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International News Campaign to End Pediatric HIV/AIDS Launched in AfricaOctober 23, 2009 At the launch of the Campaign to End Pediatric HIV/AIDS (CEPA) on Thursday, advocate Graca Machel urged African leaders to redirect state spending to prevent and treat HIV infections among women and children, Agence France-Presse reports. An estimated "1.8 million of the world's two million [HIV-positive] children" live in Sub-saharan Africa, where "[m]other-to-child prevention and treatment coverage currently averages 30 to 40 percent against a target of 80 percent," the news service writes (10/22). "No matter how small our budgets, we must do something. We will not get there (HIV reduction) with African leaders who don't get moved by people dying,"' Machel said, Reuters reports. CEPA will work with African governments to help ensure pregnant women living with HIV have access to antiretrovirals (ARVs) to help prevent the transmission of the virus to newborns (Govender, 10/22). The program also aims to improve HIV-positive childrens' access to care and ARVs, Inter Press Service reports. "CEPA is a three-year campaign that will initially focus on six countries: Uganda, Kenya, Tanzania, Mozambique, Zambia and Nigeria. Of these six countries, Kenya has the highest number of HIV-positive children, 155,000," the news service writes. The article includes details about how Nigeria's decision to offer free ARVs increased the number of HIV-positive pregnant women on the drugs (Kalideen, 10/22). Back to other news for October 2009
This article was provided by Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. It is a part of the publication Kaiser Daily Global Health Policy Report.
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