Friday, October 29, 2010
Why the Porn Industry's HIV Problem is Our Problem, Too
For the past two weeks, the media has been buzzing about the adult film performer in California who tested positive for HIV. The actor, inappropriately dubbed "Patient Zero," has been identified as a male actor who worked in both gay and straight porn, which appears to be a rarity with male performers. This discovery has prompted four studios, including Vivid Entertainment and Hustler Video, to shut down production while they test anyone who has had unprotected sex with him. As of yet, no one has tested positive, but given that it can take up to 90 days to seroconvert, retesting will most likely happen in the near future.
HIV infections in the porn industry are not a new phenomenon. While getting testing is voluntary, some studios require that their actors must be tested every 30 days and have documentation from the Adult Industry Medical Healthcare Foundation that they do not have HIV or any other STDs. But clearly, this method isn't fool proof, especially if the actor has had unprotected sex in between tests. In 2004, Darren James, who was unaware of his HIV status, unknowingly infected three other actresses. Twenty-two performers are reported to have tested positive for HIV since James, including a female performer who tested positive last year.
Read the rest
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MTV Drama Raising HIV Awareness in Africa
"It's the story of morning afters and sweet departures...and the stains we leave on each other." -From the trailer of Shuga, a cutting-edge MTV drama that's been a smash hit in Africa.
For many young Africans, the three-part TV series about a group of students in Nairobi living under the constant specter of HIV/AIDS is the story of their own lives -- and is the reason "Shuga" took the continent by storm when it debuted late last year.
Actress Sharon Olago, who played promiscuous party girl Violet in "Shuga," believes the Kenyan show has been so successful because it mirrors the complexities of modern young life, without falling into a moralistic, conventional narrative on safe sex.
"'Shuga' did not exaggerate anything, it relived what Kenya is," says Olago. "That is why it got the fame it did, that is why people jumped into it, because people saw themselves in it."
Set and filmed on location in Nairobi, the soap opera came about after UNICEF teamed up with MTV to create a health campaign to impact the lives of youths in Kenya, where an estimated 6.5 percent of its population lives with HIV.
Read the rest and watch a clip
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Thursday, October 28, 2010
Venezuela to Guarantee Access to HIV Medications, Says Health Ministry
Starting next year, the Venezuelan government will guarantee antiretroviral medication to people with HIV, and will expand the use of a Cuban-made medicine to treat diabetic foot ulcers nation-wide, according to recent announcements by the Venezuelan Health Ministry.
Venezuela’s HIV-positive patients “will have their treatment guaranteed next year; we have made preparations to acquire the medicines and cover the whole population free of charge,” said Venezuelan Health Minister Eugenia Sader in an interview with the state television station VTV last week.
Also this month, Venezuela participated in a meeting of Latin American Parliament representatives in Panama to discuss public policy on the prevention and treatment of HIV and AIDS. The meeting was sponsored by the United Nations Development Program.
Venezuela does not have a law governing HIV and AIDS policy, but the National Assembly is discussing the possibility of incorporating articles on the diseases, including treatment for HIV- positive prisoners, into the nation’s Health Law, according to Legislator Marelis Pérez, who participated in the Panama meeting.
Read the rest
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Wednesday, October 27, 2010
Cheeky! IRMA Chair Chats Up Microbicides, Lube Safety, and No Promo Homo
Rapid HIV testing: Australia's 'big embarrassment'via SX and CityVoice (Sydney), by Brendan Bolger
...Anal sex could be playing an important role in (heterosexual) HIV transmission. Vulnerable women have unprotected anal sex. Anal sex is used as contraception...Read the rest.
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Adherence Key to Reducing Genital HIV Levels in Women
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Laws Driving HIV Prevention Underground
In a region where carrying a condom has been construed as evidence of illicit activity, 10 million women sell sex to 75 million men, who then have sex with another 50 million people, according to the multinational Independent Commission on AIDS in Asia.
"The technology is there to prevent infections, but punitive laws get in the way," said Steve Kraus, regional director of UNAIDS Asia Pacific.
Asia's AIDS epidemic is linked primarily to unprotected paid sex, according to the commission, but policies outlawing sex work are undermining HIV/AIDS prevention efforts by fragmenting and stigmatizing the sex workers and turning condom possession into an act that could lead to jail time, NGO officials say.
Until recently, Cambodia was praised by the international community for its implementation of the 100 percent Condom Use Programme, which allowed for selective enforcement of anti-sex work laws and required condom availability and use for sex workers. But a national anti-trafficking law introduced in 2008 broadly criminalized sex work, and sent sex workers into hiding.
Read the rest
Read a report from Human Rights Watch on the subject
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Tuesday, October 26, 2010
Is Homophobia a Factor in the HIV Racial Gap?
Among gay men in the United States, blacks are more likely than whites to believe that homosexuality is "wrong" - and these feelings might be contributing to the black men's higher risk of HIV infection, researchers suggest.
According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, in 2006 African-Americans accounted for nearly half (45%) of new infections in the 50 states and the District of Columbia. Also, according to recent estimates, they account for a disproportionate 24 percent of reported HIV cases among gay and bisexual men in the U.S. The reasons are not clear. Studies have not found a higher rate of risky sexual behavior among black men versus white men -- but a range of factors are likely at work.
The current study was an attempt to look at one possible social factor: the stigma attached to homosexuality.
Using data from a U.S. health survey conducted periodically since 1972, the researchers found that, in general, African-Americans were more likely than whites to report a negative attitude toward homosexuality.
Read the rest
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FDA to Fast Track 1% Tenofovir (Press Release)
October 25, 2010, Arlington, VA - - The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) held an end-of-Phase II meeting to determine the next steps required for U.S. licensure of 1% tenofovir gel, a microbicide product recently found to be effective at reducing the rate of HIV and herpes infection in women when used before and after sex.
The meeting, held on October 20, 2010, was requested by CONRAD, a division of the Eastern Virginia Medical School in Norfolk, VA. CONRAD was one of the partners in the Phase II study, “CAPRISA 004,” which evaluated 1% tenofovir gel in prevention of male-to-female HIV transmission in 889 women in South Africa. USAID provided funding for the trial, conducted by the Centre for Programme Research for AIDS in South Africa and U.S. based FHI, which was the first study to show that a vaginal gel can reduce the risk of HIV and herpes infection in women. CONRAD manufactured and provided the tenofovir gel for the study.
Tenofovir gel was found to be 39% effective in reducing a woman’s risk of becoming infected with HIV during sex and 51% effective in preventing genital herpes infections in the women participating in the trial. Results of the CAPRISA 004 clinical trial were reported in July 2010 and represent the first “proof of concept” for a vaginal microbicide.
A number of key stakeholders contributed to the collaborative meeting with the FDA, including representatives from the U.S. National Institutes of Health, the U.S. Agency for International Development, Gilead Sciences, Microbicides Trial Network (MTN), South African clinical investigators, the International Partnership for Microbicides (IPM) and FHI.
During the meeting, the FDA stated their preference for two well-controlled studies to verify the safety and efficacy of 1% tenofovir gel prior to submission of a New Drug Application (NDA). The FDA furthermore stated that the NIH-sponsored Phase IIB study, MTN-003, known as VOICE (Vaginal and Oral Interventions to Control the Epidemic), represents a second adequate and well-controlled study that would, if successful, serve as the second pivotal trial together with CAPRISA 004 to support the submission of an NDA for 1% tenofovir gel.
In addition, the FDA has granted Fast Track approval designation for 1% tenofovir gel, which facilitates the development and expedites the review of drugs that are intended for treating serious diseases and fill an unmet medical need. With Fast Track designation, an NDA can be submitted as a “rolling review”, which allows a clinical trial sponsor to submit completed sections of its NDA for review by the FDA, rather than waiting until every section of the application is completed before the entire application can be reviewed.
The agency agreed that the current preclinical program for 1% tenofovir gel is sufficient to support a future NDA. However, they stated that additional safety data on adolescents would be needed and that information on in vivo drug interaction studies with commonly used vaginal products should be obtained. Also, the FDA will ultimately need data on post menopausal women. It was also agreed that a future meeting with the FDA would be held to address any outstanding discussions associated with product quality, including chemistry, manufacturing and controls (CMC). Since much of the clinical work on 1% tenofovir gel has been and will be conducted in South Africa, FDA officials indicated that they can work through the FDA’s “Office of International Programs” with the goal of coordinating the data and review processes with the South African Medicines Control Council.
CONRAD and its partners appreciate the contributions and detailed recommendations put forth by the FDA, which have helped clarify the next steps required for testing and licensure of 1% tenofovir gel.
In 2006, CONRAD and IPM obtained a co-exclusive, royalty-free license from Gilead Sciences to develop 1% tenofovir gel as a topical microbicide for use by women in developing countries to prevent HIV.
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Monday, October 25, 2010
Dignity Denied: Violation of the Rights of HIV-Positive Women
As our report makes clear, Chilean women living with HIV are routinely denied care, verbally abused, given misleading or inaccurate health information, and pressured to agree to sterilization—or sterilized without their consent. Of the sixteen women we interviewed who were sterilized, only four said that they made a fully informed and voluntary choice to have the procedure.
Their testimonies echo that of our client Francisca*, an HIV-positive Chilean woman who was sterilized without her consent during a Cesarean section. The Center and our Chilean partner Vivo Positivo filed a case on behalf of Francisca, F.S. v. Chile, at the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights in February 2009.
Read the rest
Read the full report
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Friday, October 22, 2010
Via IPS Kenya: "More Men Preventing HIV Transmission to their Unborn Children"
Pastor Joseph Muhembeli and his wife, Beatrice, queue at the Vihiga health centre with their six-month-old daughter for their prevention of mother-to-child treatment (PMTCT). But before long, as per the clinic’s policy, the couple are whisked to the front of the line – all because Muhembeli has accompanied his wife for the treatment.
The couple tested HIV-positive four years ago. But thanks to the Muhembeli’s involvement with the PMTCT programme, their six-month-old daughter has tested HIV-negative.
"For two years now, we have been encouraging male participation in the prevention of mother-to-child treatment of HIV. And that is why we give special treatment to all men who accompany their wives to either pre- or postnatal clinics," said Martha Opisa, the nurse in charge at the health centre.
Opisa said the Vihiga health centre used to receive about 40 clients a month seeking PMTCT services before men got actively involved in the pre- and postnatal clinics. "But now we now receive between 60 and 70 clients per month, almost doubling the original figure," she said.
Read the rest
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Report from the Front Lines
He was joined by Alan Whiteside, the Director of Health Economics and HIV Research Division at the University of KwaZulu Natal, Durban, South Africa and Bill Bowtell, Director of the HIV AIDS Project at the Lowy Institute.
Listen to the program here
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Thursday, October 21, 2010
Jim Pickett speaks at the Australasian HIV/AIDS Conference 2010
Pickett discussed HIV prevention in the United States context and provided insights into the U.S. Gay Men’s Health Agenda, Chicago’s “How are you healthy?” campaign, the U.S. National HIV/AIDS Strategy, sexual health, and biomedical prevention. Click here to view his slide set.
Yesterday Pickett co-chaired a symposium called “Political, Cultural, and Logistic Realities of Microbicides for Australasia and the Pacific” and sat on a number of panels discussing STI prevention and gay men’s health.
Read more about the Australasian HIV/AIDS Conference 2010 and invited speakers.
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No condom use after recent viral load test safer than intermittent condom use
In stable gay couples, where one partner is taking HIV treatment and the other is HIV-negative, the risk of HIV transmission is relatively low if condoms are not used following a recent undetectable viral load test result. However, using condoms on a few more occasions but without reference to viral load substantially increases the risk of HIV transmission. These are the findings of a mathematical modelling study, drawing on detailed data on viral loads in Dutch gay men, published online ahead of print in Sexually Transmitted Infections.
The model suggests that during the entire period that a first-line treatment regimen is taken, the risk of HIV transmission would be 1% if condoms are used all the time, 3% if condoms are not used after an undetectable viral load test in the past six months, 17% if condoms are used 30% of the time, and 22% if condoms are never used.
The model was designed to test the proposition put forward in the Swiss statement: that in long-term, serodiscordant couples, a decision to give up using condoms can be safely made as long as the HIV-positive partner is adhering to HIV treatment and has had an undetectable viral load for at least six months.
Read the rest
Read the article in Sexually Transmitted Infections
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Wednesday, October 20, 2010
'Hang them': Uganda paper publishes photos of gays
The front-page newspaper story featured a list of Uganda's 100 "top" homosexuals, with a bright yellow banner across it that read: "Hang Them." Alongside their photos were the men's names and addresses. | Reactions: |
Tuesday, October 19, 2010
Consortium assembled to design human trials of mosaic HIV vaccine
Traditional HIV vaccines are designed to stimulate the body's immune system to recognize naturally occurring stretches of specific amino acids in the virus's proteins. In contrast, mosaic vaccines are composed of many sets of synthetic, computer-generated sequences of proteins that can prompt the immune system to respond to a wide variety of circulating HIV strains.
Such vaccines have already been studied in animals and have shown some success in enhancing the breadth of immune responses. Now, Barton Haynes, MD, director of the Duke Human Vaccine Institute and the Center for HIV/AIDS Vaccine Immunology (CHAVI), says a newly formed research coalition has begun designing an early phase safety trial to assess mosaic vaccines in humans. The trial will test the mosaic concept and could possibly lead to the next generation of HIV vaccine candidates.
Read the rest
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Studies Tout Alternative HIV Regimens for Women, Babies
From Bloomberg Businessweek, by Randy Dotinga| Reactions: |
Sudan: Stigma Continues to Hold Back Darfur's HIV Fight
From All Africa| Reactions: |
Monday, October 18, 2010
Ten Years Fighting HIV/AIDS and Reaching Out to Gays
From IPS News, by Dalia Acosta| Reactions: |
China Awaits Verdict in Precedent-Setting Case on HIV
From CNN| Reactions: |
Friday, October 15, 2010
Oprah Misses the Mark on HIV/AIDS
From the Huffington Post, by Kellee Terrell| Reactions: |
Reclaiming the Wronged Body

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Beyond 2010: Gaps, Challenges and Priorities for the Future of PrEP
From AIDS Research and Human Retroviruses, by Veronese, Turpin and FeuerRead more
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Circumcision Gains in Popularity
From the Financial Times, by Andrew JackSouth Africa has long been at the epicentre of the HIV epidemic, and a venue for innovation in tackling the disease. Now, the change in political leadership is allowing some of the findings to be put into practice, albeit more slowly than many advocates would like. Two decades after anecdotal and observational data highlighted lower HIV rates in circumcised men, it was in Orange Farm, near Johannesburg, that Bertran Auvert, a French researcher, conducted a systematic clinical trial proving that the procedure could reduce infection by 60 percent.
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Thursday, October 14, 2010
NEW: Lube Safety Fact Sheet and QA for Advocates

After an extraordinary amount of work with IRMA's Lube Safety Working Group and members of the IRMA Steering Committee - led by IRMA Secretary Marc-André LeBlanc over the course of four months and many, many drafts - we are delighted to release two important documents to help you gain a better understanding of the safety issues around lubricants used for anal intercourse.
Many men, women and transgender people use lubricants (lubes) during sexual intercourse. Yet we know very little about their safety when used during anal intercourse (AI).
Very few studies have examined the effect of lubes on human rectal tissue, but those that did showed mixed results. Most water-based lubes tested in these studies were shown to be damaging to rectal tissue. However, some lubes were more damaging than others. Furthermore, in one study the use of lube for AI was associated with the presence of rectal sexually transmitted infection (STI).
Based on current evidence:
- More research is urgently needed to explore if there is a link between lube use and acquiring HIV and/or rectal STIs.
- It is unclear whether any particular type or brand of lube might increase, decrease or have no effect on acquiring HIV and/or rectal STIs.
- Using male or female condoms is still considered the best way to prevent acquiring HIV and STIs during AI. In addition, the use of condom-compatible lubes has been associated with a decreased risk of condoms breaking or slipping.
- It is not possible at this time to recommend for or against using lubes if having AI without condoms.
- Lube use on its own is not a proven method of HIV or STI prevention.
- Safety of lubricants for rectal use: A fact sheet for HIV educators and advocates (1-page)
- Safety of lubricants for rectal use: Questions & Answers for HIV educators and advocates (much more detail with research explained and citations)
- Read all blog posts on the topic of lubricants.
- Click here for an IRMA teleconference recording on lube safety (6/16.)
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Testing African Couples for HIV is Cost-effective Prevention Strategy
From Emory University| Reactions: |
TED: Mechai Viravaidya: How Mr. Condom made Thailand a better place
Since 1974, Mechai Viravaidya has been creating and running innovative family planning and poverty reduction programs throughout Southeast Asia.
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Zambia: President Invites Four Ex-Presidents for AIDS Indaba
From the Times of Zambia| Reactions: |
Wednesday, October 13, 2010
International Rectal Microbicide Advocates cheers launch of world's third rectal microbicide trial

Calls for more funding to strengthen field
This brings us another step closer to the development of safe and effective rectal microbicides for use during anal intercourse.
The world's third rectal microbicide trial launched in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania today, with sites preparing to open in Boston, Massachusetts, and Birmingham, Alabama soon. Scientists will test the rectal safety and acceptability of tenofovir gel, a microbicide developed for vaginal use that has shown promise for preventing HIV through vaginal intercourse. Depending on the outcome of this new study, tenofovir gel could be further evaluated to determine if it can reduce the risk of HIV among both men and women who engage in receptive anal intercourse.
"International Rectal Microbicide Advocates (IRMA) congratulates the Microbicide Trials Network and its partners on the launch of this very important study – the third Phase I trial in history to look at the safety and acceptability of a microbicide gel applied rectally," said Jim Pickett, IRMA Chair and Director of Advocacy at AIDS Foundation of Chicago. "This brings us another step closer to the development of safe and effective rectal microbicides for use during anal intercourse," he said.
Condoms are considered the gold standard for the prevention of HIV and STDs during sexual intercourse, but not all receptive partners are able or willing to use condoms every time. An act of anal intercourse that is not protected by a condom is 10 to 20 times more likely to result in HIV transmission compared to an act of unprotected vaginal intercourse, due to the fragility of the rectal lining and the large presence of cells targeted by HIV. New methods to protect against the sexual transmission of HIV are urgently needed. Strategies beyond condoms – such as vaccines, oral prevention, and microbicides – will provide individuals with more prevention options.
Microbicides – substances applied topically on the inside of the rectum or vagina – could potentially help prevent the transmission of HIV. The research and development of vaginal microbicide candidates is much more advanced than research on rectal microbicides. Tenofovir gel, for example, is a candidate microbicide specifically developed to prevent vaginal transmission of HIV. In a recent study known as CAPRISA 004, tenofovir gel was found to significantly reduce the risk of HIV among at-risk women who were instructed to use the gel before and after vaginal intercourse. In an ongoing, large-scale effectiveness trial called VOICE – Vaginal and Oral Interventions to Control the Epidemic – researchers from the U.S. National Institutes of Health-funded Microbicide Trials Network (MTN) are testing daily use of tenofovir gel in African women, with results expected in 2013.
This new Phase I rectal microbicide study, known as MTN-007, aims to determine if rectal use of tenofovir gel is safe, and in particular, does not cause cells in the rectum to become more vulnerable to HIV. Investigators will also ask trial participants questions regarding the gel's desirability. MTN-007 will enroll 60 men and women at the University of Pittsburgh, the University of Alabama at Birmingham, and Fenway Health in Boston. Leading the study is Ian McGowan, M.D., Ph.D., of the University of Pittsburgh, who is also co-principal investigator of the MTN and serves as Scientific Vice-Chair of IRMA.
Little is known about tenofovir gel used rectally, but science is advancing our understanding. Laboratory and animal studies involving rectal application of tenofovir gel have suggested it's safe for testing in humans. In fact, MTN researchers have just completed the first Phase I trial with eighteen participants, called RMP-02/MTN-006, in collaboration with the Microbicide Development Program at the University of California, Los Angeles. While results of RMP-02/MTN-006 are not expected until early 2011, researchers have already recommended modifications to the gel's formulation. MTN-007 is evaluating the new formulation, which still contains the same amount of active drug – 1% percent tenofovir – but has a lower concentration of glycerin (an additive found in many types of products) to make it more amenable for rectal use.
"It is very encouraging to see the rectal microbicide field moving forward," said IRMA Community Vice-Chair Kadiri Audu, who also heads up the IRMA Nigeria chapter, "and I look forward to trials taking place in Africa as well." He continued, "Gay men and other men who have sex with men in Africa have high rates of HIV infection, and we know unprotected heterosexual anal sex is relatively common on the continent and contributes a sizable number of HIV infections. As much as we need vaginal microbicides to give women an extra prevention tool, rectal microbicides for the women, men, and transgender individuals who engage in anal intercourse are absolutely essential as well."
While the rectal microbicide field has gained significant momentum, more focus and resources are necessary. In 2010, U.S. $7.2 million is being spent globally on rectal microbicide research. IRMA has calculated that annual investments must increase by 40% from 2011 – 2014, to U.S. $10 million/year and must increase further to U.S. $44 million (a six-fold increase) in the years 2015 – 2020 to ensure a minimum of candidate products are moving through the research pipeline into advanced testing for effectiveness.
Read the press release from the MTN:
Promising HIV prevention microbicide tenofovir gel being tested for safety of rectal use
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Sphincter Riddles - why do women like anal sex?
Why do women who have anal sex get more orgasms?
via Slate, by William Saletan

Last week, I tried to figure out why more women are having anal sex and why it correlates so highly with orgasms. Since 1992, the percentage of women aged 20-24 who say they've tried anal sex has doubled to 40 percent. The percentage of women aged 20-39 who say they've done it in the past year has doubled to more than 20 percent. And 94 percent of women who received anal sex in their last encounter said they reached orgasm—a higher rate of orgasm than was reported by women who had vaginal intercourse or received oral sex.
Why? For obvious reasons—anatomical, evolutionary, and aesthetic—anal sex should, on average, be less attractive and satisfying than vaginal or oral sex. In last week's column, based on new survey data, I inferred that female orgasms caused anal sex rather than the other way around. The other acts reported by women who engaged in anal sex—vaginal intercourse, cunnilingus, partnered masturbation—delivered the orgasms. In turn, these women indulged their male partners' requests for anal sex.
Well, shame on me. Not for talking about sodomy—that taboo seems to be fading fast—but for doubting that women love it. These women are now coming forward to affirm that they're into it for their own pleasure, thank you very much. And they aren't alone. Bloggers, blog readers, and Slate commenters are offering lots of other theories to explain the orgasm data.
Read the rest.
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Positive Feedback from Anti-HIV Gel Research
From The Standard, by Kudzai Chimhangwa| Reactions: |
Tuesday, October 12, 2010
Prisoners To Get Condoms in Zimbabwe?
From NewsDay, by Owen Gagare| Reactions: |
Congressmen Introduce Repealing Abstinence-Only-Until-Marriage Act
From AIDS Action| Reactions: |
Monday, October 11, 2010
Meet Kami, the HIV-positive Muppet
From CNN| Reactions: |
MSM and Condom Use: Factors Associated With Not Using A Condom
From PLoS One, by Larmarange et al.Men who have sex with other men (MSM) are a vulnerable population in Africa that has been insufficiently explored. Given the high rate of bisexuality among MSM (73% in the past year), it is important to understand their risk-taking behaviors regarding both men and women.
This socio-behavioral survey was carried out in 2007 and recruited 501 MSM. The study explored why a condom was not used during last sexual intercourse with men and with women, and considered risk factors including having sex in a public place, participation in an MSM prevention program, age, employment and education.
The study concludes that participation in a prevention program specifically targeting MSM is a major factor in prevention, but that these programs must also address heterosexual practices and the associated risks.
Read the article
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Friday, October 8, 2010
Financing the Fight Against HIV/AIDS

From the New York Times, by Donald G. McNeil
In another signal that the global battle agains AIDS is falling apart for lack of money, the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria failed on Tuesday to reach even its lowest "austerity level" fund-raising target of $13 billion - the amount it had said it needed just to keep putting patients on treatment at current rates.
Read the rest
From The Lancet, by Hecht et al.
As the global HIV/AIDS pandemic nears the end of its third decade, the challenges of efficient mobilisation of funds and management of resources are increasingly prominent. The aids2031 project modelled long-term funding needs for HIV/AIDS in developing countries with a range of scenarios and substantial variation in costs: ranging from US$397 to $722 billion globally between 2009 and 2031, depending on policy choices adopted by governments and donors.
Read the rest
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Can We Ever Cure HIV?
from MedscapeAn interesting Medscape HIV interview and conversation between two scholars, Dr. Paul Sax, Clinical Director of the HIV Program at Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston and the Associate Professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School and one of his colleagues, Dr. Dan Kuritzkes, professor at Harvard University and Harvard Medical School and also Director of AIDS Research.
Different Strategies are proposed for finding a cure:
- Purging the reservoir by activation with the potential of unwanted consequences of immune activation
- Silencing the virus so it could never turn on again
- Bone marrow transplantation
Sign up for Medscape to watch the video or read the text of the interview
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Tutu Fabulous - The Archbishop's Top 5 LGBT Quotes

via change.org
In honor of Archbishop Desmond Tutu who officially resigned yesterday, here are 5 great quotes that speak to his commitment to LGBT human rights.
Here is an especially great one:
Gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgendered people are part of so many families. They are part of the human family. They are part of God's family. And of course they are part of the African family.
Read the rest.
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Wednesday, October 6, 2010
Sex survey: American heteros are having a lot of anal sex

America reveals its sexual secrets
Repressed? Hardly.
The most comprehensive survey of American sex lives in 20 years reveals what's really going on in bed
via The Guardian, by Jon Henley
Excerpt:
More surprisingly, perhaps, the reported rate of anal sex has also increased dramatically, effectively doubling since the National Health and Social Life Survey was carried out by researchers from the University of Chicago in 1988. That study suggested around 12% of American women in the 25-29 age group had experienced anal sex in the last year; that figure has now risen to 21% (and also applies to the 30-39 age group). Some 20% of American 18- to 19-year-old girls have had anal sex at least once in their lifetimes, the new study shows, rising to more than 45% among 25-29 year olds.Read the rest.
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D.C. brings HIV testing to the DMV
From the Washington Post, by Nikita Stewart"We wanted to have a broad audience and a captive audience. You're captive at the DMV." -Angela Fulwood Wood, chief operations officer of the Family and Medical Counseling Service
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