
Associated Press (07.05.03) - Monday, July 07, 2003
Stevenson Jacobs
About 500,000 people in the Caribbean have the disease, threatening to cripple the labor force as it prepares for free- trade and increased competition, Douglas said. The number does not include Cuba, where infection rates are low. "HIV/AIDS continues to be the main threat to the development of the region," said Douglas, who oversees health matters in the 15- member Caribbean community.
Officials plan to make another push for cheaper AIDS drugs to boost access to treatment, Douglas said. He said leaders were considering an offer from Cuban President Fidel Castro to provide doctors and nurses to AIDS-stricken countries lacking adequate health care.
Douglas said governments would seek aid from the United Nations and other groups to "widen the net so that all Caribbean countries" can get help, referring to President Bush's $15 billion program to combat AIDS in Africa, and in the Caribbean countries of Haiti and Guyana. He said governments would set up a special HIV/AIDS commission in Georgetown, Guyana, with help from a $500,000 grant from the World Health Organization.
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