2009

Prison a breeding ground for Aids and TB
Mail & Guardian Online - December 18, 2009
Mara Kardas-Nelson
Researchers and advocates have singled out South Africa s under-staffed and overcrowded prisons as hotbeds for the transmission of HIV and TB, which fuel the country s already rampant epidemics. At the 40th Union World Conference on Lung Health in Cancun, Mexico , earlier this month, a panel of international experts on


Manto's last wish
Mail & Guardian Online - December 18, 2009
Mandy Rossouw And Staff Reporter: Analysis
In a desperate attempt to polish her legacy, family members of former health minister Manto Tshabalala-Msimang were trying, shortly before her death, to set up a press interview in which she would have acknowledged mistakes made during her controversial tenure. Tshabalala-Msimang died in a Johannesburg hospital on Wedn


Aids policy: 'Systemic problems need to be addressed'
Mail & Guardian Online - December 3, 2009
Faranaaz Parker
The government s revised national guidelines for access to antiretroviral (ARV) therapy cast a wider net for treating Aids, but the Health Department needs systemic change to ensure the new protocol has an impact on the pandemic. In his World Aids Day address this week, President Jacob Zuma announced that, from April 2


It's too easy to hit a sitting duck
Mail & Guardian Online - November 30, 2009
Verashni Pillay
If you re a journalist or activist you may start losing count of the number of awareness days rolling around this time of year. If you re anybody else you probably haven t even noticed. We ve had the cleverly named International Day of No Violence against Women kicking off the 16 days of activism and on December 1 the


Zuma's HIV test
Mail & Guardian Online - November 13, 2009
Mandy Rossouw
President Jacob Zuma will publicly take an HIV test on World Aids Day, as part of a major new campaign by the government to demonstrate its commitment to the fight against the disease. Two presidency sources confirmed that Zuma will take the test to signal the shift from the ambiguous messages about HIV/Aids under Thab


Motsoaledi to probe supply of ARVs in the Free State
Mail & Guardian Online - November 13, 2009
Xolile Ntutu
Health Minister Aaron Motsoaledi has undertaken to personally investigate the cases of HIV-infected patients allegedly refused antiretroviral treatment (ART) in the Free Sate, as reported by the Mail and Guardian two weeks ago. One of the patients, Nanaki Mohajane, died in Bloemfontein s National District Hospital in O


Death in the Free State
Mail & Guardian Online - October 30, 2009
Xolile Ntutu
All Nanaki Mohajane s sister, Masentle, wanted to do was to keep her favourite sibling alive. The treatment was quite simple -- Nanaki, from Bloemfontein, was diagnosed HIV-positive in August this year. She had two classic symptoms - HIV-related TB and cryptococcal meningitis. She needed treatment for both, as well as


Free State health minister: 'No shortage' of antiretrovirals
Mail & Guardian Online - October 30, 2009
Xolile Ntutu
Free State health minister Sisi Mabe is adamant that there s no shortage of antiretroviral drugs in the Free State and that there is nothing out of stock anywhere here . Here is a transcript of the interview with the M&G Online. M&G: The TAC says people are not getting their drugs in the Free State, that there


Annie Lennox tells of her commitment to South Africa
Mail & Guardian Online - September 29, 2009
Jeremy Kuper
There s a terrible tragedy that seems to have escaped a lot people with regard to South Africa post-apartheid, that the HIV/Aids pandemic is taking lives at a rate of a thousand people every day and the rate of infection is over a thousand [a day], rock star Annie Lennox says when I catch up with her at the recent Art


Take2: Winds of change sweep SA healthcare
Mail & Guardian Online - August 27, 2009
Annabel Jacoby
As recently as last year, professors Hoosen Coovadia and Salim Abdool Karim, two of South Africa s foremost HIV researchers, were two of the health department s greatest enemies. Former health minister Manto Tshabalala-Msimang made no secret of her intense dislike for them. While the international medical world quoted


Cry for help for care-givers
Mail & Guardian Online - August 11, 2009
Faranaaz Parker
Late payments to thousands of care-givers are weakening South Africa s battle against HIV/Aids and tuberculosis. Nearly 39 000 community care-givers are employed to cater for the 40-million South Africans who are dependent on public healthcare. The majority of care-givers (57%) are involved in critical HIV/Aids and TB-


Falling through the cracks
Mail & Guardian Online - August 2, 2009
Mara Kardas-Nelson
More than two months after Minister of Health Aaron Motsoaledi announced a plan to accelerate the prevention of mother-to-child transmission programme, to be initiated within two weeks , there have been no changes in South Africa s programme. This is despite a report released by the Health Systems Trust, which states t


Aids forum told of ART as a means of HIV prevention
Mail & Guardian Online - July 21, 2009
Mara Kardas-Nelson
South Africa should lead the way in using antiretroviral therapy (ART) as a means of HIV prevention, World Health Organisation (WHO) official Dr Reuben Granich announced at the Fifth International Aids Conference on Pathogenesis, Treatment and Prevention in Cape Town on Monday. Scientists and policy makers attending


HIV response 'has transformed African health systems'
Mail & Guardian Online - July 21, 2009
Mara Kardas-Nelson
Scientists and policymakers attending the Fifth International Aids Conference on HIV Pathogenesis, Treatment and Prevention in Cape Town, have strongly reacted to allegations that Aids takes up such a huge chunk of international funding that it prevents other diseases from receiving financial support. Instead, they say


Sterilised without consent
Mail & Guardian Online - June 21, 2009
Mara Kardas-Nelson
Women s rights activists have claimed that South African and Namibian public health doctors are making HIV-infected women infertile against their will. South Africa s Woman s Legal Centre (WLC) has documented 12 cases of South African women, most of them HIV-infected, who claim to have undergone what the health world c


MRC: Quarter of men in South Africa admit rape
Mail & Guardian Online - June 18, 2009
M&G Online Reporter
One in four men in South Africa have admitted to rape and many confess to attacking more than one victim, according to a study that exposes the country s endemic culture of sexual violence. Three out of four rapists first attacked while still in their teens, the study found. One in 20 men said they had raped a woman or


HIV wipes out Namibia's gains in reducing child mortality
Mail & Guardian Online - April 9, 2009
Kristin Palitza
The HI virus is reversing strides Namibia has made in improving children s health. The country was well on its way to reducing child mortality, but over the past decade the pandemic has annulled previous gains. Experts believe HIV/Aids will delay Namibia s child health development by at least six years. As a result, Na


Funds running out for ARVs
Mail & Guardian Online - April 8, 2009
Nosimilo Ndlovu
South Africa has the most extensive antiretroviral treatment programme in the world -- but experts in the field are warning that it is failing and could soon collapse. Aids activist and deputy chairperson of the South African National Aids Council Mark Heywood said the 2009-10 budget for ARV provision will fall short


Calls for Aids TRC
Mail & Guardian Online - April 3, 2009
Qudsiya Karrim
Activists say Aids-related deaths in the Mbeki era should be investigated. Qudsiya Karrim reports A truth and reconciliation commission on HIV/Aids to investigate thousands of unnecessary deaths during the Mbeki-era of Aids denialism should be instituted, the South African Aids conference was told this week. Former dep


To stop a killer
Mail & Guardian Online - March 31, 2009
Lesley Odendaal**: Comment
Only 4% of South Africans living with HIV in South Africa are receiving preventative therapy for tuberculosis and only 1% are being screened for TB. This is despite the fact that TB remains the leading cause of death in South Africa and that deaths from the disease have tripled in the past 10 years. HIV infection is a


Saving the sickest
Mail & Guardian Online - February 27, 2009
Thembelihle Tshabalala
New national guidelines have been issued by the National Department of Health that will ensure antiretroviral therapy (ART) is prioritised for those most in need of the life-saving medications The guidelines will put an end to the selective interpretation of existing Department of Health guidelines, which have sometime


Stockpiling lives
Mail & Guardian Online - February 20, 2009
Nosimilo Ndlovu
Drug manufacturing companies have come forward to help government fill a shortfall of antiretroviral (ARVs) drugs at various facilities in the Free State. Manufacturing companies have agreed to provide the ARVs and wait to receive their payments once funds are available. Yogan Pillay, deputy director general for Strate


Leading the Aids battle
Mail & Guardian Online - February 13, 2009
Nosimilo Ndlovu
Nosimilo Ndlovu interviewed Michel Sidibé, the new executive director of UNAids, the coordinating body of the United National in the global fight against HIV and AIDS. What is the relevance of the UNAids Joint Programme on Aids? To be the voice of the voiceless, to stand by the people affected and infected by HIV, and


Joint venture benefits all
Mail & Guardian Online - January 22, 2009
Andrew Gillingham
A series of breakfast meetings between wellness managers from a number of well-known South African retailers, including New Clicks, which received a special commendation in the Company Partnership Award category, led to a cooperative joint venture to provide employees with better workplace healthcare initiatives. Danie


It's all about people
Mail & Guardian Online - January 22, 2009
Andrew Gillingham
It is easy to get distracted by debates about HIV/Aids statistics and possible treatments, but the reality is that people are dying. It was with this in mind that Standard Bank adopted It s About People as its call to arms in the fight against HIV/Aids. In 2001 Standard Bank -- the corporate winner of this year s Inves


View from the top
Mail & Guardian Online - January 13, 2009
Sello S Alcock
Almost 10 years after his appointment was blocked by Thabo Mbeki, Edwin Cameron has been confirmed as a judge of the Constitutional Court. Sello S Alcock quizzed him about how he sees his new job. How did you find out about your appointment to the highest court in the land and what were you doing at the time? I woke up



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©1980, 2009. AEGiS.