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Politics : Sharks in the Septic Tank -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: epicure who wrote (52607)7/7/2002 6:42:15 PM
From: Neocon  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 82486
 
Yes, it is hard to get rid of stuff you like, even if it has little further utility. Some books I have read over and over: "1984", "The Brothers' Karamazov", Aristotle's "Ethics", "The Republic", for example. Some I dip into for reference occasionally, like old textbooks (not from St. John's, but bought second hand to review various disciplines). Some I will probably not look at again. But I dislike throwing them out, and sometimes cannot find a nice home for them.



To: epicure who wrote (52607)7/7/2002 6:50:05 PM
From: epicure  Respond to of 82486
 
this is sad. I had no idea that half the adults in botswana were infected with AIDS. Can you imagine such an infection rate? And in a poor country that cannot treat the disease?

AIDS cases in the U.S. end downward trend

July 7, 2002 Posted: 12:48 PM EDT (1648 GMT)

From Sanjay Gupta
CNN Medical Unit

BARCELONA, Spain (CNN) -- New
cases of AIDS and HIV infection in the
United States have remained roughly
stable since 1998, halting what was an
encouraging downward trend,
researchers reported Sunday at the
14th International AIDS Conference in
Barcelona, Spain.

Following four years of steady declines,
the stabilization at about 10,000 cases per
quarter has stirred concern among public
health officials.

The pre-1998 drop in new AIDS cases in the United States primarily was attributed
to highly effective anti-retroviral treatments and strong prevention measures, said
Dr. Ronald Valdiserri of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Valdiserri blamed the lack of additional progress on apathy about AIDS and
complacency with treatment options.

Of the estimated 1 million Americans with
HIV/AIDS, about half are not receiving medical
care, often because they don't know they're
infected, Valdiserri said.

While men having sex with men continues to make
up the largest group of HIV positive individuals (43
percent), more than a quarter (27 percent) of newly
infected Americans contracted the virus from
heterosexual sex, Valdiserri said.

Twenty-three percent of newly infected cases got
the disease from intravenous drug use, according to
the CDC.

Half of the newly infected heterosexual population
are African-American women, and another 25
percent are African-American men, according to
CDC figures.

Worldwide, AIDS has killed 20 million people, and
another 40 million are infected with the virus that
causes AIDS.

Seventy percent of newly infected cases (28 million
people) live in Africa, where, in some areas such as
Botswana, nearly half of adults are infected with
HIV, said Dr. Peter Piot of UNAIDS, the Joint United Nations Program on
HIV/AIDS.

The epidemic is growing fastest in Russia, spread mainly by intravenous drug
abuse, Piot said.

Despite the gloomy statistics, a comparison between the West and Africa makes it
clear that access to treatment profoundly improves survival.

Last year, nearly 500,000 Westerners received HIV/AIDS treatment, and there were
25,000 deaths from the disease. But in Africa, 30,000 people have received
treatment, and the disease has killed more than 2.2 million people.

UNAIDS researchers predicted AIDS will kill 70 million more people over the next
20 years unless a dramatic treatment advance occurs.

But participants in the conference, which opened Sunday, are not expected to
report major advances in treatment or prevention.

Public health officials have pinned their hopes for making major inroads into the
epidemic on the development of an effective, cheap vaccine, but they said no such
advance is on the horizon.

UNAIDS officials have called on industrialized nations to fulfill their promises to
help poor countries expand their prevention and treatment strategies.

One researcher said poor nations would need $10 billion this year to treat HIV
infection but have been able to allocate just $3 billion to the effort.