Filed under: HOPE Cape Town Association, HOPE Cape Town Association & Trust, HOPE Cape Town Trust, HOPE Gala Dresden, Aids, Bavaria, Blikkisdorp, cape town, e-learning, hiv, Hochschule Niederrhein, HOPE Cape Town Association, HOPE Cape Town Association & Trust, HOPE Cape Town Trust, hope community health worker, outreach, partnership, Primary Health Care Facilities, sangoma, south africa, TU Muenchen, TU Neu-Ulm, tygerberg, Tygerberg Academic Health complex, tygerberg children's hospital, university of stellenbosch, western cape
02/21/2013 • 8:01 am Comments Off on HOPE Cape Town Trust & Association working summary
HOPE Cape Town Trust & Association working summary
02/20/2013 • 10:00 pm Comments Off on UNAIDS congratulates Mongolia for removing restrictions on entry, stay and residence for people living with HIV
UNAIDS congratulates Mongolia for removing restrictions on entry, stay and residence for people living with HIV
The United Nations Joint Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) welcomes the recent law reforms in Mongolia that have removed all travel restrictions and other discriminatory provisions for people living with HIV. The reforms which were passed by Mongolia’s Parliament in mid-December of last year took effect on 15 January 2013.
The Law on Prevention of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Infection and Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome removes all HIV-related restrictions on entry, stay and residence. Foreigners applying for visas to Mongolia are no longer required to disclose or provide documentation of HIV status.
“I commend Mongolia for taking this bold step and I hope this will encourage other countries to follow their example and move the world towards zero HIV-related stigma and discrimination,” said Michel Sidibé, UNAIDS Executive Director.
UNAIDS advocates for the right to freedom of movement—regardless of HIV status. There is no evidence to suggest that restrictions on the entry, stay or residence of people living with HIV protect public health.
Mongolia’s reforms also removed employment restrictions that prevented people living with HIV from undertaking certain jobs, including in the food industry. The new law has also encouraged the creation of a multi-sectorial body comprised of government, civil society and private sector representatives to help put in place the reforms.
With the removal of Mongolia’s restrictions, UNAIDS counts 44 countries, territories, and areas that continue to impose some form of restriction on the entry, stay and residence of people living with HIV based on their HIV status. There are five countries with a complete ban on the entry and stay of people living with HIV and five more countries deny visas even for short-term stays. Nineteen countries deport individuals once their HIV-positive status is discovered.
Filed under: General, HIV and AIDS, HIV Prevention, HIV Treatment, Politics and Society, Aids, hiv, human rights, Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS, Mongolia, people living with hiv, restrictions, travel restrictions, unaids, United Nation
02/20/2013 • 8:11 am Comments Off on
This story shows that Africa is moving sometimes in the right direction. And it is good news for those working in the fields of HIV, AIDS and human rights.
Congratulations Swaziland, for your courage in banning a tradition that has been in your culture for centuries. Now the real challenge begins… enforcing the law.
The marriage of an adult man to an underage girl is known as kwendizisa in Siswati.
“Swazi men marrying girls once the girls enter puberty is not a customary law. It is not mandatory. It is tolerated because it has always been done. But times are changing, and Swaziland has the highest HIV prevalence rate in the world. This practice has added to the spread of HIV. It is a great victory for public health and for the rights of girl children that this outmoded practice must now end,” AIDS activist Sandra Kunene told IRIN/PlusNews.
Deputy Prime Minister Themba Masuku announced the government’s intention to enforce the Child Protection and Welfare Act by prosecuting men who marry underage girls.
Sexual activity with underage girls…
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Filed under: HIV and AIDS, Politics and Society, Reflection, Society and living environment, Africa, Aid and Development, Aids, child marriage, culture, enforcement, hiv, human rights, marriage, south africa, Swaziland, tradition
02/18/2013 • 11:33 pm Comments Off on
There is always a trace of hope in science
Vorinostat, a chemotherapeutic drug which inhibits histone deacetylase and is used mainly to treat refractory T-cell lymphomas under the brand name Zolinza, has been found to awaken quiescent cells infected with HIV thus creating an avenue by which the infection may be cured completely.
A single dose of the drug (which is marketed by Merck) was able to reactivate such cells in the study that was conducted in the University of North Carolina, USA.
This study has aroused tremendous interest in the field of HIV/AIDS as current drug regimens only suppress the viral load to undetectable levels; stopping the medication usually leads to a relapse of the disease with the very significant risk of drug resistance.
Merck’s head of research Daria Hazuda doesn’t think that Zolinza itself would be the drug that would be used in this form of aggressive therapy, but rather a prototype that would pave…
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Filed under: HIV Treatment, Medical and Research, Aids, eradication, health, hiv, HIV Prevention, HIV treatment, research, science
02/14/2013 • 9:58 pm Comments Off on Visit by German Minister Annette Schavan to HOPE Cape Town
Visit by German Minister Annette Schavan to HOPE Cape Town
Towards the end of the German-South African Year of Science, the then German Minister of Education and Research, Dr. Annette Schavan, and her delegation visited HOPE Cape Town on February 7, 2013. The German visitors were hosted at the Blikkiesdorp informal settlement where HOPE Cape Town runs an outreach programme that supports HIV-infected children and their families. During this visit the German delegation was also informed about the collaboration between the Pharmacology and Virology Divisions of the University of Stellenbosch and HOPE Cape Town.
Just before 4 p.m., Rev. Fr. Stefan Hippler, employees of HOPE Cape Town and Professors Bernd Rosenkranz and Wolfgang Preiser from the University of Stellenbosch welcomed Dr Schavan and her delegation of about 30 people from the German parliament, academic and other institutions to Blikkiesdorp. Previously, the minister had attended meetings with local and international enterprises and organisations in South Africa in order to consolidate the scientific cooperation between both countries.
Prof Dr Bernd Rosenkranz, Head of the Division of Pharmacology, and his colleague Prof Dr Wolfgang Preiser, Head of the Division of Medical Virology, both also HOPE Cape Town board members, shared their experiences of being part of a joint German-South African research project on infectious diseases with the group. One project that was presented described how German students had the opportunity to familiarize themselves with diseases common in South African that are rare in Germany. In return, the joint research project allowed South Africans to develop new forms of treatment that had been tested in Germany before.
Rev. Fr. Hippler introduced the non-profit-organisation HOPE Cape Town to the audience. He highlighted the importance of the world-wide network of the charity and emphasised the significant contribution that the cooperation between international medical research initiatives and local communities brings about. Moreover, the catholic priest underlined how the work of HOPE Cape Town’s 30 employees at the Ithemba ward at Tygerberg Hospital and in 20 primary health care facilities in various informal settlements contributes to the fight against the HI virus.
The visibly interested minister and her delegation from Germany were invited to walk through Blikkiesdorp and meet its inhabitants whilst Rev. Fr. Hippler and the HOPE Cape Town community health workers explained to the visitors under which difficult circumstances people live there. Furthermore, the delegation was informed about the severe social problems such as unemployment and domestic violence that mark people’s daily existence. Through visiting HOPE Cape Town’s project in Blikkiesdorp the foreign visitors were given an authentic albeit a little uncomfortable experience of the challenges that people living in informal settlements face on a daily basis. The German delegates enjoyed the hands-on experience as a welcome alternative to the usual power-point presentations that they have to sit through on such visits.
Filed under: HOPE Cape Town Association, HOPE Cape Town Association & Trust, Medical and Research, Networking, Aids, Annette Schavan, german delegation, German Minister of Education and Research, Germany, hiv, HOPE Cape Town Association & Trust, HOPE Cape Town Trust, international medical research, medical virology, Pharmacology, Prof Preiser, Prof Rosenkranz, rev fr, Scientific year, south africa, university of stellenbosch, Virology, wolfgang preiser




