- HATIP #1, 13th March 2003
- HATIP #2, 27th March 2003
- HATIP #3, 10th April 2003
- HATIP #4, 24 April 2003
- HATIP #5, 8 May 2003
- HATIP #6, 23 May 2003
- HATIP #7, 12 June 2003
- HATIP #8, 26 June 2003
- HATIP #9, 10th July 2003
- HATIP #10, 24 July 2003
- HATIP #11, 7 August 2003
- HATIP #12, 28 August 2003
- HATIP #13, 11 September 2003
- HATIP #14, 2 October 2003
- HATIP #15, 9 October 2003
- HATIP #16, 23 October 2003
- HATIP #17 , November 6 2003
- HATIP #18 24 November 2003
- HATIP #19, 4 December 2003
- HATIP #20, 19 December 2003
HATIP #2, 27th March 2003
News headlines
A selection of news stories which have appeared since 13 March 2003.
'Inspirational' Nkosi Johnson honoured by London HIV clinic
At a special naming and dedication ceremony held this morning the HIV clinic at the West London Centre for Sexual Health was relaunched as the Nkosi Johnson unit.
Adherence the factor most associated with HIV suppression in semen
Poor adherence was the single factor most likely to result in HIV being detectable in the semen of men taking anti-HIV drugs in a Brazilian study published in the April 2003 edition of the Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes.
Investment funds tell drug companies to improve treatment access for
poorest countries
A coalition of UK and European investment funds with $943 billion under management are calling on pharmaceutical companies to take swift steps to ensure that poor countries have access to essential medicines.
Is a liver biopsy really needed in an HIV/HCV patient?
Liver biopsies, the "gold standard" for reaching treatment decisions for people coinfected with HIV and hepatitis C (HCV) may be unnecessary in the majority of cases as tests on biochemical markers can, in most cases, give an indication of liver damage according to two recent studies.
Pakistani and Afghani drug users at high HIV risk
The majority of Pakistani and Afghani male drug injectors lack basic knowledge of HIV and the risk factors that lead to infection, according to a study conducted by the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. The researchers found that only 16 percent of the study participants were aware of the existence of HIV or AIDS.
Testing and conselling increases condom use in HIV-discordant couples, but unsafe sex under-reported
Voluntary HIV testing and counselling was associated with a substantial increase in self-reported condom use amongst HIV-discordant heterosexual couples in a study conducted by the University of Alabama and University of Zambia in Lusaka, Zambia. However, the study, which is published in the 28th March 2003 edition of AIDS, also showed that biological markers were able to detect widespread under-reporting of unprotected sex.
Women do just as well as men on HAART, major cohort reports
Men and women do equally well on HAART according to data from the EuroSIDA cohort published in the 1st April 2003 edition of the Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes (now available online).
South African HIV treatment activists start civil disobedience programme
HIV treatment activists in South Africa are using the civil disobedience tactics employed by the governing ANC to bring down the apartheid regime to highlight the refusal of the ruling party to provide anti-HIV drugs.
AIDS in Africa: WHO & UNAIDS reaffirm unsafe sex as main mode of transmission
Last Friday (14th March) the World Health Organisation (WHO) and the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) hosted an expert consultation which addressed issues related to unsafe injection practices and HIV in healthcare contexts and evaluated the relative contribution of unsafe injections to HIV transmission in sub-Saharan Africa.
Alcohol increases SIV 64-fold in monkeys: implications for HIV transmission
Both HIV and alcohol suppress the immune system, but little is known about the interaction between the two, and how drinking large amounts of alcohol affects HIV replication, particularly in primary infection.HIV main infectious cause of death amongst pregnant South African women
HIV is the leading infectious cause of death amongst pregnant women in South Africa, according to a report recently released by the country's health ministry.
About HATIP
A regular electronic newsletter for health care workers and community-based organisations on HIV treatment in resource-limited settings.
Its publication is supported by the UK government's Department for International Development (DfID), the Diana, Princess of Wales Memorial Fund and the Stop TB Department of the World Health Organization.
Other supporters include Positive Action GlaxoSmithKline (founding sponsor); Abbott Fund; Abbott Molecular; Cavidi; Elton John AIDS Foundation; Merck & Co., Inc.; Pfizer Ltd; F Hoffmann La Roche; Schering Plough; and Tibotec, a division of Janssen Cilag.
latest aidsmap news
- Blood viral load predicts HIV transmission better than semen viral load in small study among MSM
- Infectiousness and antiretroviral therapy: reports look set to further fuel the debate
- Albendazole treatment of helminth co-infection in Kenyan HIV patients raises CD4 counts
- Justice Edwin Cameron calls for a campaign against 'misguided criminal laws and prosecutions'
- HIV prevalence and incidence in Uganda on the way up
- Half of Russian XDR-TB patients cured with aggressive treatment
- Updated British HIV pregnancy guidelines published
- Incidence increasing of HIV-associated multicentric Castleman's disease, a relatively rare lymphatic cancer
- Rapid progression of liver fibrosis in HIV-positive gay men recently infected with hepatitis C
- Long-term HIV treatment cuts risk of hardening of coronary artery
