God, AIDS, Africa & HOPE

Reflections / Gedanken

22.04.2010 working group for HIV positive priests and religious

What has the working group for HIV positive priests and religious in mind?

We want to provide excellent and confidential service and pastoral care for Catholic priests, religious, deacons and seminarians, but open to other denominations – which includes:

    • Advice for priests, religious, deacons and seminarians regarding VCT for themselves and their communities
    • Confidential and non judgmental counseling (in person, by email, phone, letter)
    • General information about HIV and AIDS
    • Assistance in the work on AIDS policies in religious institutions, diocesan structures, church related business
    • Workshops for interested priests and religious
    • Networking for priests and religious infected or affected by the HI virus
    • Advocacy against stigma
    • Transforming the stigma of HIV into a meaningful tool of service to others in our churches
    • Working on a theology of HIV and AIDS
    • Cooperation with relevant authorities, especially with the papal council for health care workers

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

POZ.com – Treatment News : New Therapy Shows Potential as an Anti-HIV Medication

New Therapy Shows Potential as an Anti-HIV Medication

A new antibody-based therapy prevents HIV from infecting CD4 cells and could become a potent antiviral treatment, according to an announcement by Peregrine Pharmaceuticals, which is developing the therapy. The new data are from a study published online ahead of print in The Journal of Experimental Medicine.

Peregrine’s experimental agent works by blocking phosphatidylserine (PS), a molecule normally found on the inside of cell membranes but can become exposed on the outside of the membranes of viruses and virally infected cells. Exposed PS, researchers believe, enables viruses such as HIV to evade immune recognition and dampens the body’s normal response to infection.

In previous experiments, researchers found that an anti-PS antibody called bavituximab had antiviral activity against a number of viruses as well as anti-cancer properties. That drug is in Phase I and II studies for HIV, hepatitis C virus (HCV) and several types of cancer.

In the most recent published experiment, Anthony Moody, MD, from Duke University in Durham, North Carolina, and his colleagues studied four antibodies targeted to PS. When the antibodies bound with PS on the surface of an immune cell called a monocyte, the researchers explained, the monocyte released chemical messengers called chemokines that blocked HIV from docking with CD4 cells.

“This publication is the latest in a series of presentations and publications that supports the potential of PS as a target in HIV infection and provides new insights into the unique mechanisms of action of our PS-targeting antibodies,” said Steven W. King, president and CEO of Peregrine. “While past studies have focused on the broad nature of the PS target, these new data reveal that some of these antibodies may also have highly specific effects.”

Moody and his colleagues found that the antibodies, in test tubes, blocked HIV infection of CD4 cells about 85 percent of the time. The specific area on the CD4 cell where the chemokines blocked entry was the CCR5 receptor—which is the target of the antiretroviral drugs Selzentry (maraviroc) and vicriviroc, and which is the receptor used by most strains of HIV to infect cells.

Moreover, Barton Haynes, MD, director of the Duke Human Vaccine Institute and senior author of the study, commented, “These results indicate that targeting a host cell lipid such as PS as an anti-viral strategy is a promising concept of relevance to new therapeutic and possibly prophylactic innovations for HIV.”

Source:

POZ – POZ Magazine – POZ.com – Treatment News : New Therapy Shows Potential as an Anti-HIV Medication.

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

12.04.2010 New strategic plan..

South Africa has a new strategic plan to combat HIV and AIDS and this month, a massive roll out in advertising for VCT, voluntary counseling and testing will start. It is amazing to see what the Soccer World cup 2010 can accomplish. What still has to be seen is how this massive drive is financed and how we continue with it after the world cup. Too often I have seen big plans and little action – so I will wait and see what comes out. Let’s cross our thumbs that South Africa does the right choice and follows through.. it would have an amazing effect on the death numbers due to HIV and AIDS.

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

03.04.2010 Parliamentarians and UNAIDS seek HIV Travel Ban Removal Worldwide

March 31, 2010

Parliamentarians, UNAIDS Seek HIV Travel Ban Removal Worldwide

UNAIDS met with parliamentarians from around the world in Bangkok recently, calling for an end to all HIV-related travel restrictions, aidsmap reports. According to the article, 52 countries have some form of restriction on entry, stay or residence for people living with HIV, while 17 other countries prohibit even short-term visits by positive people.

“Travel restrictions for people living with HIV do not protect public health and are outdated in the age of universal access to HIV prevention and treatment,” commented Michel Sidibé, executive director of UNAIDS. Former President George W. Bush lifted the United States’ HIV travel ban in 2008, but the new policy did not go into effect until January of this year.   Source: POZ – POZ Magazine – POZ.com – News : Parliamentarians, UNAIDS Seek HIV Travel Ban Removal Worldwide.

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Parliamentarians have joined with UNAIDS to call for the removal of travel restrictions for people with HIV.

Governments were urged to action by parliamentarians from around the world, meeting at the 122nd Assembly of the Inter-Parliamentary Union in Bangkok on March 28th.  A total of 52 countries have restrictions of some type on the entry, stay or residence of HIV-positive non-citizens. China’s continuing near-total ban on visits and residence by HIV-positive individuals was exposed by the refusal of a visa to Robert Dessaix, a novelist who is HIV-positive.  A total of 17 other countries have restrictions on even short-term visits by people with HIV. These range from the complete entry bans in Singapore and the Sudan, to requirements for HIV testing for those wishing to stay in the country for longer periods, as is the case with Russia. “Parliamentarians have a duty to protect the rights of all citizens, including people with HIV,” said Theo-Ben Gurirab, President of the Inter-Parliamentary Union. “By placing restrictions on the travel and movement of people with HIV, we needlessly rob them of their dignity and equal rights.” Countries on all continents have restrictions on visits lasting three months or more, longer-term residence, or migration. Most of these entry restrictions date from the early days of the HIV pandemic, and were imposed in the mistaken belief that they would help control local epidemics. A number of countries justify longer-term bans as a way of protecting scarce health resources, or as a way of deterring “health tourism.” “Travel restrictions for people living with HIV do not protect public health and are outdated in the age of universal access to HIV prevention and treatment,” commented Michel Sidibé, executive director of UNAIDS. In January 2010, the US removed its long-standing HIV travel ban.

Source: http://www.aidsmap.com/en/news/4227A15B-AAC5-4179-AB49-2572830C72C2.asp


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

01.04.2010 Holy days ahead

For us Christians there are now very three very holy days ahead, starting today with Holy Thursday and ending with Easter, the most important feast of Christianity. In between Good Friday which tells a bloody story about suffering and death. I find it always important to have this Good Friday in between – a day where our faith clearly and without any cover up is realising the cruelty of the world, the suffering, the injustice and all what goes with it. But it is also a day where we think of those marginalised today – those suffering of HIV and AIDS, those who are refugees in a foreign country and not welcomed, those in absolute poverty or sentenced without a fair trial. So many people to think of on Good Friday. Last but not least we can also look at ourselves, our wounds, our dark sides, our pain and shortcomings – and we can do this in the knowledge that it belongs to us, it is part of being a human, and that we have to accept most of it, change some of it, but that we all can trust that God will transform all of it to an Easter experience.

I think this counts a lot specially in the days where our church is going to the press because of all the old wounds never revealed. I hope and with that this Good Friday is a Good Day for our church, acknowledging our pain and shortcomings without excuses – that will be the first step to be able to experience also an Easter of our church.

Filed under: Reflection, Uncategorized, , , , , ,

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