God, AIDS, Africa & HOPE

Reflections / Gedanken

POZ Magazine: Beijing AIDS Group Forced to Close

Beijing AIDS Group Forced to Close

Beijing Loving Source, an AIDS service organization, will close operations following increased pressure from tax authorities in the Chinese government, The Associated Press (AP) reports. The group was founded by Hu Jia, a well-known AIDS activist who is currently serving a 3.5 year prison sentence for pushing authorities to deal with HIV publicly. After the government started regulating overseas donations, the organization ran into financial troubles.

To read the AP article, click here

http://www.poz.com/rssredir/articles/AIDS_Beijing_ASO_1_19395.shtml

Filed under: HIV and AIDS, Politics and Society, , , ,

11.11.2010 working group on ethics and hiv

I am invited to the theological working group on ethics and HIV in Frankfurt, associated to the “Aktionsbuendnis AIDS” in Germany. It is a lively discussion about what we have to do and how to create synergies and specially the topic how we deal within the church with employees who are HIV  positive is coming up again and again. It seems to me that all churches are not very open on this issue. Maybe the sensitivity of the topic is to frightening for the superiors. Not sure about it, but I am sure that we have to tackle it before it hits us. An interesting afternoon where North and South are meeting in a lively debate.

Filed under: HIV and AIDS, Networking, Reflection, , , , , , , ,

07.11.2010 AIDS Gala Berlin – and where is the bishop?

Again, I am guest at the German AIDS Gala in Berlin, the 17th of its kind. And again the German Oper Berlin is booked out and masses of people are flocking to attend this prestigious event. Michaela from Dresden is accompanying me to this event and after being picked up by the Shuttle Service at the hotel, it is once again a funny feeling to take the red carpet, letting the journalists and photographers guess who the couple is.. 🙂 Being asked how I felt about the feature of myself and HOPE Cape Town in the Berliner Morgenzeitung I must admit that I even didn’t know about it – nobody told me. Quick I realise that HOPE Cape Town will feature prominently this eve as one of the projects sponsored by the German AIDS Foundation. Brief chats with Her Highness, the Begum Aga Khan, the National foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle and his husband and others from the Board of Trustees follow before the programme starts. And as now expected, the chairperson of the board of trustees of the German AIDS Gala in Berlin, the Begum Aga Khan tells the audience about her visit at HOPE Cape Town last year – a film shows her and me visiting the Ithemba Ward and I wish all our HOPE Community Health Workers, senior staff and management could hear the applause as she congratulates the projects and the priest for their work down there in the Western Cape. These are moments were I would love to beam myself away for the time being – sometimes it is interesting enough for me difficult to hear public praise. But it is also the feeling of encouragement present.

The programme contains great opera – I do enjoy it and when the Opera Children’s choir sings “Laudate Domino” I suddenly realise that there is no official representative of the church. And if feels suddenly so completely wrong: National ministers, certainly all important people of the local and national business world, politicians and artists are present – showing their committment towards the battle against a pandemic which changed the world – celebrating also partly a project, which originated and is still support by a German-speaking Catholic community and no representative of my church is present. And I suddenly realise that also in Dresden the last five years there was no-show of the local bishop or his representative. The sorrows and the joy of the people are the sorrows and the joy of us Christians – I ask myself whether it is not poor judgement to be not present visible as a church at major events where people from so different walks of life unify and come together in this important cause. I suddenly feel sad a moment, but then the joy of the choir carries me away from it.

Congratulations to the German AIDS Foundation and all its helper for this great eve – and I am grateful that within one week I am able to attend to major fundraising galas bringing hope and future again to South Africa. A big part of the proceeds of Berlin are also going to HOPE Cape Town and supporting our work. Deo gratias.

Filed under: HIV and AIDS, HOPE Cape Town Association & Trust, Medical and Research, Networking, Reflection, Society and living environment, , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

03.11.2010 Munich

Arrived yesterday in Munich to attend the workshop at the Technical University today. I am still with many thoughts in Dresden – the HOPE Gala Dresden was indeed a highlight of the year – and the proceeds of 100 000 Euro for HOPE Cape Town a great success.  Seeing a touched Joachim Franz receiving the 2nd HOPE award was also a very special moment. The talk at the Technical University Dresden and my encounter with students of the Kreuz School added so much value to my stay.
There is lots of interest to tighten the relationship between Dresden and Cape Town and I can see so many possibilities to do this with style and meaning for the people concerned – I am looking forward to explore all the ways available.

I feel blessed seeing all the good will and support.

Filed under: HIV and AIDS, Networking, Society and living environment, , , , , ,

POZ Magazine: New Study Challenges Assumptions About HIV Treatment as Prevention

A new Chinese study conducted among heterosexual couples of mixed HIV status found that antiretroviral (ARV) therapy does not substantially reduce the risk of HIV transmission in a real-world setting. The study, published October 1 in the Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes, and reported by aidsmap, suggests that more data might be needed before rushing to roll out HIV treatment-as-prevention programs around the globe.
Treatment-as-prevention rests on a fairly well-established theory that when ARV therapy reduces an HIV-positive person’s viral load, he or she will be less likely to transmit the virus to sex partners. While this has been noted for nearly a decade, the strategy has received increasing attention in light of recent studies showing a reduction in HIV transmission in both San Francisco and Vancouver, two cities where an increasing number of HIV-positive people have received ARV therapy and the average community viral loads have dropped substantially.

To test this theory further, researchers looked at HIV transmission rates among 1,927 mostly monogamous couples in the Henan province of China, where one of the partners had HIV and the other did not. Many people in this province became infected from tainted equipment used for blood donations.
Surprisingly, the researchers found that there was no statistically meaningful difference in the rate of transmission in the couples whose HIV-positive partner was on ARV therapy (3 percent transmission) compared with couples where the HIV-partner was not on treatment (5 percent transmission).
The study’s authors acknowledge that poor adherence could have contributed to the failure to find that ARV therapy reduced transmission risk. Nevertheless, aidsmap reports that Myron Cohen, MD, from the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill said in an accompanying editorial that the study results “demand a giant pause.”
“Will ART suppress transmission of HIV under ‘real life’ conditions?” he asks. “[I]t seems wise to try and answer this question before we fully deploy a ‘Test and Treat strategy,’ expecting to detect a benefit to the general population.”

Source:  http://www.poz.com/rssredir/articles/hiv_china_prevention_761_19254.shtml

Filed under: HIV and AIDS, HIV Prevention, HIV Treatment, Medical and Research, , , ,

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