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International News Global Climate Change to Increase Vulnerability to HIV/AIDS of People in Developing Countries, Panel SaysApril 30, 2008 Climate change is the newest threat to the increasing HIV/AIDS epidemic worldwide, panelists said Wednesday at an HIV forum at the University of New South Wales in Sydney, Australia, the AAP/Age reports (McLean, AAP/Age, 4/30). Cooper said that with 16,000 HIV new cases daily and the failure of research to produce a vaccine or cure, the outlook for fighting the pandemic was "pretty grim." He said, "I don't think we have any idea of how to harness a vaccine for this, and we need a strong basic science breakthrough to get anywhere with it." Cooper said that it is important to increase preventive measures that work, including condoms and male circumcision, as well as work towards the development of microbicide gels and drugs to block HIV infection (AAP/Age, 4/30). "Science has achieved great strides towards shaping a more effective response to HIV," but "research has not succeeded in producing the hoped for 'magic bullets' of either a cure or a vaccine," Cooper said, adding, "We need to escalate our research efforts while sustaining and expanding what we know works: good prevention and access to life-saving antiretroviral therapy and integrated care" (UNSW release, 4/30). Back to other news for April 2008
This article was provided by Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. It is a part of the publication Kaiser Daily HIV/AIDS Report.
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