2008

Drop in TB funding could set back fight against AIDS: About 11 million of 33 million HIV-positive people have TB, a Nobel laureate warns, and if financially troubled nations renege on aid pledges, it would deprive the poor of treatment.
Los Angeles Times - October 15, 2008
Mary Engel, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer, mary.engel@latimes.com
Fearing that the global economic crisis could cause nations to renege on commitments to fight tuberculosis, new Nobel laureate and HIV co-discoverer Francoise Barre-Sinoussi warned that a drop in TB funding could wipe out gains made against AIDS because so many people suffer from both diseases. We are at the period of


For many rape victims, treatment and support services fall short
Los Angeles Times - October 6, 2008
Valerie Ulene, Special to The Times
Each year in the United States , according to the U.S. Department of Justice, more than 270,000 people are raped or sexually assaulted. The number is shocking enough. Also shocking is what happens afterward -- or what doesn t happen. In a study published in June in the journal Contraception, researchers at the John H.


Nobel Prize awarded for AIDS, cervical cancer research
Los Angeles Times - October 6, 2008
Thomas H. Maugh II, thomas.maugh@latimes.com
The awards recognize two French researchers who discovered the human AIDS virus and a German scientist who showed that human papilloma virus causes cervical cancer. Two French researchers who discovered the human AIDS virus and a German scientist who showed that human papilloma virus causes cervical cancer were awarded


HIV dates back to around 1900, study shows
Los Angeles Times - October 2, 2008
Mary Engel, mary.engel@latimes.com
-- Genetic analysis of tissue specimen recently discovered in the Democratic Republic of the Congo leads researchers to believe the virus that causes AIDS has been present for more than a century. A genetic analysis of a biopsy sample recently discovered in the Democratic Republic of the Congo has led researchers to co


Schwarzenegger signs bills creating hospital privacy oversight office: The move comes months after his wife, Maria Shriver, and other celebrities had their medical records peeked at by UCLA Medical Center employees.
Los Angeles Times - October 1, 2008
Jordan Rau, jordan.rau@latimes.com and Patrick McGreevy, patrick.mcgreevy@ latimes.com
SACRAMENTO -- Hospitals and other health facilities will face harsh new penalties if their employees snoop in the medical records of patients, under legislation signed Tuesday by Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger after privacy was breached on celebrities files -- including his wife s -- at UCLA Medical Center. Schwarzenegger


Schwarzenegger grapples with new medical insurance laws
Los Angeles Times - September 29, 2008
Jordan Rau, jordan.rau@latimes.com
-- As he considers 10 bills passed by the Legislature that would expand what insurers must pay for, he must balance improved coverage with the risk of driving costs so high that people can t afford it. SACRAMENTO -- Garrett Warren, 14, needs braces to fix the gaps in his teeth caused by a severe cleft lip and palate th


Another barrier to routine AIDS testing falls
Los Angeles Times Blog - September 29, 2008
Susan Brink
Another obstacle to routine screening for HIV is about to fall, this time for the Department of Veterans Affairs, the nation s largest provider of HIV care. You may recall that in 2006, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention issued revised recommendations for testing adults, adolescents and pregnant women for t


China milk scandal hits home
Los Angeles Times - September 27, 2008
Barbara Demick,barbara.demick@latimes.com
Chinese had shrugged off previous problems as Western hysteria, but tainted milk has many wondering what else poses a risk. Even professed patriots seek out products not made in China . BEIJING -- Even after regulators assured the public that all contaminated baby formula was off the shelves, B.X. Wei wasn t going to f


New South Africa president is sworn in
Los Angeles Times - September 26, 2008
Robyn Dixon
-- Kgalema Motlanthe, called a uniting figure, is viewed as a caretaker until elections next year, when ANC chief Jacob Zuma is expected to take over. JOHANNESBURG, SOUTH AFRICA -- A low-key former mining union official, Kgalema Motlanthe, was sworn in as president of South Africa on Thursday, widely seen as a care


Editorial: Family planning run amok
Los Angeles Times - September 24, 2008
-- A federal push to let healthcare workers refuse services is really an assault on reproductive rights. Here comes another sneak attack on family planning by the Bush administration. Masquerading as a measure to protect healthcare providers from morally coercive or discriminatory practices, a rule change proposed by t


South Africa's president ousted
Los Angeles Times - September 21, 2008
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa - President Thabo Mbeki was forced from office Saturday, paving the way for rival Jacob Zuma to take power and leaving AIDS-plagued South Africa in a state of political and economic uncertainty. Mr. Zuma, expected to take over after parliamentary elections next year, has come back from near p


HIV epidemic in U.S. a crisis, health officials say: In testimony before a House panel, additional programs are urged to protect and educate African Americans, Latinos and gay and bisexual men.
Los Angeles Times - September 17, 2008
Cynthia Dizikes, cynthia.dizikes@latimes.com
WASHINGTON -- The HIV epidemic in the United States is a crisis, federal health officials told a House panel Tuesday, urging additional programs to specifically protect and educate African Americans, Latinos and gay and bisexual men -- the groups hardest hit by the virus that causes AIDS. Their testimony before the


Times Q & A with South African cartoonist under attack
Los Angeles Times - September 12, 2008
Robyn Dixon, robyn.dixon@latimes.com
-- Zapiro defends his cartoon depicting ANC chief and presidential hopeful Jacob Zuma as about to rape the justice system, which has drawn criticism from his supporters. JOHANNESBURG, SOUTH AFRICA -- Zapiro, as one of South Africa s most controversial cartoonists calls himself, is a liberal pro-Palestinian Jew who was


Zimbabwe bloggers shine a light on their troubled country
Los Angeles Times - September 10, 2008
Robyn Dixon, robyn.dixon@latimes.com
JOHANNESBURG, SOUTH AFRICA -- The blogger calls himself a fat white man and jokes about the right way to approach a cordon of Zimbabwean riot police: Don t wear an opposition T-shirt, or ask for the results of the recent one-man presidential runoff. Instead, greet them with a breezy Good morning! How are you, sirs?


Cultivated for AIDS victims, Laguna Beach garden is missing its keeper
Los Angeles Times - September 7, 2008
Susannah Rosenblatt, susannah.rosenblatt @latimes.com
-- The man who tended to a plot that became the resting place of many in the once-thriving gay community is himself fighting the disease. The small patch of flowers serves as a reminder. It commemorates lives lost and souls remembered. The ashes of 50 or so are scattered or buried there. But the freshly turned topsoil


Palin appears to disagree with McCain on sex education
Los Angeles Times - September 6, 2008
Seema Mehta, seema.mehta@latimes.com
The Republican vice presidential candidate says students should be taught about condoms. Her running mate -- and the party platform -- disagree. Teen pregnancy and sex education were thrust into the spotlight this week when Republican vice presidential nominee Sarah Palin revealed that her 17-year-old daughter is five


Poverty-reduction aid lags, study finds
Los Angeles Times - September 5, 2008
Richard Boudreaux, boudreaux@latimes.com
-- The United Nations report says an ambitious goal embraced by wealthy countries to cut extreme global poverty by 2015 is in jeopardy. UNITED NATIONS -- Development aid from the United States and other wealthy countries has declined since the middle of this decade, jeopardizing the ambitious U.N. goal they had embrace


OPINION: GOP platform on abstinence and education
Los Angeles Times - September 2, 2008
A call for abstinence Here is the portion of the Republican platform that deals with abstinence and education: We renew our call for replacing family planning programs for teens with increased funding for abstinence education, which teaches abstinence until marriage as the responsible and expected standard of behavior.


Researchers produce blood in lab from stem cells
Los Angeles Times - August 20, 2008
Karen Kaplan, karen.kaplan@latimes.com
The discovery marks a technical advance but has a long way to go before it can be considered an alternative to donor blood. Scientists said Tuesday that they had devised a way to grow large quantities of blood in the lab using human embryonic stem cells, potentially making blood drives a thing of the past. But experts


SO CA LOCAL EVENTS: L.A. church exhibit offers a personal look at AIDS orphans in Africa
Los Angeles Times - August 16, 2008
Duke Helfand, duke.helfand@latimes.com
-- Visitors to the traveling World Vision display walk through a replica of an African village, view four children s pictures and listen on headsets to their harrowing tales. It is a chilling statistic: 12 million children in sub-Saharan Africa have been orphaned by AIDS. But the figure alone cannot begin to convey the


40% of U.S. population has been tested for HIV However, 250,000 are infected and don't know it, according to new data released by the CDC. Efforts to increase screening are underway.
Los Angeles Times - August 7, 2008
Thomas H. Maugh II, thomas.maugh@latimes.com
Just over 40% of the adult U.S. population has been screened at least once for HIV, but a quarter of a million people are infected and don t know it, government researchers said Thursday. About 10% of the population gets an HIV test each year -- a figure that has remained stable since 2000 despite efforts to increase t


Mexico's HIV-positive orphans look to the future
Los Angeles Times Blog: La Plaza - August 5, 2008
Deborah Bonello in Mexico City, LA Times correspondent
Oscar is 10 years old and his favorite subject at school is math. He wants to be a lawyer when he grows up. Oscar also is HIV-positive, and he lost his parents to complications with the virus two years ago. He lives in a community of children here at La Casa de la Sal (the House of Salt) in Mexico City. All of the 25 c


HIV drugs to be used in prevention: Researchers are conducting trials to determine whether existing treatments can help block infections.
Los Angeles Times - August 5, 2008
Thomas H. Maugh II, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer, thomas.maugh@latimes.com
Disheartened by the failures of vaccines and microbicides in blocking HIV transmission, some AIDS researchers are now touting a third possibility: using existing HIV drugs prophylactically. By next year, as many as 15,000 people worldwide will be enrolled in trials to test the concept -- more than are enrolled in all v


Growth hormone cuts abnormal fat in patients with HIV: But the treatment brings a risk, according to research in an AIDS-themed edition of a medical journal. Other studies examine tuberculosis medicine and the treatment of injection-drug abusers.
Los Angeles Times -- August 4, 2008
Thomas H. Maugh II, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
Low doses of human growth hormone can reverse some of the abnormal fat distribution caused by HIV therapy, lowering the risk of cardiovascular disease, but the treatment may produce unnecessary risk for those who have early stages of diabetes, researchers said Sunday. The hormone produced good results but would have to


The right way to fight AIDS: You can't battle the disease without medicine. But medicine alone is not enough.
Los Angeles Times - August 3, 2008
Helen Epstein**
The 17th International AIDS Conference opens today in Mexico City, and all the big pharmaceutical and medical supply companies will be there, including Merck; Pfizer ; Becton, Dickinson and Co.; Glaxo- SmithKline; Abbott Laboratories and many others. With each passing year, this meeting has been looking increasingly li


HIV epidemic in U.S. worse than previously thought, CDC says: Based on new testing methods, the CDC says there are actually about 56,300 new infections a year -- not 40,000 -- and that rate has been fairly constant for a decade.
Los Angeles Times - August 3, 2008
Thomas H. Maugh II, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer, thomas.maugh@latimes.com
Federal officials have been underestimating the number of new HIV infections in the United States by 40% every year for more than a decade, a finding that indicates the U.S. epidemic is much worse than thought, researchers said Saturday. Using sophisticated testing to identify new infections, the Centers for Disease Co


Editorial: The good fight - The battle against AIDS is far from over, but there has been commendable progress.
Los Angeles Times - August 2, 2008
Global health advocates can come off as a pretty crabby bunch. When the United Nations released its annual report on the worldwide AIDS epidemic this week, the reaction was mostly a lot of sniping about rich countries slow response to the problem, or the political factors that prevent money from being spent appropriate


Ban on travelers with HIV to U.S. partly lifted
Los Angeles Times - July 31, 2008
Vimal Patel, vimal.patel@latimes.com
-- President Bush signs a measure that repeals the congressional restriction, but the Department of Health and Human Services still lists the virus among diseases barring entry. WASHINGTON -- President Bush signed a sweeping measure Wednesday that provides $48 billion to combat AIDS and other diseases globally and that


AIDS deaths down 10% in 2007
Los Angeles Times - July 30, 2008
Thomas H. Maugh II, thomas.maugh@latimes.com
New infections in children also declined, a U.N. report says. Greater access to treatment is cited. The number of AIDS deaths worldwide dropped 10% in 2007 because of increasing access to treatment, as did the number of new infections in children, the United Nations reported Tuesday. Condom use and prevention efforts i


AIDS bill gains Senate renewal
Los Angeles Times - July 17, 2008
Vimal Patel, vimal.patel@latimes.com
-- Bipartisan support of President Bush s 2003 foreign policy initiative comes after intense debate about its cost, and $48 billion is authorized to carry the program through 2013. WASHINGTON -- The Senate on Wednesday approved a $48-billion program to treat and prevent AIDS, malaria and tuberculosis, tripling the amou


Increased HIV risk found in genetic mutation
Los Angeles Times - July 17, 2008
Thomas H. Maugh II, thomas.maugh@latimes.com and Karen Kaplan, karen.kaplan@latimes.com
The discovery offers a partial explanation for the disproportionate spread of the virus among Africans and African Americans, researchers say. A genetic mutation that originally protected Africans from a virulent form of malaria now renders them 40% more susceptible to HIV infections, offering a partial explanation for


Democracy is losing ground in Africa
Los Angeles Times - July 13, 2008
Edmund Sanders, edmund.sanders@latimes.com
NAIROBI, KENYA -- Election-related meltdowns in Zimbabwe and Kenya are stark reminders of democracy s fragile foothold in Africa, experts say, despite years of financial and diplomatic investment by the United States and other Western nations. A combination of challenges unique to the continent, including


Gay online soap opera has a serious message
Los Angeles Times - July 11, 2008
Scott Gold, scott.gold@latimes.com
Funded largely by West Hollywood, the racy Web show promotes safe sex at a time when diagnoses of AIDS and HIV are rising. The target is men too young to recall the disease s early devastation. A young, muscled man named Edgar is flat on his back under a tree, clad only in camouflage-print underwear. The sun is well ab


HIV clinic in South Los Angeles sees more teenagers
Los Angeles Times - July 6, 2008
Mary Engel, mary.engel@latimes.com
OASIS facility will begin a Saturday program for adolescents. Newly diagnosed cases among young gay men have jumped nationwide. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released a worrisome report late last month on a jump in newly diagnosed HIV cases among young gay men. From 2001 to 2006, such cases among all g


Cookie and Magic Johnson and Spike Lee help fight HIV among blacks
Los Angeles Times - July 6, 2008
Mary Engel, mary.engel@latimes.com
Ladies, said Cookie Johnson, looking straight into the camera, her husband s arm draped across her shoulders. Have you been tested . . . . . . for HIV? finished Lakers basketball legend Earvin Magic Johnson. As the most prominent African American face of HIV, Johnson, who is now a businessman and philanthropist, has l


Pharmaceutical fakes: Counterfeit malaria drugs threaten Africa with a lethal new problem.
Los Angeles Times - June 30, 2008
Ateam of international researchers bought anti-malaria drugs from pharmacies in six cities in Africa s malaria belt, tested the products and despaired. More than a third of the alleged medicines flunked the field tests for clinical efficacy. And 48% of the drugs manufactured in Africa -- the best hope for affordable me


LAS VEGAS: Local film fest and benefit boost a slow month
Los Angeles Times - June 18, 2008
This is the time of year when Vegas turns inward and events created by locals gain prominence. That in part is because things are slow historically leading up to July 4 weekend. For locals, it s now easy to buy two-for-one tickets to production shows or to get a local s rate for a staycation room on the Strip. In fact,


Silberman, Pace among 6 to get Presidential Medal of Freedom
Los Angeles Times - June 12, 2008
James Gerstenzang,james.gerstenzang, @latimes.com
-- The two are closely identified with Bush s national security policy, the campaign against terrorism and the war in Iraq . WASHINGTON -- President Bush will award the nation s highest civilian award, the Presidential Medal of Freedom, to a veteran federal judge, Laurence H. Silberman, whose controversial role in nati


L.A. woman's suit against husband over HIV infection will go to trial: A judge ruled that the one-year statute of limitations should not apply because the woman had justifiably trusted her spouse, who didn't tell her of possible exposure before their marriage.
Los Angeles Times - June 10, 2008
Victoria Kim, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
In tearful testimony, the woman known in court documents as Bridget B. choked up as she described the first time she met her ex-husband, the man she is now suing for infecting her with HIV. After a six-year legal battle that has thrust the couple s sexual history into the public record and taken them before the Califor


World AIDS treatment program meets goal -- two years late: The goal of having 3 million people in developing countries receive treatment by 2005 was 'excessively aspirational,' one expert says. In 2007, 1 million started taking life-saving drugs, but 2.5 million
Los Angeles Times - June 3, 2008
Thomas H. Maugh II, thomas.maugh@latimes.com
Nearly 3 million people in developing countries are now receiving antiretroviral drugs to treat AIDS, a treatment goal that health authorities had hoped to meet two years ago, according to a new report released Monday. About 1 million people received the life-saving drugs for the first time during 2007, according to th


Marijuana 'grow houses' are creating problems in Arcata, California
Los Angeles Times - May 31, 2008
Tim Reiterman, tim.reiterman@latimes.com and Eric Bailey, eric.bailey@latimes.com
About $55,000 in damage was caused in this rental house in Arcata, Calif., where marijuana was being grown and a piece of equipment started a fire. The owner didn t know how the house was being used. Officials estimate as many as 1,000 of the 7,500 homes in town are used for pot, reducing housing stock and creating bui


'Sex and the City' screening to benefit AIDS charity
Los Angeles Times - May 20, 2008
-- Sex and the City benefit screening Actress Kristin Davis and director Michael Patrick King will field questions from the audience after a charity screening of their Sex and the City film May 29. The 7:30 p.m. screening at the ArcLight Hollywood will benefit AIDS Project Los Angeles. Tickets are $50 and $100. For


Make mine marijuana
Los Angeles Times - May 19, 2008
Joel Stein
Sometimes I can t believe how Californian California is. Women walk around half-naked, waiters call patrons dude, and medical marijuana is legal. But I wondered just how legal. Could anyone buy it? Even me, who doesn t have cancer, AIDS, arthritis, glaucoma or even any previous pot-smoking experience? Medical marijuana


Medical marijuana and organ transplants don't mix: Patients who have used doctor-prescribed pot are being turned away from hospital transplant programs.
Los Angeles Times - May 19, 2008
stuart.glascock@latimes.com
SEATTLE -- Should using doctor-prescribed marijuana be a deal-breaker for someone needing an organ transplant? It is not a theoretical question but a pressing and emotional one confronting hospitals and patients in states where medical use of marijuana is legal. This month, Timothy Garon, 56, a Seattle musician, died a


HIV patient triggers a doctor's dilemma about confidentiality and safety
Los Angeles Times - May 12, 2008
Marc Siegel, Special to The Times
When a patient tests HIV-positive, a doctor has to navigate state law and medical ethics. It can be a rocky path. My patient, a 26-year-old native of the Dominican Republic , had been seeing me for only a few months when I determined that he had been infected with HIV. He didn t seem surprised but was close-mouthed abo


Great leap forward for Nepal's gays
Los Angeles Times - May 2, 2008
Henry Chu, henry.chu@latimes.com
-- One activist has taken an invisible minority in the conservative land out of the shadows, having secured a Supreme Court ruling affirming gay and transgender rights. KATMANDU, NEPAL -- Just eight years ago, Sunil Pant wondered whether there was anyone else in this Himalayan land like him. To his engineer s mind, it


Looking for Mr. Wright: The minister reveals that he's as radical and bigoted as his critics insist.
Los Angeles Times - April 29, 2008
jgoldberg@latimescolumnists.com
God bless the Rev. Jeremiah Wright! After Barack Obama gave his big race speech in mid-March, many critics noted that the Illinois senator had thrown his own grandmother under the bus to defend his controversial pastor. Well, Wright proved over the last few days that he would not be outdone. He not only threw Obama und


OPINION: No results? No research money. When even scientists acknowledge that 25 years of research haven't born any fruit, it's time to stop searching for an AIDS vaccine.
Los Angeles Times - April 25, 2008
Homayoon Khanlou and Michael Weinstein
The search for an AIDS vaccine has lost its scientific purpose and turned into a self-serving quest. How else to explain the remarks found in David Baltimore and Seth Berkley s Keep funding the AIDS vaccine ? Saying simply that AIDS vaccine development is hard is not a credible response to recent criticism leveled at t


OPINION: Keep funding the AIDS vaccine
Los Angeles Times - April 14, 2008
David Baltimore & Seth Berkley
In his Blowback, Stop AIDS vaccine research, Michael Weinstein suggested that U.S. government funding for AIDS vaccine research should stop and the money now being used to this end be redeployed to treatment. This very pessimistic view of the possibility of success in the vaccine quest is a misreading of the situation.


Bill Clinton, China linked via his foundation
Los Angeles Times - April 13, 2008
Stephen Braun, steve.braun@latimes.com
A firm that has donated to the president s charity is accused of collaborating with the government in its crackdown on Tibetan activists. Hillary Clinton has spoken out against China s actions. NEW YORK - As Chinese authorities have clamped down on unrest in Tibet and jailed dissidents in advance of the 2008 Olympics,


King-Harbor takeover candidate raises doubts
Los Angeles Times - April 7, 2008
Garrett Therolf, garrett.therolf@latimes.com
Some experts and community members fear Pacific Hospital is too small for the task. Some health experts and community leaders have criticized news that a small private hospital is the prime -- and perhaps only -- candidate for the contract to reopen Martin Luther King-Harbor Hospital, signaling possible continuing hurd


OPINION: More foreign aid for AIDS
Los Angeles Times - April 4, 2008
A $50-billion bill to fight AIDS and other diseases in Africa and elsewhere gives us reason to cheer. President Bush is going partway toward atoning for his sins in the Middle East by rebuilding Africa. His leadership in fighting disease and poverty on the continent culminated Wednesday with a breathtaking gesture from


OPINION: Stop AIDS vaccine research: The U.S. should focus its funds on providing treatment to people in need.
Los Angeles Times - April 4, 2008
Michael Weinstein
As the catalyst for the call to halt U.S. government funding of AIDS vaccine research, I was somewhat dismayed by The Times recent editorial, Revamping AIDS vaccine research, which took issue with the AIDS Healthcare Foundation s position without fully understanding it. Our position is this: In light of over 20 years o


Bush AIDS initiative gets bipartisan renewal
Los Angeles Times - April 3, 2008
James Hohmann, james.hohmann@latimes.com
Concessions are made as both sides authorize $50 billion through 2013 to greatly expand the president s initiative. WASHINGTON -- A bipartisan coalition in the House voted Wednesday to significantly expand a popular program aimed at combating HIV and AIDS around the world, renewing the President s Emergency Plan for AI


L.A. clinic offers care for Mayas
Los Angeles Times - April 2, 2008
Anna Gorman, anna.gorman@latimes.com
Clinica Romero reaches a community that has generally been reluctant to seek Western treatment. The Maya women sit patiently in the lobby of Clinica Oscar Romero, playing with their children and speaking in their native dialects of Kanjobal and Quiche. Idalia Xuncax knows all of the women. She is their guide, translato


Quick HIV test for veterans launched in L.A.
Los Angeles Times - April 2, 2008
Mary Engle, mary.engle@latimes.com
At a downtown facility near skid row, the VA can swab a person s mouth and get almost instant results. The VA Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System began offering 20-minute HIV tests at its downtown ambulatory care center Tuesday -- part of a campaign to encourage more veterans to get tested and treated for the virus.


OPINION: Revamping AIDS vaccine research
Los Angeles Times - April 1, 2008
Large-scale trials of potential AIDS vaccines have come up short. A narrower approach is better. The failure of a promising AIDS vaccine -- which not only didn t prevent HIV infection but may have increased susceptibility to the virus -- led to two conflicting calls for action, neither of which got it right. Recipients


Delicate decision: To circumcise or not?
Los Angeles Times - March 31, 2008
Marnell Jameson, Special to The Times
As the practice grows less common in the U.S., parents weigh the medical, social and religious pros and cons. FOR nearly all of Nada Mouallem s pregnancy, she and her husband, Tony, had a running argument. She wanted to have their son circumcised. He didn t. Many days, I d go off and research all the pros. He d go and


Delays thwart drug tracking system
Los Angeles Times - March 25, 2008
Marc Lifsher, marc.lifsher@latimes.com
The pharmaceutical industry says its needs more time to gear up for a novel state plan to fight counterfeiting. SACRAMENTO -- News of as many as 19 deaths in the United States linked to contaminated blood thinner heparin from China has generated new concerns about how to keep bad drugs from finding their way into the m


'A more perfect union' by Barack Obama
Los Angeles Times - March 19, 2008
These are the prepared remarks that the Illinois senator delivered today at the Constitution Center in Philadelphia. We the people, in order to form a more perfect union. Two hundred and twenty one years ago, in a hall that still stands across the street, a group of men gathered and, with these simple words, launched A


Hepatitis outbreak tied to alleged cost-cutting
Los Angeles Times - March 16, 2008
Ashley Powers, ashley.powers@latimes.com
LAS VEGAS -- Health officials here sensed something was wrong. It was January, and two acute cases of hepatitis C had been reported to authorities -- the number Clark County averages in a year. The patients, they soon discovered, had one thing in common: Both had undergone procedures at the same clinic. When investigat


Anti-meth campaign aimed at gay men
Los Angeles Times - March 14, 2008
Mary Engel, mary.engel@ latimes.com
California is spending $11 million to discourage use of the drug, which increases the risk of spreading HIV. California drug officials launched an $11-million barrage of billboards, bus wraps, cable TV ads and a website Thursday aimed at discouraging gay men from using methamphetamine, an illegal stimulant linked to ri


Editorial: TB emergency
Los Angeles Times - February 28, 2008
Drug-resistant forms of the disease are widespread, and time and money to fight it are short. In the early stages of the AIDS epidemic, most Americans were aware of the arrival of a horrible new disease that was spreading rapidly. But they weren t particularly afraid, because the victims were mostly outside the mainstr


Drug-resistant TB on the rise: It accounts for at least 5% of all new cases and far more in some places, WHO says
Los Angeles Times - February 27, 2008
Thomas H. Maugh II
A dangerous form of drug-resistant tuberculosis has reached its highest levels ever, accounting for at least 5 percent of all new TB cases worldwide, and 15 to 22 percent of new cases in parts of the former Soviet Union and China , the World Health Organization said Tuesday. The WHO report, the first new survey


AIDS agency sues L.A. over action on former hospice
Los Angeles Times - February 24, 2008
Mary Engel, mary.engel@latimes.com
Los Angeles largest nonprofit AIDS services agency is suing to stop the city from foreclosing on a onetime AIDS hospice that was built with a city housing loan and is now being used as offices for HIV case managers. The AIDS Healthcare Foundation opened Linn House, its third hospice, on donated land near West Hollywood


Editorial: Married to HIV
Los Angeles Times - February 22, 2008
President Bush s Africa plan doesn t acknowledge that often it s husbands who infect wives. President Bush returns from Africa, where he justifiably touted the success of his AIDS relief initiative, to face a battle with Congress over that laudable program. Bush wants to nearly double funding, to $30 billion over the n


HIV treatment becoming profitable
Los Angeles Times - February 21, 2008
Daniel Costello, daniel.costello@latimes.com
It wasn t long ago that the pharmaceutical industry viewed HIV drugs as more of a public service than possible bestsellers. Unlike in the case of cancer or heart disease, where drugs for patients in richer markets such as the United States and Europe can be instantly and startlingly profitable, two-thirds of people inf


U.S. not planning bases in Africa, Bush says: Nearing the end of his visit to the continent, he offers reassurance to Ghana's leader. He also defends his AIDS program.
Los Angeles Times - February 21, 2008
James Gerstenzang, james.gerstenzang @latimes.com
ACCRA, GHANA -- After crossing Africa from west to east and back, the central issues that followed President Bush on his tour all came together Wednesday in the white stucco Osu Castle here on the Atlantic shoreline. With gusto, the president declared that s baloney to the notion that the United States was pre


In Tanzania, Bush urges Congress to renew AIDS relief program as it is: Dems argue for less focus on abstinence, maybe more funding
Los Angeles Times - February 18, 2008
James Gerstenzang
Dar es Salaam, Tanzania -- With old and young providing testament to the success of a U.S.-funded effort to fight AIDS, President Bush on Sunday call for Congress to renew the program quickly and said that helping Africa is in the national and moral interests of the United States . The program pro


Bush visits Africa to make deals, tout HIV success: Rice tasked with calming the deadly crisis in Kenya
Los Angeles Times - February 17, 2008
James Gerstenzang
Dar es Salaam, Tanzania -- President Bush defended his decision to avoid Africa s most-troubled quarters on his trip across the continent s midsection Saturday, saying the United States is ready to help countries that make the right choices. For Bush, the trip underscores an effort over seven years to shift the way the


A continent fights a deadly disease
Los Angeles Times - February 15, 2008
President Bush is to visit Africa for a look at U.S.-sponsored HIV/AIDS programs. Here are some key details about AIDS in the region: AIDS in Africa * 68% of all people infected with HIV live in sub-Saharan Africa, where more than three-fourths of all AIDS-related deaths in 2007 occurred. * 1.7 million people in sub-Sa


New life for African AIDS patients
Los Angeles Times - February 15, 2008
Edmund Sanders, edmund.sanders@latimes.com
Thanks to U.S. funding, antiviral drugs are available to those too poor to afford them. The results are dramatic. URANGA, KENYA - This western Kenya village was slowly dying five years ago. One in three people was HIV-positive, then a virtual death sentence. Coffin-makers couldn t work fast enough and the nearby hospit


Rice to visit strife-torn Kenya
Los Angeles Times - February 14, 2008
James Gerstenzang, james.gerstenzang@latimes.com
Bush announces the move on the eve of his Africa trip, which will skirt the continent s trouble spots. WASHINGTON -- President Bush said today that he would send Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice to Kenya to try to bring an end to postelection violence, as he laid out a U.S. agenda in Africa to promote economic and p


Setback, hope in AIDS research
Los Angeles Times - February 11, 2008
Jia-Rui Chong, jia-rui.chong@latimes.com
BOSTON -- Several promising, large-scale trials trying to prevent the spread of HIV have produced sobering results, as researchers discussed at a meeting last week, but longer-term data on new treatments are proving encouraging. Much of the buzz at the 15th Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections, the l


Drugs cut HIV transmission via breast-feeding
Los Angeles Times - February 9, 2008
Jia-Rui Chong, jia-rui.chong@latimes.com
BOSTON -- The use of antiretroviral drugs by mother or baby for several months after delivery can significantly reduce the risk of transmitting the AIDS virus during breast-feeding, researchers reported this week. Public health officials have had great success blocking HIV transmission to newborns using the drugs


With HIV, growing older faster
Los Angeles Times - February 5, 2008
Mary Engel, mary.engel@latimes.com
Many gained years of life through drug cocktails, but the ailments of aging are showing up earlier. Larry Gibson first spotted Dennis Golay outside West Hollywood s French Market Place. By the time he was halfway across Santa Monica Boulevard, he d fallen in love. It was Nov. 14, 1981 -- Golay s 34th birthday. Seve


His needle plan has touched a nerve: A Texas lay chaplain faces jail time for handing out clean syringes to drug addicts to curtail the spread of HIV.
Los Angeles Times - January 28, 2008
miguel.bustillo@latimes.com
SAN ANTONIO -- Bill Day doesn t fancy himself an outlaw -- and with his Mr. Rogers demeanor, he definitely doesn t look the part. But soon the 73-year-old lay chaplain could spend up to a year in jail for breaking a law that he considers immoral. Day hands out clean needles to drug addicts on some of the seediest stree


Planned Parenthood kicks off lobbying effort
Los Angeles Times - January 23, 2008
Stephanie Simon, stephanie.simon@latimes.com
The group seeks to recruit 1 million people to vote for candidates who support its agenda -- including abortion rights and birth control. The political wing of Planned Parenthood on Tuesday announced an unprecedented voter-mobilization effort targeting the young, often low-income women who rely on the group s clinics f


They came with hope, left with unsold wares
Los Angeles Times - January 22, 2008
Sandy Banks, sandy.banks@latimes.com
In a near-empty exhibition room in a Santa Monica hotel, Dorothy Tarro packed up her table of unsold jewelry, purses and statues Monday afternoon for the long trip back home to Kenya . She had come to the World Women Trade Fair at the Doubletree expecting to find thousands of enthusiastic, free-spending shoppers in the


Aging Baby Boomers and seniors are at risk for HIV
Los Angeles Times - January 15, 2008
P.J. Huffstutter
KANSAS CITY, Mo. - Jane Fowler thinks it s about time college students had the talk with their grandparents. She doesn t mean grandmothers and grandfathers explaining the facts of life. She wants kids to explain safe sex to their elders. It s part of a broader message the 72-year-old has advocated for more than a decad


Ambition, reality at odds in gov.'s budget: Cutbacks will hit hard, especially if he keeps his no-new-taxes pledge
Los Angeles Times - January 11, 2008
Evan Halper, evan.halper@latimes.com
SACRAMENTO - Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger s ambitious policy agenda collided with fiscal reality Thursday as he rolled out a proposed budget that threatens to unravel his investment in schools, healthcare and criminal justice programs. At the same time he is pushing a $14-billion expansion of healthcare to nearly all Cal


'Wolf is back' at state budget door: The governor lays out his plan to pare a $14-billion shortfall. The key is a constitutional amendment to impose a spending cap.
Los Angeles Times - January 9, 2008
Michael Rothfeld, michael.rothfeld@latimes.com
SACRAMENTO - Returning to policies he advanced without success early in his tenure, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger called Tuesday for state government to permanently rein in spending and vowed not to raise taxes next year -- even as he prepared a budget that would increase insurance fees for millions of property owners.


Skid row's neediest may get housing and care
Los Angeles Times - January 8, 2008
Susannah Rosenblatt, susannah.rosenblatt@ latimes.com
Los Angeles 50 most at risk transients have been identified. Today, the county votes on a program to house them. Social service volunteers identified a 65-year-old homeless veteran as one of the people most likely to die on skid row in downtown Los Angeles. The man, who suffers from kidney and liver disease and has liv


AIDS archives
The Los Angles Times - January 2, 2008
AIDS archives Online summaries of the three AIDS archives are, or soon will be, available at the Online Archive of California at www.oac.cdlib.org. For more information on the individual archives, contact: www.onearchives.org or (213) 741-0094 www.glbthistory.org or (415) 777-5455 www.library.ucsf.edu/collres/archives/


Documenting the toll of AIDS: Archives in L.A. and San Francisco collect personal and official records of the costs and lessons of the epidemic.
The Los Angles Times - January 2, 2008
Larry Gordon, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
Twelve years after a Silver Lake man died, his pharmacy receipts and medical bills sit in a Los Angeles archive with a hand-written message declaring: The Cost of AIDS. In a San Francisco library, a massive photo collection capturing the exuberance of gay liberation in the 1970s and its tragic collision with AIDS fills


Gloria Reuben returns to groundbreaking ER role
Los Angeles Times - January 2, 2007
Greg Braxton, greg.braxton@latimes.com
Gloria Reuben raised more than a few eyebrows in 2000 when she went from the front lines of NBC s acclaimed ER to the back line of Tina Turner s rock n roll tour. Now she s starting the new year by stepping forward into her past. Reuben, who won accolades for her groundbreaking portrayal of Jeanie Boulet, a physician s


Lawyer finds redemption in helping poor
Los Angeles Times - January 1, 2008
Jessica Garrison, jessica.garrison@latimes.com
He used to be one of them. Now an attorney, he s dedicated to helping drug addicts and skid row residents. Legal aid lawyer Louis Rafti was leading a group of law students on a tour of skid row when he saw it in the corner of a homeless shelter. The cot. The very one, he could swear it was, that he had slept on during



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