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International News U.S. Military Medical Team Supports HIV Prevention Efforts in BotswanaAugust 15, 2012 In an article on the U.S. Department of Defense webpage, the American Forces Press Service reports on how a U.S. military medical team is helping the Botswana Defense Force "to promote Botswana's national program of education, HIV screening and male circumcision surgeries to stem what's become a national epidemic," according to Army Col. Michael Kelly, an Army Reserve surgeon deployed in Botswana from the Army Reserve Medical Command in Washington. "The Botswana Ministry of Health's goal, Kelly said, is to bring the number of new HIV diagnoses to zero by 2016, ... an ambitious plan, in light of an HIV rate that has skyrocketed since the first case of AIDS was diagnosed in Botswana in 1985," the news service writes (Miles, 8/14). Back to other news for August 2012
This article was provided by Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. It is a part of the publication Kaiser Daily Global Health Policy Report. Visit the Kaiser Family Foundation's website to find out more about their activities, publications and services.
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