1997

December

Putting DNA to Work as a Biomedical Tool Science: Caltech chemist's molecular machines might someday target viruses or cancer cells.
Los Angeles Times - Monday, December 29, 1997
K.C. Cole; Times Science Writer
Jacqueline Barton is on intimate terms with DNA, the master molecule of life. She knows its secret crevices, weird loops, strange digressions and switchbacks. When she talks about DNA, her hands trace its imaginary contours, lovingly, like a sculpture.

Medical Care in County Jails Beset by Serious Ills Health: Sheriff's Dept. is taking steps to improve conditions. But number of sick inmates hampers effort.
Los Angeles Times - Sunday, December 28, 1997
Tina Daunt; Times Staff Writer
The run-down hospital at Men's Central Jail is infested with rats and roaches. Medical records--some too messy to read--are kept by the thousands on long shelves and are often lost or misplaced. Every day, carts packed with scores of vials are trundled from one cell to another by nurses dispensing medication.

County Health Director Reorganizing AIDS Office Government: Program's management has been questioned in internal audits. New moves shift power from interim chief.
Los Angeles Times - Friday, December 26, 1997
Sharon Bernstein; Times Staff Writer
In response to several critical internal audits of Los Angeles County's AIDS services--including one that documents a potential loss of $26 million because of unreimbursed expenditures--county health director Mark Finucane has quietly begun to revamp the Office of AIDS Programs and Policy.

COLUMN ONE: Lessons in the Art of Dying--and Living Talking of love, regrets, dreams and hard choices, 'students' in classes led by a former priest confront a reality often denied in our culture. Their goal; to craft a better death.
Los Angeles Times - Sunday, December 21, 1997
Maria L. La Ganga; Times Staff Writer
SAN FRANCISCO - This is Paul's dream of the perfect death: Retired math teacher, avid sailor, he circumnavigates the globe at age 99, is lost at sea and never seen again. His hands shake a little with Parkinson's disease as he tells this story in his soft, wheezy voice.

The 'Sacred' Debate Television: As ABC renews its drama about a liberal priest, Catholics remain divided over the show's intent.
Los Angeles Times - Thursday December 4, 1997
John Dart; Times Staff Writer
"Nothing Sacred," the TV series about a fictional Catholic parish, recently won a full season on the air despite its poor ratings, leaving Catholics divided over whether it's an insulting portrait of trendily liberal priests or a worthy attempt to show them grappling with moral problems as doubt-plagued humans.

AIDS Activists Swarm Capital Online Health: 'Virtual' march on Washington highlights 10th annual worldwide event to focus on disease. Novelty is countered by dire predictions.
Los Angeles Times - Tuesday December 2, 1997
Marlene Cimons; Times Staff Writer
WASHINGTON - In one of numerous events held to commemorate World AIDS Day, the AIDS community launched the first-ever "virtual" march on Washington, enabling citizens all over the globe to participate Monday without having to leave the comfort of their computer screens.

AIDS Patients Make Uneasy Reentry to the Work Force Health: New drugs resurrect careers. But some pause, fearing a relapse after giving up disability benefits.
Los Angeles Times - TUESDAY December 2, 1997
Bettina Boxall; Times Staff Writer
It had been so long since he was part of the 9-to-5 office routine that Michael did not know what kind of tie to wear to interviews. At a temp agency he had to scan the chests of other job hopefuls for fashion tips.

A Life of Service: Sister Mary, whose past has seen many painful twists and turns, now brings comfort to others with the world's most comprehensive Web site on AIDS and HIV.
Los Angeles Times; Monday, December 1, 1997
Jean O. Pasco, Special to The Times
It's been years since there was a sofa in this San Juan Capistrano living room. It had to go to make way for the bank of computers. The computers had to come in so Sister Mary Elizabeth Clark could do her chosen work among the afflicted, the curious, the dying.

November

HIV Surge Among Addicts Catches Russia Unprepared Disease: Official cases are few, but AIDS-linked virus could devastate large drug taking population, experts say.
Los Angeles Times - WEDNESDAY November 5, 1997
Vanora Bennett; Times Staff Writer
ST. PETERSBURG, Russia - Under the chilly brick archways of the Right-Bank Market here, the Russian-style dance of death that experts say is bringing an AIDS epidemic to this huge country is in full swing.

From Drug Arrest to AIDS Nightmare Health: The many contacts of Nushawn Williams, accused of spreading HIV, are slowly being traced. At hearing, mental tests are ordered.
Los Angeles Times - TUESDAY November 4, 1997
John J. Goldman; Times Staff Writer
NEW YORK - It has grown from a simple arrest for allegedly selling $20 worth of crack cocaine into one of the largest public health investigations in this city's history.

October

Man Infects 9 With AIDS Virus in Semirural N.Y. Health: He reportedly traded drugs for sex, even after diagnosis. Youngest victim is 13. Number could multiply.
Los Angeles Times - TUESDAY October 28, 1997
David Lauter; Times Staff Writer
At least nine women in a semi-rural area of western New York state, including one as young as 13, have been infected with the virus that causes AIDS by a 20-year-old man who gave drugs to schoolgirls in exchange for sex, even though he knew he had the disease, officials said Monday.

September

26,000 Take a Step Against AIDS Health: Organizers of 13th annual walk say at least $3 million is raised for services and educational programs.
Los Angeles Times - MONDAY September 29, 1997
Julie Tamaki; Times Staff Writer
A record crowd of more than 26,000 walkers converged Sunday on Hollywood for the 13th annual AIDS Walk Los Angeles, which officials said raised at least $3 million to fund AIDS services and educational programs.

Gonorrhea Rate in Gays Stirs AIDS Concerns
Los Angeles Times - FRIDAY September 26, 1997
Thomas H. Maugh II; Times Medical Writer
Reversing a decades-long decline, the incidence of gonorrhea among gay males has begun to rise sharply, a sign of spreading unsafe sexual practices that may presage a new explosion of AIDS cases, federal authorities said Thursday.

Test of HIV in Humans at Issue AIDS: Physician volunteers to be exposed to weakened but live strain of virus in clinical trial of possible vaccine.
Los Angeles Times - TUESDAY September 23, 1997
David Colker; Times Staff Writer
NORTH HOLLYWOOD - Physician Charles Farthing has spent more than a decade battling the AIDS virus in his patients' bodies. Now, he proposes putting the virus into his own.

Skepticism Greets AIDS Trial Offer Medicine: Researchers say testing any live-HIV vaccine in humans is of little scientific value at this time, and far too risky to volunteer participants.
Los Angeles Times - TUESDAY September 23, 1997
James Gerstenzang; Times Staff Writer
WASHINGTON - Researchers seeking to develop an AIDS vaccine addressed with skepticism Monday, even an undercurrent of scorn, the announcement by a physicians' group that 50 volunteers are willing to subject themselves to an injection of a live, weakened strain of the virus that causes the disease.

Alternatives: Take Two Aspirin, Call the Doc in the Morning? Getting Rid of Headaches Now Can Mean Using Aromatherapy, Acupuncture or Massage Therapy
Los Angeles Times - MONDAY September 22, 1997
Barbara Thomas; Times Staff Writer
From time to time, Health will look at a common ailment and its remedies from three perspectives: traditional Western medicine and two alternatives. Today, how to treat a common headache.

New AIDS Cases Show Decline in U.S. Health: Incidence among adolescents and adults fell 6% last year, the first drop since the epidemic was identified 16 years ago.
Los Angeles Times - FRIDAY September 19, 1997
Marlene Cimons; Times Staff Writer
WASHINGTON - For the first time since the AIDS epidemic was identified 16 years ago, the number of newly diagnosed cases of the disease in adolescent and adult Americans declined last year, federal health officials reported on Thursday.

EDITORIAL: Clinton May Have Found an Answer in Dr. Satcher Nomination should end trouble with surgeon general post
Los Angeles Times - TUESDAY September 16, 1997
The Clinton administration has nominated Dr. David Satcher to the long-vacant position of U.S. surgeon general. The White House has had nothing but trouble with this post, but it looks as if this nominee could solve the political problems.

Community News File--Santa Monica: Construction Begins on Apartments for AIDS, HIV Patients
Los Angeles Times - FRIDAY September 12, 1997
Groundbreaking for a 25-apartment complex for people with HIV and AIDS will be held today. "These are long-term apartments for independent living. They are not a hospice or health care facility," said Scott Figenshow, executive director of Project New Hope, a Los Angeles-based nonprofit agency.

Drug Therapy Slows AIDS, Study Shows
Los Angeles Times - THURSDAY September 11, 1997
Thomas H. Maugh II; Times Medical Writer
In the first study of its kind, researchers report today that so-called triple therapy for HIV-positive individuals can not only reduce blood levels of the virus, but also significantly slows the progression from infection to actual clinical symptoms of AIDS.

Bill Would Expedite Dying Inmates' Release Government: Legislation going to governor would require judges to act on requests within 10 days. Proponents say the state would save money by allowing more terminally ill prisoners to be freed.
Los Angeles Times - WEDNESDAY September 3, 1997
Virginia Ellis; Times Staff Writer
SACRAMENTO - For seven months, convicted burglar Frederick Lopez lay dying of AIDS in a bleak prison hospital while a warden's request "strongly urging" that he be allowed to spend his last days in the care of his family languished in the Orange County courthouse.

August

COLUMN ONE: Doing Time--and Drugs--in Chowchilla Inside the nation's largest women's prison, even the specter of AIDS can't slow down a thriving heroin trade that includes the sale of used infirmary syringes.
Los Angeles Times - SUNDAY August 31, 1997
Mark Arax; Times Staff Writer
CHOWCHILLA - The heroin underground here at the largest women's prison in America never stops scheming, a nimble supplier of drugs and hypodermic needles and butane lighters, each commanding a swindler's price.

COMMUNITY NEWS FILE: Beverly Hills Weekend Events to Raise Money for AIDS Charities
Los Angeles Times - SATURDAY August 30, 1997
The Labor Day L.A. Foundation is hosting a fund-raising dinner tonight at the Regent Beverly Wilshire honoring the producers of the television series "E.R." Foundation President Ronald Palmieri called the black-tie dinner the centerpiece of a series of weekend events expected to raise $250,000 for AIDS-related charities.

Experimental HIV Treatment Launched Health: Doctors use girl's own altered bone marrow in an attempt to
Los Angeles Times, Friday August 29, 1997
Terence Monmaney; Times Medical Writer
Around 2 on Thursday afternoon at Childrens Hospital Los Angeles, a 13-year-old girl infected with the virus that causes AIDS became the first child to undergo experimental gene therapy to combat the disease.

Lungren Backs Study on Medical Marijuana Use
Los Angeles Times; Wednesday August 27, 1997
Eric Bailey; Times Staff Writer
SACRAMENTO -- Atty. Gen. Dan Lungren, the most vocal critic of California's new medical marijuana law, announced his support Tuesday for a $3-million research program intended to settle the decades-long dispute over the drug's benefits and failings for the ill.

OPINION: Needle Exchanges Can Be a Path to Promote Racial Healing AIDS: Lift the federal funding ban to slow the epidemic.
Los Angeles Times; Monday August 25, 1997
Diane Watson; Sen. Diane Watson (D-Los Angeles), a state senator since 1978, chairs the Senate Health and Human Services Committee
In response to President Clinton's mission to promote racial healing, Americans of all backgrounds have expressed hope for bridging the racial divide and preventing race relations from becoming, in his words, a "powder keg of problems."

Foes of Needle Exchange Say Most Favor Ban
Los Angeles Times; Thursday, August 21, 1997
Kasper Zeuthen; Times Staff Writer
WASHINGTON -- Fearing that the ban on federal funds for needle exchange programs might be lifted, opponents on Wednesday warned Congress and the Clinton administration that a majority of the public is against reversing the current policy.

FDA Loosens Restrictions on Drug Ads on TV, Radio
Los Angeles Times; Saturday August 9, 1997
Kasper Zeuthen; Times Staff Writer
WASHINGTON -- In a move expected to spark an avalanche of commercials for prescription drugs, the Food and Drug Administration on Friday announced a policy giving pharmaceutical companies more leeway to promote their products on television and radio.

July

New Day for AIDS Policy in Cuba The nation, which has quarantined people with HIV, is now allowing an international group to design a public health campaign to prevent virus' spread.
Los Angeles Times (MEDICINE) - Thursday, July 24, 1997
Juanita Darling; Times Staff Writer
HAVANA--For years, Cuba has been notorious for its draconian treatment of people infected with the virus that causes AIDS: The government has rounded up everyone infected with the human immunodeficiency virus and locked them in sanitariums until they developed AIDS and died.

Valley Focus: Valleywide AIDS Service Groups Get Kaiser Grants
Los Angeles Times (Valley Edition): Wednesday July 23, 1997
Sylvia L. Oliande; Times Staff Writer
Kaiser Permanente awarded nearly $30,000 in grants to several organizations that work to help those with AIDS and HIV in the San Fernando Valley and neighboring areas.

AIDS Deaths Drop Further, U.S. Reports
Los Angeles Times (Home Editon) - Tuesday July 15, 1997
Marlene Cimons; Times Staff Writer
WASHINGTON -- AIDS deaths fell 19% over a nine-month period last year compared with the same period in 1995, accelerating a decline reported earlier this year, federal health officials said Monday.

Drug Firm Airing Ads for Female Contraceptive Marketing: Pharmacia & Upjohn's TV commercials for Depo-Provera are an
Los Angeles Times, Wednesday July 9, 1997
Denise Gellene; Times Staff Writer
Pharmacia & Upjohn began airing commercials Tuesday for Depo-Provera, becoming the first company to advertise a female contraceptive on television.

Needle Programs Are Needed Evidence is in: They can reduce AIDS without fostering drug use
Los Angeles Times; Tuesday July 8, 1997
Understandably uneasy with government agencies giving drug addicts needles and other paraphernalia, Congress prohibited federally funded needle exchange programs in 1988. The ban could be lifted, Congress said, when there was proof that such programs reduced transmission of the AIDS virus without increasing illegal drug use. Now, that time has come.

Straight Talk From a Straight Shooter Journeys: Joycelyn Elders was known for her outspokenness during her run
Los Angeles Times; Thursday July 3, 1997
Bob Sipchen; Times Staff Writer
LITTLE ROCK, Ark. -- Parental Advisory: The following story contains mature themes and language that may be inappropriate for children and adolescents. Or not.

June

The Net Effect Why High Court Struck Down the Law; How Web Filtering Software Works
Los Angeles Times - Friday June 27, 1997
Karen Kaplan; Times Staff Writer
Thursday's Supreme Court ruling striking down the Communications Decency Act was widely praised by the online community and roundly criticized by advocates for family values.

Action on 'Right to Die' Languishes in California
Los Angeles Times - Friday June 27, 1997
Eric Bailey; Times Staff Writer
SACRAMENTO -- It has been five years since California helped fan the debate over letting doctors hasten death for the terminally ill. But despite the high amount of attention the issue has received in the state, supporters of a "right to die" concede that for now, they have little chance to win their battle legislatively.

SUPREME COURT RULINGS: Terminally Ill Are Determined to Make Their Own Judgments
Los Angeles Times - Friday June 27, 1997
Kim Murphy and Maria La Ganga; Times Staff Writers
Dale Gilsdorf sometimes imagines the moment of his death, and it makes him feel powerful. It's an odd thing, really: how knowing he is going to die gives him the ability to choose how it will happen.

High Court Refuses to Grant Constitutional 'Right to Die'
Los Angeles Times - Friday June 27, 1997
David G. Savage; Times Staff Writer
WASHINGTON -- Saying the nation's "profound debate" about doctor-assisted suicide should continue, the Supreme Court on Thursday nonetheless upheld state laws that forbid physicians to help the terminally ill end their lives.

CITYSCAPES / TRACY JOHNSON: Coffee, Information on AIDS a Distinctive Blend at This Lounge
Los Angeles Times Saturday June 21, 1997
Tracy Johnson
Crammed between a steamy nightclub and a sidewalk eatery on the oh-so-hip strip of Santa Monica Boulevard that cuts through West Hollywood, the WeHo Lounge is giving new meaning to the way AIDS information is delivered.

Newfound Herpes Tied to Cancer Health: Virus, relatively common in those with HIV, may cause multiple myeloma.
Los Angeles Times Friday June 20, 1997
Thomas H. Maugh II; Times Medical Writer
A newly discovered herpes virus recently linked to Kaposi's sarcoma may also cause a deadly form of bone marrow cancer called multiple myeloma, researchers at the West Los Angeles Veterans Affairs Medical Center reported today.

Panel to Call for Triple-Drug Therapy for HIV Health: Federal officials seek to reduce confusion among doctors. Report
Los Angeles Times, Thursday June 19, 1997
Marlene Cimons; Times Staff Writer
WASHINGTON -- Federal health officials are expected to recommend today that most HIV -infected patients be treated early and aggressively with potent triple-drug combinations that include a protease inhibitor, a regimen that is not always currently practiced among clinicians nationwide.

New Complications for AIDS Patients Law: Living longer, some survivors face bankruptcy, discrimination, and
Los Angeles (Orange County Edition) Monday June 16, 1997
Peter Noah; Times Staff Writer
Linda developed a severe case of pneumonia, and rashes swelled her eyes shut. It was early 1995, and no medical remedy seemed to be helping the AIDS patient. Believing she had just a short time to live, Linda maxed out her credit cards and cashed in her life insurance policy.

AIDS Programs Need Bolstering, Grand Jury Urges Health: It says county should open office to expand education and
Los Angeles Times (Orange County Edition) Thursday June 12, 1997
Marcida Dodson; Times Staff Writer
SANTA ANA -- Health officials should establish an Orange County Office of AIDS to raise awareness of the disease and do a better job of coordinating education and prevention programs, the county grand jury recommended Wednesday.

COMMUNITY NEWS FOCUS: Improvement Needed in AIDS Education, Grand Jury Reports
Los Angeles Times (Orange County Edition), Tuesday, June 17, 1997
Marcida Dodson; Times Staff Writer
Junior high and high schools are teaching students the basic facts about AIDS but are failing to instruct them uniformly how to resist peer pressure and abstain from sex and other high-risk activities that could lead to infection, according to an Orange County Grand Jury report released Monday.

County Will Test Prop. 215 With Cannabis Co-Op Worker
Los Angeles Times (Orange County Edition) Thursday June 5, 1997
Lee Romney; Times Staff Writer
SANTA ANA -- The Orange County district attorney's office has filed the county's first drug case challenging the power of Proposition 215--the measure that allows people with certain illnesses to grow and use marijuana with a doctor's approval.

May

Assembly Bill Requires Parental OK for Body Piercing
Los Angeles Times Wednesday May 28, 1997
Jenifer Warren; Times Staff Writer
SACRAMENTO -- Minors who want their bodies pierced would need a note from Mom or Dad under legislation that won overwhelming approval Tuesday in the Assembly.

Can Clinton Kick Quest for AIDS Vaccine Into Gear?
Los Angeles Times, Sunday May 25, 1997
Thomas H. Maugh II, Marlene Cimons and John-Thor Dahlburg; Times Staff Writers
President Clinton's call for the accelerated development of an AIDS vaccine has a good chance of success, especially if he is able to stimulate an international effort, senior researchers say.

Doctors Group Backs Bill to Research Medical Pot Use
Los Angeles Times, Wednesday May 21, 1997
Eric Bailey; Times Staff Writer
SACRAMENTO -- The California Medical Assn. is throwing its weight behind a legislative effort to finance $6 million in research on the therapeutic uses of marijuana and design a distribution system for patients who may need the drug.

Central Los Angeles Along With Mousse, Salon Offers AIDS and Cancer Advice
Los Angeles Times, Friday May 16, 1997
Michael Krikorian; Times Staff Writer
For ages, women have been going to beauty salons to chat and gossip with their stylists while getting their hair done. That tradition still exists at the Salon 21 beauty shop in Los Angeles' Mid-City area, but the conversation topics have been expanded: breast cancer and AIDS prevention.

Ventura County Focus: AIDS Partnership to Distribute Grants
Los Angeles Times, Friday May 16, 1997
Fred Alvarez; Times Staff Writer
The Ventura County AIDS Partnership is set to distribute grants totaling $150,000 to seven local organizations doing battle with the disease.

Valley Focus: Panorama City Expanded HIV Clinic to Host Open House
Los Angeles Times, Thursday May 15, 1997
Sylvia L. Oliande
In celebration of its expanded facilities, staff and supporters of the Northeast Valley Health Corp.'s HIV Early Intervention Program clinic will host an open house today.

Wanted: Rationality About 'Pot' One wise ruling made in medical marijuana dispute, but more is needed
Los Angeles Times; Monday May 12, 1997
When Californians passed Proposition 215 six months ago, federal drug officials understandably complained that the state was legalizing something--the medical use of marijuana--over which only Washington had jurisdiction. Then the government took a series of overly zealous steps that exacerbated state-federal tensions.

AIDS Vaccine Proving to Be an Elusive Goal
Los Angeles Times; Sunday May 11, 1997
Marlene Cimons; Times Staff Writer
WASHINGTON -- Even today, the memory makes scientists cringe. On a spring day in 1984, Health and Human Services Secretary Margaret Heckler, surrounded by prominent AIDS researchers and public health officials, announced that the virus responsible for causing AIDS had been found.

Middle Ground for Tort Reform As the issue heats up in Sacramento, extremes should be avoided
Los Angeles Times; Sunday May 11, 1997
The California Supreme Court's unanimous decision last week on pain and suffering awards applies to a rather limited set of cases. But as the legislative tort wars heat up again in Sacramento, the court's decision is nonetheless a broad reminder that a key goal of the tort system still is to compensate people found to have suffered injury or damage.

BRIEFLY: The State Insurance Receiver Is Appointed in Alleged Scam
Los Angeles Times; Saturday May 10, 1997
Debora Vrana; Times Staff Writer
A Los Angeles County Superior Court judge has appointed a receiver for a Southern California company that allegedly sold more than $80 million in investments backed by illegitimate life insurance policies for the terminally ill.

POLITICS Opposites Attract--and Team Up on a Flood of Legislation
Los Angeles Times; Thursday May 8, 1997
Edwin Chen; Times Staff Writer
WASHINGTON -- Sen. Orrin G. Hatch was not looking forward to his meeting with Trent Lott. He knew that the Senate Republican leader would not be happy to learn that he was collaborating with Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, of all people, on a plan to raise taxes to pay for health insurance for millions of low-income children.

Heirs Can Get Jury Awards, Court Says Law: State justices rule that compensation can be passed to others when
Los Angeles Times; Tuesday May 6, 1997
Maura Dolan; Times Legal Affairs Writer
SAN FRANCISCO -- In a victory for asbestos victims, AIDS patients and other terminally ill litigants, the California Supreme Court decided Monday that jury awards for pain and suffering can be passed on to the heirs of plaintiffs who die while their cases are on appeal.

VENTURA COUNTY POSTSCRIPT Fighting HIV With Education
Los Angeles Times; Monday May 5, 1997
Fred Alvarez; Times Staff Writer
VENTURA -- Doug Halter never considered himself a pioneer. Or much of an activist. But that was before the plague.

VENTURA COUNTY Turning Back HIV With Medication and Education
Los Angeles Times (Valley Edition); Monday May 5, 1997
Fred Alvarez; Times Staff Writer
Doug Halter never considered himself a pioneer. Or much of an activist. But that was before the plague.

ANN CONWAY: Shifting Fronts in the Battle Against AIDS
Los Angeles Times; Monday May 5, 1997
Ann Conway
"When you love somebody, you love somebody," says the boyfriend of Denise LaVigne. With her for 15 years, he stayed at her side even after she learned she was HIV -positive in 1990. "I am here," he says.

Survey Finds First Decline in Teenage Sex in 20 Years
Los Angeles Times, Friday May 2, 1997
Richard T. Cooper; Times Staff Writer
WASHINGTON -- For the first time in more than 20 years, there is evidence that the rising wave of premarital sexual intercourse among America's teenagers finally may have crested and begun to subside.

Judge Shields Doctors Who Recommend Pot
Los Angeles Times, Thursday May 1, 1997
Maria La Ganga and Eric Bailey; Times Staff Writers
SAN FRANCISCO -- Saying the Clinton administration has sent mixed signals on medical marijuana, a judge blocked the federal government Wednesday from carrying out threats to punish California doctors who recommend the drug to patients.

April

U.S. Agency Sounds Alarm About 'Miracle' Hormones Health: TV blitz aims to caution consumers about DHEA, melatonin.
Los Angeles Times; Monday April 28, 1997
Robert A. Rosenblatt, Times Staff Writer
WASHINGTON -- The government is organizing a television blitz to warn Americans who gulp hormone pills to restore their youth and strength that they could be flirting disastrously with high blood pressure, diabetes and cancer.

He Finds Hope by Giving It to Others Books: Traditional medicine left Dr. Daniel J. Baxter unfulfilled.
Los Angeles Times; Tuesday April 22, 1997
David L. Ulin
NEW YORK -- Daniel J. Baxter's Upper West Side apartment is not the kind of place you'd expect a doctor to live. In the first place, it's a bit too far north to be fashionable; in the second, it's only a single room. Then, there are the various religious icons that dot the walls and odd corners, like watchful reminders of another world.

Yacht Racers Challenge Limitations of AIDS Victims
Los Angeles Times; Tuesday April 22, 1997
Nick Green
In an effort to fight prejudice and show that people who have AIDS can perform even the most daunting of tasks, members of Ventura County's newest AIDS advocacy group will sail 2,200 miles across the Pacific Ocean.

DEA Agents Raid Marijuana Club Health: Equipment, 331 plants seized from San Francisco operation
Los Angeles Times; Tuesday April 22, 1997
Maria L. La Ganga; Times Staff Writer
SAN FRANCISCO -- Ratcheting up its battle against facilities that distribute marijuana to AIDS and cancer patients, federal authorities Monday raided a small supplier, confiscating 331 plants and a variety of growing equipment.

U.S. Charges Four With Fraud in Life Insurance Investment Case
Los Angeles Times; Tuesday April 22, 1997
Debora Vrana; Times Staff Writer
The U.S. attorney's office has charged three men and a woman with fraud in connection with an alleged $50-million scheme involving investments secured by illegitimate life insurance policies for the terminally ill.

Examining the Issues Behind NIMBY Positions Society: For seven years, UCI assistant professor has studied opposition
Los Angeles Times; Monday April 21, 1997
Ken Woo; Times Staff Writer
IRVINE -- She started out studying homeless people, but Lois Takahashi now finds herself researching the mysteries of the NIMBY (Not In My Backyard) syndrome.

TV Reviews On the Medical Front With Disease Cowboys
Los Angeles Times; Saturday April 19, 1997
Thomas H. Maugh II; Times Medical Writer
They're called cowboys, but they don't ride the range and they aren't chasing cattle. Instead, they are a dedicated group of virologists who saddle up at the first hint of a disease outbreak and go looking for strange and exotic viruses.

February

Dana Parsons: Instead of the End, AIDS Proved to Be Their Beginning
Los Angeles Times - FRIDAY February 14, 1997
Dana Parsons
There was a time when Herb Hall thought Valentine's Day never would mean anything to him again. It was 1989, and it wasn't as though he wanted to come out of the closet and tell everyone his past included a promiscuous life, but the jolting AIDS diagnosis he just received left him little choice. For the next year, he wallowed in depression and thoughts of dying.

More Doctors Found Willing to Assist Suicide Medicine: About half of Bay Area physicians responding to survey say they've agreed to help AIDS patients kill themselves, study shows.
Los Angeles Times - THURSDAY February 6, 1997
Terence Monmaney; Times Medical Writer
The 1995 survey, published today in the New England Journal of Medicine, found that about half of the 118 responding doctors said they had agreed to help at least one patient commit suicide by prescribing lethal doses of sedative drugs.

January

CALIFORNIA REGIONAL FOCUS: SAN DIEGO-- Agouron's 'Magic Bullet' HIV Drug Stirs Interest of Doctors, Investors
Los Angeles Times - WEDNESDAY January 29, 1997
Chris Kraul; Times Staff Writer
Once again, a San Diego biotechnology company seems poised to receive approval from the Food and Drug Administration to sell a new "magic bullet" drug, the company's stock is heading through the roof, and hopes are high that the city will soon see the flowering of its first major home-grown drug company.

Sex, Seriously Education: Orange-based Hannah's Childrens Homes is trying to reach African Americans with a message about HIV infection. The unlikely venues include hair salons and bachelor parties.
Los Angeles Times - WEDNESDAY January 29, 1997
Brad Bonhall; Times Staff Writer
It may have been a first: a bachelor party that doubled as a safe-sex workshop.

AIDS Treatment May Renew Immune System Health: In lab tests, drug mix partially restores function. But it is unclear if revived cells will ward off infections.
Los Angeles Times - MONDAY January 27, 1997
Marlene Cimons; Times Staff Writer
WASHINGTON - AIDS researchers reported for the first time Sunday that a medicinal combination containing one of the powerful new protease inhibitor drugs appears to have restored partial immune system function in people with moderately advanced HIV disease.

Promising AIDS Drugs Seen as Becoming Easier to Use Health: Potent 'cocktail' treatments are hampered by difficult regimen they require. Advances may allow patients to stick with them more easily.
Los Angeles Times - SUNDAY January 26, 1997
Marlene Cimons; Times Staff Writer
WASHINGTON - Leading AIDS researchers said Saturday that the powerful new drug combinations having a major impact on AIDS patients are still too complicated and cumbersome to take, and they predicted that an imminent second generation of drugs will greatly simplify the task.

New York City Reports Plunge in AIDS Fight
Los Angeles Times - SATURDAY January 25, 1997
Marlene Cimons; Times Staff Writer
WASHINGTON - In what is likely to be a harbinger of a welcome national trend, New York City recorded an unprecedented and unexpectedly sharp decline in AIDS deaths last year, public health officials said Friday.

Hope Sprigs Eternal Biotech Firm Wants to Grow Herbal Medicine Business
Los Angeles Times - THURSDAY January 23, 1997
Nancy Rivera Brooks; Times Staff Writer
In the tastefully decorated lobby of Irvine-based PharmaPrint, a fledgling biotech company, hangs an offbeat piece of corporate art: two sprigs of mistletoe, nicely framed.

Drug 'Cocktails' May Rid Body of AIDS, Researcher Speculates
Los Angeles Times - THURSDAY January 23, 1997
Marlene Cimons; Times Staff Writer
WASHINGTON - A leading AIDS researcher on Wednesday raised the provocative notion that powerful drug combinations could eradicate the AIDS virus from the body after three years.

Donations of Blood in Lieu of Driver Fines Halted Courts: Traffic commissioner's plan to bolster Red Cross supply is stopped. For safety, agency insists on volunteers.
Los Angeles Times - SATURDAY January 18, 1997
Michael Granberry; Times Staff Writer
LAGUNA HILLS - The presiding judge of Municipal Court in Laguna Niguel ordered a traffic commissioner Friday to stop offering errant motorists the option of donating blood to local blood banks instead of paying $50 fines.

Club Offering Marijuana Reopens in San Francisco Drugs: Group, given a reprieve by Prop. 215, serves customers who say they have a medicinal need for pot.
Los Angeles Times - THURSDAY January 16, 1997
Mary Curtius; Times Staff Writer
SAN FRANCISCO - Two months after California voters legalized medical use of marijuana, and five months after the Cannabis Buyers Club was shut down by state narcotics officers, the club reopened Wednesday with a promise to supply high-quality, low-cost weed just steps from this city's Civic Center.

HEARTS of the CITY Leading a Fight for Rights The Lambda legal fund has been a driving force in changing the law's treatment of gays.
Los Angeles Times - WEDNESDAY January 15, 1997
Bettina Boxall; Times Staff Writer
To get a snapshot of the gay rights frontier, one need only pick up a turquoise handout from the Lambda Legal Defense and Education Fund.

Suit Seeks to Bar U.S. Sanctions for Prescribing Pot Courts: Doctors and patients fight federal attempt to nullify Proposition 215, saying that not allowing physicians to discuss marijuana violates 1st Amendment.
Los Angeles Times - WEDNESDAY January 15, 1997
Jenifer Warren; Times Staff Writer
SACRAMENTO - A group of doctors and patients filed a lawsuit Tuesday to block the federal government from punishing physicians who recommend marijuana for sick people in their care.

AZT May Mute Benefits of New AIDS Therapy Health: Patients who used older treatments have shown resistance to new combinations using protease inhibitors.
Los Angeles Times - SUNDAY January 12, 1997
David Colker; Times Staff Writer
Even as excitement grows that new treatments have vastly improved the outlook for AIDS patients, a cruel irony has emerged--those who were most conscientious about treating their disease in the past may have put themselves beyond help from the promising new discoveries.

Wilson Seeks to Boost AIDS Treatment Budget Health: Plan for $86 million in funds is hailed as recognition of new, aggressive drug approach.
Los Angeles Times - SUNDAY January 5, 1997
Dave Lesher; Times Staff Writer
SACRAMENTO - Gov. Pete Wilson's proposed budget, reflecting a rapid increase in the demand for new AIDS drug treatments, calls for a raise in state and federal government funding from $18 million two years ago to more than $86 million next year, senior administration officials said Saturday.


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