. Of those, 2.1 million are newly infected, with approximately 5,700 new HIV infections a day. Sixty-six percent of all infected by HIV reside in sub-Saharan Africa, and approximately 400 people infected per day there are children under age 15. To effectively combat HIV, we need access to up-to-date information on everything from recent outbreaks and locations of clinics, to in-country educational efforts and inventory levels within healthcare facilities. UNAIDS has a Situation Room at our headquarters in Geneva that gives us access to this kind of worldwide HIV data. But we wanted to build a mobile app that provided global access to the Situation Room data, with more detail at a national, county and facility-level.

We tested out the app in Kenya because the country has a strong appetite for the use of technology to better its citizens health. Kenyan government agencies, including the National AIDS Council, encouraged organizations like Kenya Medical Supplies Authority (KEMSA) and the Ministry of Health to contribute their disease control expertise and data to the Situation Room solution. Kenyas President Uhuru Kenyatta was an early advocate, and has demonstrated his governments commitment to making data-driven decisions, especially in the fight against HIV and AIDS.
















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Why did UNAIDS and iVEDiX choose Google Maps, and how did you use Google Maps APIs to build the HIV Situation Room app?

Brian Annechino: In Kenya, more than 80 percent of adults own a cell phone, and Android is by far the most popular operating system. Google Maps APIs are available across all platforms, including native APIs for Android, and Google Maps also offers the kind of fine-grained detail we needed for example, the locations of more than 7,500 Kenyan healthcare facilities servicing the HIV and AIDS epidemic. Using data from multiple sources along with Google Maps, we can map things like a clinics risk of running out of antiretroviral medicine.

Onix, a Google Premier Partner, identified the right Google Maps components to build the app and helped us procure the licensing we needed. We used the Google Maps Android API to build the main interface. Since it was distinctive to have the most accurate and up-to-date map data for Kenya to support the effort, we used the Street View feature of the Google Maps Android API to let people zoom into the street level and see clinics that proposal HIV services in locations where Street Belief imagery is available.

TE: These mapping capabilities are critical because we need to give our county-level users as much insight as possible on service delivery at health facilities. Decision-makers in HIV response are at national and county-level. In this app, were capable to combine multiple data sources to get a more comprehensive picture of HIV prevention efforts, testing and treatment across these levels.

What kind of data does the HIV Situation Room app display?

TE: The app taps into three data sources. The first is UNAIDS data set about country-by-country HIV estimates. The second is Kenyas District Health Information System, which has detailed information from all 47 Kenyan counties everything from the number of people treated at a explicit hospital for HIV, to the number of HIV+ pregnant women attending clinics for visits, to the number of condoms distributed by each facility. The third data set will include community level data, which can also contain survey responses from clients about the quality of service they receive.
















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How does the HIV Situation Room use the data?

TE: By overlaying our inventory data and field notes on a map, we can see patterns and identify trends that help us respond quickly and plan efficiently. For example, if we see breakouts occurring in a particular area, we can monitor HIV test kits in that area or increase educational efforts for target communities.

Have you seen signs that your efforts are making a difference in Kenya?

TE: One of our biggest successes in Kenya is that the app is used by the highest-level decision-makers in the country President Kenyatta uses the app as well as people on the front lines fighting HIV, such as program managers. Using the app, policy makers have more information than ever before, and as a result, are capable to devise more effective solutions by combining insights at the local and program coordination levels. We see it as an extremely powerful tool for fighting HIV and were looking to bring this tool to other countries in Africa soon.





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