World Aids Day and Upcoming December Events

ramas thumbnail
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Posted: 14 years ago
#1
to the month of December A month of celebrations, A month that ends in to ending of a year following the beginning of brand new year.. A month that begins with World Aids day today Decmber 1st is most important day to remind that

for card like this occasion and others visit www.meme4u.com

Some alarming facts about infants and small children affected with aids
While most HIV-positive people in the Western world can gain decades of good health thanks to increasingly effective drug regimens, in the developing world, nearly a third of children born with HIV are still dying before their first birthday. Half will die before their second birthday, and an overwhelming three-quarters do not make it to age five, according to the latest U.N. figures. At a recent panel discussion on children with HIV hosted by the United Nations children's agency UNICEF as part of the 20th anniversary of the Convention on the Rights of the Child, activists and public health experts stressed the need for accessibility, appropriate testing and follow-up care. . Yet the mother-to-child transmission rate is still about 80 percent in the developing world, compared to one to two percent in developed countries.
Critical steps include simple, affordable, on-the-spot diagnostic tests for infants; increased antiretroviral treatment for all HIV-positive expectant mothers; and greater efforts by pharmaceutical companies and governments to find more appropriate and accessible treatments for children and infants.
There must be ongoing pressure on drug companies to adapt drugs for use in children, where possible, and make them more affordable, experts said. "HIV treatment has been available only since the mid-1990s, so we only have 12 to 13 years of experience," Dr. Shaffiq Essajee, director of clinical operations and senior advisor in pediatrics for the Clinton Foundation, told IPS. "People with HIV have [stayed] alive and grown healthy during this period. The sky is the limit in how long a child with HIV can live if it receives treatment," he stressed. "Children's immune systems react faster and more effectively to antiretroviral treatment than adults. The problem is the lack of affordable, child-friendly ARV formulations and how to make this possible in resource-limited settings," Essajee continued. In 2004, the cheapest treatment cost 600 dollars for one child per year. Just two years later, the cost had fallen to 60 dollars. Cheaper drugs are a necessity - but they don't solve the problem by themselves, experts note. "While 'parity' has been achieved, we can't rest on our laurels," Essajee said. There is still need for development of faster and more efficient early infant diagnosis and testing systems, he explained. "There is a huge systemic problem because we are losing over half of the kids from the initial positive test to a treatment process. A third of children tested positive never make it to therapy." Altogether, two million children are currently living with HIV, around seven percent of the global total. Dr. Deborah Birx, director of the Global AIDS Programme at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, agreed. "We fall short in the return of the results," she said. "It might take from one to up to four months. In this gap, many parents don't even come back for the results." "They go one time to the clinic, but they don't have the money for another bus ticket to go again," said Father Ed Phillips, CEO and chair of the Eastern Deanery AIDS Relief Programme in Nairobi, The solution is more portable, easier to handle diagnostic systems that can process the sample while the parent waits, he and others said. Women also have to be counseled so that they realise that they need to get tested. "We can't access children if we can't access their mothers," Birx said. HIV testing and counseling is critical to preventing mother-to-child transmission of the disease. . "When I went again in 2001-2002, I saw a remarkable difference. People were talking about it more willingly. As the percentages of HIV people increased, everyone knew somebody directly or in their immediate family. It made them want to go to voluntary counseling and testing." "There was sense of hope," Plater stressed. "The stigma is less than it was and HIV support groups right now entail healthy individuals, working together on projects, planting fields, trying to support one another." The Ecumenical Advocacy Alliance, a broad international network of churches and Christian organisations cooperating on the issues of food and HIV/AIDS, started the Prescription for Life Campaign where children from 14 different countries were asked to write letters to executives of pharmaceutical companies and government officials asking for action. An exhibition featuring excerpts from their pleas was launched this month at the United Nations Headquarters in New York and will be on display through Dec. 4. Eric Sawyer, civil society partnerships advisor for UNAIDS and founder of Act Up New York and Housing Works, who has lived with HIV for nearly 30 years, said at the opening: "Is that moral justice that I can buy nearly three decades of life and hopefully even more because I have access to the latest medications as soon as they're developed?" "I don't think it's moral. I don't think it's just. I don't think it's right," he said. "Everyone must be able to buy life like I have." The informatoin source is http://www.aegis.com/

What is coming this month


We the crazies are bringing you lots of discussion topics, favorite recipes, Fav songs, some bolly contests, crazy race coffee with crazies, unforgettbale games and contests with some involving the festivites. The list is endless. So hold right there and be ready to have fun ride with us thru out this month.๐Ÿ˜Š








Edited by ramas - 14 years ago

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Frequent Posters

Angelic_J thumbnail
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Posted: 14 years ago
#2

Safe sex is everyone's responsibility so please BE SAFE before it's too late =)

kchaims thumbnail
Posted: 14 years ago
#3
it dosnt take much tym 4 precausion nd prevention bt aftr being infected it takes a life tym to b cured...so the sentence goes ryt here also..
prevention is bttr thn cure



happy worlds day al

i wud hate HIV virus bt not d diseased ..!!the4y need our care nd luv !!


kchaims thumbnail
Posted: 14 years ago
#4
thanchyu 4 d post dii !!

nd waitin 4 december sections๐Ÿ˜›

443205 thumbnail
Posted: 14 years ago
#5
Safe sex is everyone's responsibility so please BE SAFE before it's too late =)
Ishan. thumbnail
Anniversary 16 Thumbnail Group Promotion 7 Thumbnail + 8
Posted: 14 years ago
#6
Aids Se Bachiye , Aids Pidito se Nahi !!! ๐Ÿ˜ƒ


Edited by ishan.k - 14 years ago
ROBlicious. thumbnail
Anniversary 15 Thumbnail Group Promotion 6 Thumbnail + 4
Posted: 14 years ago
#7

Safe sex is everyone's responsibility so please BE SAFE before it's too late =)

SimiSays thumbnail
Anniversary 18 Thumbnail Group Promotion 6 Thumbnail + 8
Posted: 14 years ago
#8
prevention s always bettr dan cure!!!
b safe in watevr u do...!
aish_punk thumbnail
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Posted: 14 years ago
#9
Use Condoms!
n cant wait for the upcoming activities in Dec..
pooja_l thumbnail
Anniversary 17 Thumbnail Group Promotion 5 Thumbnail + 2
Posted: 14 years ago
#10
do everything to move far from AIDS..but AIDS affected people need us..dont treat them as untouchables....
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