2008

Hillary Clinton weighing secretary of state post
Associated Press - November 19, 2008
Beth Fouhy
CHICAGO - Former President Bill Clinton has agreed to publicly disclose the names of most donors to his presidential foundation and library, a significant concession aimed at helping smooth the path for his wife to become the next secretary of state. Hillary Rodham Clinton, meanwhile, was expected to decide soon whethe


Zimbabwe doctors blame govt for cholera epidemic
Associated Press - November 19, 2008
Celean Jacobson
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa - A group of doctors said Wednesday that President Robert Mugabe s government is to blame for a cholera epidemic sweeping Zimbabwe and that the disease s spread there is being dramatically underreported. About 160 people have died of cholera in Zimbabwe in recent weeks, independent aid organi


Africa rejoices over Obama, but seeks own answers
Associated Press - November 19, 2008
Donna Bryson
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa - Two weeks after Africans danced for joy to see a black man elected president of the United States , a Kenyan newspaper columnist delivered a crisp warning to this complex and troubled continent: Obama is not the Great Black Hope. Africans will have to look for solutions within themselv


South African cartoonist makes light of Mandela
Associated Press - November 18, 2008
Celean Jacobson
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (AP) -- Don t worry, Nelson Mandela can laugh at himself. At least that s the opinion of Jonathan Shapiro, South Africa s leading political cartoonist for 20 years, whose work has not shied away from ridiculing the foibles of the anti-apartheid icon. In Shapiro s latest exhibit, the South


Clinton Foundation raised more than $124M in 2007
Associated Press - November 18, 2008
Andrew DeMillo
Little Rock, Ark. (AP) -- Former President Bill Clinton s nonprofit foundation raised more than $124 million last year as his wife sought the Democratic presidential nomination, according to tax forms recently filed with the Internal Revenue Service. Donations to the William J. Clinton Foundation face increased scrutin


Police seize fake medicines in Asia
Associated Press - November 17, 2008
PARIS: Interpol says police in China and five countries in Southeast Asia have seized $6.6 million worth of counterfeit antibiotics, anti-HIV drugs and other medicines. The international police agency says 16 million fake pills were uncovered in the operation, including drugs for fighting malaria and tuberculosis.


Woman who got HIV in transplant sues Illinois hospital
Associated Press - November 17, 2008
Mike Robinson
CHICAGO - A 33-year-old woman who claims she contracted HIV and hepatitis C from a kidney transplant sued the University of Chicago Medical Center and one of its doctors Monday, saying they should have told her the organ donor was gay. Attorney Thomas Demetrio, who represents the woman, said there was no way to estimat


Charlize Theron to aid UN helping battered women
Associated Press - November 17, 2008
UNITED NATIONS: Charlize Theron is the newest U.N. Messenger of Peace, turning her Academy Award-winning fame to ending violence against women and girls around the globe. Theron, 33, told reporters Monday after being inducted into the U.N. role that she was taking on her new responsibilities very humbly, with a very ex


Ohio man convicted for hiding HIV diagnosis
Associated Press - November 14, 2008
Mike Robinson
DELAWARE, Ohio - A jury in central Ohio found a man guilty of felonious assault Friday for not telling a girlfriend he has the virus that causes AIDS. Peter Ayala, 45, was charged in June under a state law making it a felony for a person who has tested positive for HIV to conceal it from a sexual partner. Following the


Playful campaign boosts India condom sales
Associated Press - November 14, 2008
NEW DELHI: Go ahead. Buy one. Don t be embarrassed. Playful television advertisements in India featuring a talking parrot and a puppy named Condom are helping increase condom sales in the country, where AIDS is a growing problem, health experts said Friday. The ads are intended to change the way people see condoms in t


Ohio man on trial, accused of hiding HIV diagnosis
Associated Press - November 14, 2008
DELAWARE, Ohio - A trial has opened for a central Ohio man accused of not telling a girlfriend he has the virus that causes AIDS. Forty-five-year-old Peter Ayala was charged in June with one count of felonious assault under a state law making it a felony for a person who tested positive for HIV to conceal it from a sex


Hundreds in Chile not told of positive HIV tests
Associated Press - November 13, 2008
SANTIAGO, Chile - Chile is scrambling to reach people who could be unknowingly spreading AIDS. Public health services failed to tell 512 people that they tested positive for HIV, and private-sector services failed to inform an estimated 1,700, Health Minister Alvaro Erazo told lawmakers Thursday. Chile s public hea


More countries make spreading HIV a crime
Associated Press - November 13, 2008
Maria Cheng
LONDON - An increasing number of countries worldwide are making spreading HIV a crime, according to a new report from the International Planned Parenthood Federation. Health officials fear the trend could undermine gains made in fighting the AIDS pandemic and provoke a surge in cases. Globally, about 33 million people


'Idol' gives back over $64 million to charities
Associated Press - November 12, 2008
LOS ANGELES - American Idol has allocated more than $64 million in grants to six U.S. and international charities from contributions to its Idol Gives Back fundraising event. The popular Fox singing competition s star-studded gala, held at the Kodak Theatre in April, featured musical performances by Miley Cyrus, Fergie


Dutch court sentences 2 men in HIV injection case
Associated Press - November 12, 2008
AMSTERDAM, Netherlands - A Dutch court convicted two men Wednesday for attempting to infect 14 victims with HIV in a bizarre sex case. The Groningen District Court found the two guilty of severe assault for injecting semiconscious men with HIV-infected blood at sex parties between January 2006 and May 2007. Peter M


Germany: Marrow transplant may have cured AIDS
Associated Press - November 12, 2008
Patrick McGroarty, Associated Press Writer
BERLIN - An American man who suffered from AIDS appears to have been cured of the disease 20 months after receiving a targeted bone marrow transplant normally used to fight leukemia, his doctors said Wednesday. While researchers -- and the doctors themselves -- caution that the case might be no more than a fluke, other


Bush looks back on past relief efforts in Africa
Associated Press - November 11, 2008
Christine Simmons
WASHINGTON - President Bush, reflecting on his time in office, said Wednesday that one of the most uplifting experiences of his nearly eight-year tenure has been witnessing the gains Africa has made in education and fighting hunger and disease. Speaking at a charity dinner, Bush called the work done for Africa by his a


Organ group sued after 2 recipients die of cancer
Associated Press - November 11, 2008
INDIANAPOLIS - Transplanted organs from a single donor spread skin cancer to two recipients who then died, claim two medical malpractice complaints against the Indiana Organ Procurement Organization. Anthony Taylor, 45, of South Bend received the liver and one kidney from the donor in October 2006 and died nine months


Paterson: Everybody will feel the pain
Associated Press - November 11, 2008
John Kekis
SYRACUSE, N.Y. - Taking his message of economic emergency to upstate New York, Gov. David Paterson minced no words at a town hall meeting on Tuesday, again warning that impending budget cuts would affect everyone. We are in uncharted territory right now. We need to address this economic crisis as soon as possible, Pat


Baltimore HIV/AIDS nonprofit posts closing notice
Associated Press - November 11, 2008
BALTIMORE - Baltimore s oldest nonprofit organization assisting those infected with the AIDS virus is closing its doors. The Health Education Resources Organization on Maryland Avenue, also known as HERO, has helped people with HIV/AIDS since 1983. A notice in its windows says it is closing Nov. 26. No reason for the c


Aid group to spend $2.75 billion to fight diseases
Associated Press - November 11, 2008
NEW DELHI: An international aid agency will spend $2.75 billion over the next two years to fight AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria in 140 countries, an official said. The Global Fund aims to cut the number of deaths from tuberculosis and malaria by half by 2015, Rajat Gupta, a top fund official, said in a statement issued


African researchers plan malaria vaccine trial
Associated Press - November 10, 2008
Donna Bryson
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa - A medical trial involving 16,000 children across Africa will be a challenge to human, scientific and communications resources on the world s poorest continent, three researchers hoping to develop the first malaria vaccine said Monday. Joe Cohen and Drs. Christian Loucq and Eusebio Macete sa


HIV-positive Cambodian man arrested in teen sex
Associated Press - November 8, 2008
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia - An HIV-positive Cambodian man was arrested after allegedly paying an underage orphan to have unprotected sex with him at a rural treatment center for the disease, police said Friday. Phat Sarath, 37, was arrested Thursday after his wife informed police she had walked in on her husband having sex


Zimbabwe returns $7.3 million to AIDS group
Associated Press - November 7, 2008
Ashok Sharma
NEW DELHI -- Zimbabwe s central bank has returned $7.3 million to an international aid agency that it confiscated last year, an official said Friday. The agency, the Global Fund, had announced a day earlier that it would not give any new funds to Zimbabwe to fight AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria until the money was retu


AIDS group to Zimbabwe bank: Return $7M donation
Associated Press - November 6, 2008
Ashok Sharma
NEW DELHI - An international aid agency will not give new health care funds to Zimbabwe to fight AIDS and other diseases until the country s central bank returns roughly $7 million of the group s donation, an agency official said Thursday. The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria says $7.3 million of the


Florida doctor sentenced in huge HIV-Medicare fraud
Associated Press - November 4, 2008
MIAMI - A 58-year-old Miami doctor was sentenced to seven years in prison for attempting to defraud the Medicare system out of $26.2 million. Ronald Harris pleaded guilty in August to two counts of conspiracy to defraud and three counts of submitting false Medicare claims in an HIV scheme. Using two clinics, Harris all


Mich. voters mull medical marijuana ballot measure
Associated Press - November 4, 2008
Jeff Karoub, Associated Press Writer
DETROIT - Supporters and opponents of a medical marijuana law were watching to see if the state would join the dozen others that allow severely ill patients to use the illegal drug. Voters were deciding Tuesday on Proposal 1, which would allow those patients to register with the state and legally buy, grow and use smal


AIDS group demands Zimbabwe return $7.3 million
Associated Press - Monday, November 3, 2008
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (AP) -- An international organization that fights AIDS and other communicable diseases is demanding that Zimbabwe return millions of dollars in donations it says were misused. The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria says it wants $7.3 million back from the $12.


AIDS-hit Swaziland promotes circumcision
Associated Press - Sunday, November 2, 2008
Clare Nullis, Associated Press Writer
MBABANE, Swaziland (AP) -- Nelson Mdlovu strides out of the small clinic with a spring in his step and a smile on his lips just minutes after being circumcised. Mdlovu swallowed his fears to line up with nine other equally nervous men for the 30-minute operation. They joined the ranks of hundreds of Swazi men who have


Massachusettes drug company official gets probation
Associated Press - October 31, 2008
BOSTON - The former medical director of a Massachusetts-based pharmaceutical company has been sentenced to probation after pleading guilty to promoting off-label use of computer devices in an effort to boost sales of an AIDS drug. Dr. Norma Muurahainen, who worked at Serono Laboratories Inc. on Norwell, was sentenced o


Starbucks joins with (RED) in drinks promotion
Associated Press - October 30, 2008
NEW ORLEANS: Starbucks Corp. is trying to refocus in a tough economy as a company with a conscience, announcing a partnership with Bono s (RED) label on Wednesday as it attempts to recover from a slowdown in consumer spending. The partnership with (RED), co-founded by the U2 frontman, will donate a portion of the proce


Bono: World has a stake in upcoming US election
Associated Press - October 30, 2008
Becky Bohrer
New Orleans (AP) -- U2 frontman and activist Bono said Wednesday that next week s presidential election provides a great opportunity to relaunch Brand USA amid worldwide scrutiny. The whole world has a stake in how things turn out, the Ireland native told thousands of Starbucks Corp.


Florida health officials to launch HIV/AIDS Web site
Associated Press - October 30, 2008
MIAMI -- Florida health officials are promoting a Web site aimed at getting women better informed about HIV and AIDS. The Web site is to be officially launched on Thursday. Called the Southern AIDS Living Quilt, it s part of a campaign to get women in the South tested. It also hopes to spark dialogue to end the social


Chile's health minister quits over AIDS scandal
Associated Press - October 29, 2008
SANTIAGO, Chile (AP) - Chile s Health Minister is resigning amid an uproar over the government s failure to notify people who had tested positive for AIDS. Presidential spokesman Francisco Vidal said Tuesday President Michelle Bachelet accepted the resignation of Soledad Barria. A television station reported this m


Kenya to probe alleged fraud in health programs
Associated Press - October 27, 2008
NAIROBI, Kenya : A Kenyan official says the government will investigate allegations of corruption in programs funded by a U.N.-backed agency to treat patients with AIDS, malaria or tuberculosis. Medical Services Minister Anyang Nyongo says the agency rejected Kenya s application for $208 million to finance future progr


St. Louis Planned Parenthood offers free HIV tests
Associated Press - October 27, 2008
ST. LOUIS - Planned Parenthood of the St. Louis Region is offering free HIV testing for area high school students after concerns that as many as 50 Normandy High School district students may have been exposed to HIV. Students at Normandy are being tested voluntarily at the school by the St. Louis County Health Departme


AIDS treatment should start sooner, study finds
Associated Press - Monday, October 27, 2008
Marilynn Marchione, AP Medical Writer
WASHINGTON, (AP) -- People who have the AIDS virus should start drug treatments sooner than current guidelines recommend, suggests a large new study that could change the care of hundreds of thousands of Americans. The study found that delaying treatment until a patient s immune system is badly damaged nearly doubles t


Studies: Newer HIV drugs more tolerable for many
Associated Press - October 26, 2008
TRENTON, New Jersey: Two HIV drugs approved last year for patients who have developed resistance to older drugs also work well in new patients, and with fewer troubling side effects than a widely used regimen, according to the drugs makers. Late-stage, company-funded studies on the drugs, aimed at winning approval to a


HIV scare puts Mo. school in uncertain territory
Associated Press - October 24, 2008
NORMANDY, Mo.: Students at a suburban St. Louis high school headed to the gymnasium for HIV testing this week after an infected person told health officials as many as 50 teenagers might have been exposed to the virus that causes AIDS. Officials refused to give details on who the person was or how the students at Norma


Official: 114 hepatitis cases may trace to clinics
Associated Press - October 23, 2008
Ken Ritter
LAS VEGAS, CA (AP) -- Investigators think they ve identified almost all the people who may have contracted the potentially deadly hepatitis C virus at two Las Vegas outpatient medical clinics, a top public health official said Thursday. In putting everything together, we ve identified 114 cases in total linked to the t


Kindergarten sex ed becoming mandatory in England
Associated Press - October 23, 2008
Nancy Zuckerbrod
LONDON -- It s a controversial idea in a land known for prudishness about sex - teaching kids as young as 5 about the birds and bees. But with one of the highest teen pregnancy rates in Europe, the British government is bringing sex education to all schools in England - including kindergartens. While countries like


Missouri: Testing After H.I.V. Scare at High School
Associated Press - October 22, 2008
Officials plan to start H.I.V. testing at a suburban St. Louis high school where as many as 50 students may have been exposed to the virus that causes AIDS. A St. Louis County spokesman said the mode of transmission in the scare at Normandy High School could include sexual activity, drug use, piercings or tattoos. The


Swedish health agency blasted for HIV stance
Associated Press - October 22, 2008
Louise Nordstrom, Associated Press Writer
STOCKHOLM, Sweden - A Swedish health agency revealed in an article published Wednesday that it had refused to help police track down people who knowingly infect others with HIV. The revelation triggered harsh criticism and the government agency, the Swedish Institute for Infectious Disease Control, agreed later in the


Bush: aid to poor nations especially needed now
Associated Press - October 21, 2008
Deb Riechmann
WASHINGTON (AP) -- Amid global economic turmoil, President Bush said Tuesday that it s more important than ever for the United States and other prosperous nations to help the less fortunate. During times of economic crisis, some may be tempted to turn inward -- focusing on our problems here at home while ignoring our i


First-degree murder trial involving HIV
Associated Press - October 21, 2008
HAMILTON, Ontario: A Canadian court started proceedings Monday in the country s first-ever first-degree murder trial involving the alleged sexual transmission of the HIV virus. Lawyers told the court that Johnson Aziga, 52, first learned he was HIV positive in 1997, but continued to have unprotected sex without disclos


African leader in AIDS fight wins $5 million prize
Associated Press - October 20, 2008
Nancy Zuckerbrod
LONDON -- He took an AIDS test publicly despite a deep stigma in Africa against the disease. He pressed to cut the prevalence of mothers passing the HIV virus onto their babies. He fought to make more anti-retroviral drugs available. Festus Gontebanye Mogae, the former president of Botswana , was honored Monday with


Advocates address challenges of gay seniors
Associated Press - October 19, 2008
David Crary
New York -- Frank Carter was once a globe-trotting professional dancer; his world is smaller now. He battles multiple health problems, walks with a cane and rarely leaves his compact Manhattan apartment. As an 86-year-old gay man, with no family nearby and many acquaintances long since dead, he d seem a likely prospect


AIDS researcher suffers typhoid in South Africa
Associated Press - October 17, 2008
BALTIMORE - A spokeswoman for AIDS researcher Robert Gallo says he suffered a severe bout of typhoid in South Africa that forced him to miss an appearance at a recent AIDS vaccine conference. Nora Grannell, a spokeswoman for the Baltimore-based Institute of Human Virology headed by Gallo, said the researcher was hospit


AIDS project being launched
Associated Press - October 17, 2008
NEW ORLEANS (AP) - A Web-based living quilt is set to be launched to focus attention on the issue of HIV and AIDS in the South. Organizers say the Southern AIDS Living Quilt project is meant to illustrate the impact of HIV/AIDS in the South, featuring video stories of women affected and describing what they call the di


UN urges Indonesia to stop imprisoning drug users
Associated Press - October 16, 2008
JAKARTA, Indonesia - The United Nations urged Indonesia on Thursday to treat drug abusers like patients, not criminals, saying the shift could help prevent an explosion in HIV infections. The roughly 28,000 drug users jailed by Indonesia should be in clinics, not detention facilities, said Christian Kroll, the U.N. glo


Gilead 3Q profit surges as HIV drug sales soar
Associated Press - October 16, 2008
-- Gilead Sciences posts 27 percent jump in 3rd-quarter profit as sales of HIV drugs jump FOSTER CITY, Calif. (AP) -- Biotechnology company Gilead Sciences Inc. on Thursday said its third-quarter profit shot up 27 percent, as sales of its drugs to treat HIV soared. The results topped Wall Street s expectations, and sha


Brazil to speed up AIDS project for Mozambique
Associated Press - October 16, 2008
MAPUTO, Mozambique : Brazilian officials are ready with US$4 million to get started on an AIDS drug factory promised for Mozambique five years ago. Brazilian Foreign Minister Celso Amorim said at a news conference in Mozambique s capital that the money was for the first building phase of the factory outside Maputo. He


Carlsbad biotech company files bankruptcy
Associated Press - October 15, 2008
CARLSBAD, Calif. - A San Diego County-based biotech company co-founded by the late Jonas Salk to develop an AIDS vaccine has filed Chapter 7 bankruptcy. The North County Times reported Wednesday that Orchestra Therapeutics, formerly known as The Immune Response Corp., filed court papers Monday in the U.S. Bankruptcy Co


HIV concerns raised at St. Louis-area school
Associated Press - October 15, 2008
Jim Salter
ST. LOUIS - The St. Louis County Health Department on Wednesday raised concerns that some students at Normandy High School may have been exposed to HIV, the virus that causes AIDS. Health department director Dr. Dolores Gunn said the concern was raised after someone tested positive for HIV and that may have led to the


Drug czar says medical marijuana is bad medicine
Associated Press - October 15, 2008
Ben Leubsdorf
DETROIT - A ballot proposal that would legalize medical marijuana is bad medicine for Michigan, according to the nation s top anti-drug official. John Walters, director of the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy, said in an interview Wednesday that proponents rely on sympathy, not hard facts, to gain sup


Yes on A: A new S.F. General
Associated Press - October 15, 2008
San Francisco General Hospital serves many vital roles. It is the only top-level, 24/7 trauma center in the city. It houses the nation s premier AIDS ward. It is the only alternative for the uninsured or Medi-Cal patients who can t find a doctor to treat them for the program s paltry reimbursement rates. It is also the


Trial opens in AIDS-infection case
Associated Press - October 15, 2008
Opening statements began Tuesday in a lawsuit that claims a man gave his ex-wife AIDS on their honeymoon. The couple were identified in court papers only as Bridget B. and John B. He engaged in reckless, risky, unprotected sexual conduct with numerous men while he was dating Bridget and through their marriage, argued


Scientists at conference in S Africa say economic crisis will hinder search for AIDS vaccine
Associated Press - October 14, 2008
Clare Nullis, Associated Press Writer
CAPE TOWN, South Africa (AP) - The global economic turmoil is likely to take its toll on AIDS research funding and add to the problems plaguing the search for a vaccine against the virus, scientists warned Tuesday. Anthony Fauci, director of the U.S. National Institutes of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said it was i


Aid agencies: world's poor will be biggest victims
Associated Press - October 14, 2008
Alexander G. Higgins
GENEVA, Switzerland (AP) -- The world s poorest people will be hungrier, sicker and have fewer jobs as a result of the global financial crisis, and cash-strapped aid agencies will be less able to help, aid groups are warning. The charities that provide food, medicine and other relief on the ground say cutbacks have alr


South Africa's new health minister reverses policy on HIV/AIDS
Associated Press - October 14, 2008
CAPE TOWN, SOUTH AFRICA -- South Africa s new health minister broke dramatically on Monday from a decade of discredited government policies on AIDS, declaring that the disease was unquestionably caused by HIV and must be treated with conventional medicine. Health Minister Barbara Hogan s pronouncement marked the offici


Scientists bleak about AIDS vaccine prospects
Associated Press - October 14, 2008
CAPE TOWN, South Africa -- Scientists attending an international AIDS conference in South Africa say the global economic turmoil is likely to take its toll on research funding and add to the problems plaguing the elusive search for a vaccine. Anthony Fauci, director of the U.S. National Institutes of Allergy and Infect


Chinese dissidents miss out on Nobel peace prize
Associated Press - October 10, 2008
Doug Mellgren and Matti Huuhtanen
OSLO, Norway (AP) -- Former Finnish President Martti Ahtisaari won the Nobel Peace Prize Friday, but this year the news was as much about who didn t Critics say the secretive, five-member panel missed a golden opportunity to reward Chinese dissidents and highlight human rights abuses in


Magic Johnson critical of hosts after AIDS remarks
Associated Press - October 10, 2008
Doug Glass
MINNEAPOLIS - Magic Johnson criticized a pair of talk show hosts Friday for accusing him of faking AIDS but said he didn t want them to be fired. Chris Baker and Langdon Perry of KTLK in Minneapolis made the remarks during Baker s conservative radio show on Wednesday. After Johnson condemned the statements, the station


Radio talkers accuse Magic Johnson of faking AIDS
Associated Press - October 10, 2008
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - Magic Johnson says he s outraged that a pair of Minneapolis talk radio hosts accused him of faking AIDS. KTLK s Chris Baker and Langdon Perry made the remarks during Baker s conservative talk show on Wednesday. The context for the remarks wasn t clear. According to a partial transcript and audio clip


Station apologizes for comments about Magic
Associated Press - October 10, 2008
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - A Minneapolis radio station said Friday it would air public service announcements on HIV/AIDS after a pair of talk hosts accused former NBA star Magic Johnson of faking AIDS. KTLK s Chris Baker and Langdon Perry made the remarks during Baker s conservative talk show on Wednesday. After Johnson condem


Clinic under fire over licensing, record keeping
Associated Press - October 10, 2008
PHOENIX - A review by state health officials of a nonprofit Hispanic group s clinic revealed several problems including issues with licensing and record keeping. The report, released by the Arizona Department of Health Services, said the Chicanos Por La Causa Inc. outpatient facility in south-central Phoenix was not li


UN food program finds hunger in rural Zimbabwe
Associated Press - October 9, 2008
Donna Bryson
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa - Some rural Zimbabweans facing one of the hungriest years they could remember have been forced to live on a meal a day and in some cases only on wild fruits, the U.N. food aid agency said Thursday. The World Food Program appealed for donations to help fight hunger in Zimbabwe, straining as a


China opposes Peace Prize for rights activist
Associated Press - October 9, 2008
BEIJING - China said Thursday that a prominent Chinese human rights activist should not be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize, saying such an honor would go against the spirit of the award. Jailed dissident Hu Jia is considered among the front-runners for the prize to be announced Friday. No short list of potential Nobel la


Superstar Dallas preacher goes international
Associated Press - October 9, 2008
Donna Bryson
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa - It s time for Americans to look and pray beyond their borders, Bishop T.D. Jakes said Thursday as he prepared to take a major step in that direction with a revival meeting in South Africa. The superstar preacher, pastor of the Dallas megachurch The Potter s House and best-selling author was


Laureates: Financial crisis may hit AIDS funding
Associated Press - October 8, 2008
PARIS - Two French researchers who shared the Nobel Prize in medicine for discovering the AIDS virus are voicing fears that the world financial crisis will hurt funding to fight the disease. Luc Montagnier and Francoise Barre-Sinoussi say they told President Nicolas Sarkozy of their concerns that both research and inte


US, Japan favored for Nobel chemistry prize
Associated Press - October 7, 2008
Karl Ritter and Matt Moore
STOCKHOLM, Sweden - U.S. and Japanese researchers are among the favorites to win the Nobel Prize in chemistry, but don t expect any recent discoveries to get the nod. The prize committee at the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences typically awards decades-old research that has withstood the test of time. Possible fiel


China suggests Nobel should not go to activist
Associated Press - October 7, 2008
BEIJING - China s foreign ministry suggested Tuesday that it hopes Chinese human rights activists will not win this year s Nobel Peace Prize, saying the award should go to the right people. Dissidents Gao Zhisheng and Hu Jia, both arrested and jailed through the Beijing Olympics to keep them out of the public eye, are


University at Buffalo gets $7.6M for AIDS research
Associated Press - October 7, 2008
BUFFALO, N.Y. - The University at Buffalo has been awarded a $7.6 million contract to help AIDS researchers in developing countries conduct proper clinical trials. The seven-year award from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases is one of the largest UB has ever received. The university s School of P


Pfizer continues realigning with 3 new units
Associated Press - October 7, 2008
Linda A. Johnson
TRENTON, N.J. - Pfizer Inc. (PFE, News), continuing its drive to create more focused business units, told employees worldwide Tuesday it is replacing its current geographic divisions with new ones focused on primary care, specialty care and operations in emerging markets. The shift is aimed at enabling the company t


Marysville doctor opens care center in Malawi
Associated Press - October 6, 2008
Jesse Dunsmore
MARYSVILLE, Mich. - Patients may visit Rod McLane at his office, Spine and Sport Chiropractic Center in Marysville, for back problems. But they will come to his center in Malawi , Africa, with considerably more dire circumstances. McLane s foundation, Hope Endeavors, recently opened the HIV/AIDS Rehabilitation, Feeding


Nobels awarded for AIDS, cancer virus research
Associated Press - October 6, 2008
Malcolm Ritter
Two French scientists who discovered the AIDS virus and a German who defied convention in showing a viral cause for cervical cancer shared the Nobel Prize in medicine Monday for breakthroughs that have led to lifesaving drugs and a vaccine. Francoise Barre-Sinoussi and Luc Montagnier of France were cited for t


Nobel is postscript to bitter 1980s HIV dispute
Associated Press - October 6, 2008
Malcolm Ritter
The awarding of the Nobel Prize in medicine on Monday writes a postscript to a bitter scientific dispute in the 1980s over who deserved credit for discovering HIV and the resulting test to screen blood for it. The Nobel committee honored French scientist Dr. Luc Montagnier and a collaborator for discovering the virus.


German, Two French Researchers Share Nobel Prize in Medicine
Associated Press - October 6, 2008
STOCKHOLM -- Germany s Harald zur Hausen and French researchers Francoise Barre-Sinoussi and Luc Montagnier shared the 2008 Nobel Prize in medicine Monday for discovering the AIDS virus and the role of viruses in cervical cancer. Ms. Barre-Sinoussi and Mr. Montagnier were cited for their discovery of human immunodefici


Gay elders' distinctive challenges get closer look
Associated Press - October 4, 2008
David Crary
NEW YORK - Frank Carter was once a globe-trotting professional dancer; his world is smaller now. He battles multiple health problems, walks with a cane and rarely leaves his compact Manhattan apartment. As an 86-year-old gay man, with no family nearby and many acquaintances long since dead, he d seem a likely prospect


Washington defines 60-day medical pot supply
Associated Press - October 3, 2008
Gene Johnson
SEATTLE - The state Health Department on Thursday defined a two-month supply of medical marijuana as 24 ounces of usable pot and up to 15 plants, a limit designed to end a decade of confusion over how much patients are allowed to have. But patient advocates criticized the limit as arbitrary and insufficient, saying it


Protesters briefly interrupt governor
Associated Press - October 3, 2008
NEW YORK - Protesters seeking more aid for people suffering from HIV/AIDS have briefly interrupted Gov. David Paterson s meeting with legislative leaders unveiling dire economic news. The protesters disrupted the meeting early with chants of We want a meeting! Paterson smiled from the panel, unable to see what the prot


Group opposes medical-marijuana ballot measure
Associated Press - October 2, 2008
Ben Leubsdorf
SOUTHFIELD, Mich. - If Michigan voters approve a medical-marijuana ballot initiative next month, the state will enter a minefield of unintended consequences, according to a newly formed group opposing the measure. Citizens Protecting Michigan s Kids made its debut Thursday with a morning press conference at a hospital


Plainfield man arrested on HIV exposure charge
Associated Press - October 2, 2008
CEDAR FALLS, Iowa - A Plainfield man has been charged with allegedly exposing another person to the virus that causes AIDS. Thirty-four-year-old Nick Rhoades is charged with criminal transmission of HIV. He was arrested on Monday at University Hospitals in Iowa City. Police say Rhoades met a Cedar Falls man online and


4 NYPD officers with HIV get disability pensions
Associated Press - October 2, 2008
NEW YORK - Four NYPD police officers who contracted the HIV virus while on duty have been granted disability pensions. The cases were disclosed as part of a lawsuit filed by a retired female officer who says she too was infected on the job and wants a tax-free pension. Called Jane Doe in Brooklyn Federal Court, she all


Missing in Mexico: One condom-mobile
Associated Press - October 1, 2008
Maria Gallucci
MEXICO CITY - Missing in Mexico: One truck carrying 5,000 condoms, 800 HIV tests and a 23-foot (7 meter) inflatable prophylactic. The coordinator of an HIV/AIDS awareness tour, Polo Gomez, said Wednesday that the Condomovil was parked in front of a friend s house in Mexico City when it disappeared Sunday evening. He be


Study traces AIDS virus origin to 100 years ago
Associated Press - Wednesday, October 1, 2008
Malcolm Ritter, AP Science Writer
NEW YORK: The AIDS virus has been circulating among people for about 100 years, decades longer than scientists had thought, a new study suggests. Genetic analysis pushes the estimated origin of HIV back to between 1884 and 1924, with a more focused estimate at 1908. Previously, scientists had estimated the origin at ar


Abortion, AIDS, stem cells: 'Private Practice' brings bioethical issues to prime-time TV
Associated Press - September 30, 2008
Sandy Cohen
LOS ANGELES (AP) - On a massive sound stage at Hollywood s Raleigh Studios, a woman is dying of ovarian cancer. One doctor wants to treat her traditionally, by removing her uterus and ovaries. Another wants the patient to participate in a clinical trail that might preserve her ability to have children, but could have s


Iowa man drops HIV lawsuit against McDonald's
Associated Press - September 29, 2008
DYERSVILLE, Iowa - A man who filed a lawsuit claiming he was fired from his job at a Dyersville McDonald s because he was gay and has HIV has dropped the case. Daniel Carver of Epworth dropped the lawsuit last week. Court records did not indicate whether a settlement was reached in the case. All I can tell you is that


U.S. hearts open wider to children with HIV
Associated Press - September 28, 2008
ADDIS ABABA, ETHIOPIA -- Solomon Henderson inherited just three things from his birth parents, who left him at an Ethiopian orphanage when he was a year old: a picture of Jesus, a plastic crucifix and HIV. As one of about 14,000 Ethiopian children born with the virus every year, Solomon s prospects for survival, much l


Newman planned for charitable legacy after death
Associated Press - September 28, 2008
Susan Haigh
HARTFORD, Conn. - Paul Newman broached the subject of his philanthropic legacy several years ago while fishing with friends Robert Forrester and David Horvitz off the Outer Banks of North Carolina. Even though he was a Hollywood icon - a 10-time Academy Award nominee known for his performances in such classic films as


South African leader vows to fight crime, poverty
Associated Press - September 28, 2008
Celean Jacobson
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa - South Africa s new president went on television Sunday seeking to calm the nation after a week of political drama, saying the government is pressing ahead to combat poverty, unemployment and crime. Kgalema Motlanthe, 59, a mild-mannered former freedom fighter, was installed Thursday after f


CosmoGirl essay sends southern Md. girl to Africa
Associated Press - September 28, 2008
CALIFORNIA, Md. - Christina Dawson s time in Peru and Malaysia , coupled with a desire to work abroad after college, filled her heart with the knowledge and her pen with the words to win an essay to become a youth ambassador. After winning a contest along with 19 other teenagers, the sout


South Africa's removal of health minister praised
Associated Press - September 26, 2008
Clare Nullis
CAPE TOWN, South Africa -- AIDS activists on Friday celebrated the removal of South Africa s health minister, accused of causing countless unnecessary deaths by promoting nutritional supplements instead of conventional medicine for people with HIV. New President Kgalema Motlanthe, within hours of taking office Thursday


UN chief: $16B being given to help world's poor
Associated Press - September 25, 2008
Edith M. Lederer
UNITED NATIONS - Bill Gates said Thursday the U.N. s goals to fight poverty have grabbed the world s attention - and the U.N. chief said the world has responded with more than $16 billion despite the current financial crisis. This has exceeded all our expectations, Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said at the end of a day


Leaders try to rid world of malaria deaths by 2015
Associated Press - September 25, 2008
John Heilprin
UNITED NATIONS - Malaria as a mass child killer would be virtually eliminated globally by 2015 under a plan backed by nearly $3 billion in pledges, officials said Thursday. With the number of malaria deaths approaching 1 million a year, most of them infants and toddlers, the infectious disease has become a scourge in r


Star power meets philanthropy with celeb charities
Associated Press - September 25, 2008
Megan K. Scott
NEW YORK - Bono battles the AIDS epidemic. Leonardo tries to make the world a greener place, and Martha has a soft spot for animals. For today s celebs, charity work is almost as much a part of the job as walking the red carpet. Famous names have become affiliated with preventing domestic violence, curing breast cancer


Anti-apartheid activist becomes South Africa president
Associated Press - September 25, 2008
Clare Nullis
CAPE TOWN, South Africa - A mild-mannered anti-apartheid activist on Thursday became the third president of South Africa since the end of white rule, vowing to foster unity in a country shaken by a power feud between its past and future leaders. Kgalema Motlanthe is widely seen as a caretaker president until next year


Executive sentenced in Serono fraud case
Associated Press - September 24, 2008
Jay Lindsay
BOSTON - The president of a medical device company was sentenced Wednesday to three years probation and fined $10,000 for plotting with Swiss-based Serono Laboratories to increase sales of an AIDS drug by manipulating a test for AIDS patients. Rudolph Liedtke, president of Michigan-based RJL Sciences, pleaded guilty to


Medical device exec manipulated AIDS drug sales
Associated Press - September 24, 2008
Denise Lavoie
BOSTON - The president of a medical device company has been sentenced to three years probation and ordered to pay a $10,000 fine for conspiring to promote sales of an AIDS drug by manipulating a test for AIDS patients. Rudolph Liedtke (LIT -kee), president of Michigan-based RJL Sciences, was sentenced Wednesday in Bost


Pfizer, Nobel winner team up on health program
Associated Press - September 24, 2008
Linda A. Johnson
TRENTON, N.J. - Drugmaker Pfizer Inc. is working with the founder of Nobel Peace Prize-winning Bangladeshi microlender Grameen Bank to improve health care delivery - and eventually boost sales of its drugs - in poor countries. The project will work with the bank s affiliated health care system, Grameen Health, which ru


Group releases HIV report card for DC
Associated Press - September 24, 2008
WASHINGTON - An advocacy group is praising the District of Columbia for supporting needle exchanges in an effort to reduce the spread of AIDS. The D.C. Appleseed Center for Law and Justice on Wednesday released its fourth report card since 2005 on efforts to slow Washington s AIDS epidemic. The city was graded in eleve


Schwarzenegger signs California budget 85 days late
Associated Press - September 23, 2008
Judy Lin
SACRAMENTO, Calif. - Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger signed the most overdue state budget in California history Tuesday, skipping the usual fanfare because he said the Legislature s efforts on the $144.5 billion spending plan were nothing to celebrate. Nearly a quarter of the way through its fiscal year, the state finally h


NJ supremacist group distributes anti-Obama fliers
Associated Press - September 23, 2008
Samantha Henry
TRENTON, N.J. - Some residents of a northwestern New Jersey town received fliers last weekend that criticized the prospect of Democrat Barack Obama becoming the first black president. One national watchdog group said it may be the first distribution of racist fliers during the campaign. Roxbury Mayor Tim Smith said the


China warns of tougher punishment for bad blood
Associated Press - September 23, 2008
BEIJING: Agents who collect or supply blood that causes death or serious illness face stricter punishments starting Tuesday in an attempt by Chinese authorities to crack down on the illegal sale of blood. Those found guilty of collecting or supplying blood that causes at least five people to contract AIDS, hepatitis B,


South African finance minister quits but could stay
Associated Press - September 22, 2008
Clare Nullis
CAPE TOWN, South Africa - South Africa s finance minister resigned along with most leading Cabinet members Tuesday but tried to reassure a shaken business community and stock market by saying he was willing to serve the country s new administration. Finance Minister Trevor Manuel was finance minister for 11 years and i


2008 MacArthur Foundation fellows
Associated Press - September 22, 2008
The following 25 fellows each will receive $500,000 over the next five years from the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation: -Chimamanda Adichie, 31, fiction writer, Columbia, Md. Using events inspired by her native Nigeria , Adichie explores ethnic conflict in novels and stories. -Will Allen, 59, urban far


Orthodox church settles suit claiming priest abuse
Associated Press - September 22, 2008
SAN FRANCISCO - A mentally ill parishioner has reached a settlement in his lawsuit against a San Francisco Eastern Orthodox church and an HIV-positive priest he accused of sexual abuse. The unnamed plaintiff s 2006 suit claims the Greek Orthodox Metropolis church turned a blind eye to the alleged misconduct of the Rev.


UN chief asks rich nations to spend $72B on Africa
Associated Press - September 22, 2008
Edith M. Lederer
UNITED NATIONS (AP) - Under the cloud of a global financial crisis, Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon on Monday urged the world s rich nations to spend $72 billion a year to help Africa achieve U.N. goals to fight poverty, improve health and ensure universal primary education. He told the opening of a high-level meeting on


South Africa's Mbeki resigns after power struggle
Associated Press - September 21, 2008
Clare Nullis
CAPE TOWN, South Africa - South African President Thabo Mbeki told the nation Sunday that he had resigned, having lost a power struggle to a rival tainted by allegations of corruption but poised now to lead the country. In a somber but dignified speech focusing on the successes and shortcomings of his nine-year preside


ANC forces South African President Mbeki to resign
Associated Press - September 20, 2008
Donna Bryson
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa - President Thabo Mbeki bowed to heavy pressure from his own party to resign Saturday, tossed to the sidelines of the economic powerhouse he built up as punishment for allegedly abusing his power in trying to quash a popular rival. The swiftness of the ouster likely will stoke fears about the


Affable Zuma has wide appeal among South Africans
Associated Press - September 20, 2008
Donna Bryson
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa - Affable populist Jacob Zuma could teach other politicians a thing or two about resiliency. The man in line to be South Africa s next president has a resume typical of the black activists who helped end apartheid - impoverished childhood, political awakening, guerrilla training, Robben Islan


Administration urged to end HIV travel ban
Associated Press - September 20, 2008
Jim Abrams
WASHINGTON - Experts at an early August international AIDS conference in Mexico City were full of praise for the United States for having reversed a 15-year-old law banning HIV-positive people from entering the country. But nearly two months after President Bush signed that act into law, his administration has yet to t


More consolidation seen in generic drug industry
Associated Press - September 19, 2008
WASHINGTON: A wave of consolidation that has reshaped the generic drug industry in recent years will continue, experts say, as companies like Teva Pharmaceutical Industries and Mylan Inc. compete for new business in emerging global markets. This year already has seen a record level of buyouts with acquisitions valued a


WHO: Recalculation cuts malaria cases by half
Associated Press - September 18, 2008
Eliane Engeler
GENEVA - The World Health Organization halved its estimate of the number of people who get malaria each year, saying Thursday that better measurement techniques had cut the number from 500 million people to 247 million. The U.N. agency, which issued the revised figure in its World Malaria Report 2008, said the new esti


16 students pricked by lancets tested for diseases
Associated Press - September 18, 2008
GOSHEN, Ind. (Map, News) - Sixteen northern Indiana students who were pricked by blood-testing lancets by three eighth-grade classmates were tested Thursday for contagious diseases. The three Goshen Middle School students accused of jabbing their classmates face preliminary charges of battery and could face additional


Brazil to produce generic AIDS drug
Associated Press - September 18, 2008
BRASILIA, Brazil : Brazil s health minister says Latin America s biggest country will produce an inexpensive generic version of an AIDS drug made by Merck & Co. Jose Gomes Temporao said Wednesday the decision to produce efavirenz , a generic version of Stocrin, was taken because


Train engineer faced challenges in final years
Associated Press - September 17, 2008
Greg Risling
LOS ANGELES - In the years leading up to his death in the locomotive of a commuter train, engineer Robert Sanchez s life was marked by personal tragedy, jail time, and concerns about his health and job security. His HIV-positive companion had committed suicide, he was concerned about his diabetes and he feared a brush


Brad Pitt donates money to support gay marriage
Associated Press - September 17, 2008
LOS ANGELES - Brad Pitt has donated $100,000 to fight California s November ballot initiative that would overturn the state Supreme Court decision legalizing same-sex marriage. It s the first time voters will be asked to ban same-sex marriage in a state where gay couples already have won the right to wed. Same-sex marr


J&J reports anemia drug linked to deaths in study
Associated Press - September 17, 2008
Linda A. Johnson
TRENTON, N.J. - A blockbuster anemia drug made by a Johnson & Johnson company has been linked to the deaths of some patients in an experiment testing whether it could help stroke patients. J&J s Ortho Biotech unit said late Wednesday that it had learned of preliminary data from a study in which participants wer


UN chief fears world impact of US financial crisis
Associated Press - September 16, 2008
Edith M. Lederer
UNITED NATIONS - Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon expressed deep concern Tuesday that the U.S. financial crisis will have a serious global impact, especially on rich donor nations that play key roles in fighting poverty. He urged a resumption of stalled world trade talks, which the U.N. sees as crucial to opening world ma


FDA blocks imports from India's generic drug giant
Associated Press - September 16, 2008
Lauran Neergaard
WASHINGTON - The government closed U.S. borders Tuesday to more than 30 generic drugs - including popular antibiotics and cholesterol medicines - made by India s biggest pharmaceutical company, citing poor quality in two of its factories. The Food and Drug Administration s move doesn t end U.S. sales by


Aid agencies hopeful of feeding Zimbabwe
Associated Press - September 15, 2008
Alexander G. Higgins
GENEVA - Aid agencies on Monday welcomed the new power-sharing government in Zimbabwe as giving hope that they will be able to step up food deliveries to millions of people facing hunger and worse. The food situation in Zimbabwe has reached crisis point, said Matthew Cochrane of the international Red Cross. There are


Jolie, Pitt donate $2 million for Ethiopian clinic
Associated Press - September 15, 2008
NEW YORK -- Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt are giving back to the country where their 3-year-old daughter Zahara was born. The couple have donated $2 million to help fight HIV/AIDS and tuberculosis in Ethiopia , said the Global Health Committee, which announced the donation by the Jolie-Pitt Foundation. The organizat


World Bank head urges help for "fragile" states
Associated Press - September 13, 2008
WASHINGTON: World Bank President Robert Zoellick warned Friday that the international community must work harder in aiding so-called fragile states, home to about 20 percent of the world s population, or risk them becoming the safe havens for terrorists. Zoellick said such nations, which range from


UNICEF: child mortality down 27 percent since 1990
Associated Press - September 12, 2008
Edith M. Lederer
UNITED NATIONS - The U.N. Children s Fund said Friday the number of children who die before the age of five has declined by 27 percent over the last two decades, and the rate is expected to continue falling. According to new UNICEF figures, there were 68 deaths per 1,000 live births around the world in 2007 compared wi


British rock band Queen sings to tens of thousands of Ukrainians in AIDS charity concert
Associated Press - September 12, 2008
Olga Bondaruk
KHARKIV, Ukraine - Queen sang to tens of thousands of Ukrainians in a charity concert meant to raise money and AIDS awareness in this ex-Soviet republic. Cheering fans packed the central square Friday in Ukraine s second-largest city, to listen to the legendary British rock band, whose lead vocalist Freddie Mercury die


Security levels for biological agents
Associated Press - September 12, 2008
Laboratory standards are based on a biosafety level assigned to specific infectious biological agents. Some agents are handled at different levels depending on the type of work being done and the concentration of the specimen. - Biosafety Level 1 (BSL-1): Well-characterized agents not known to consistently cause diseas


Judge throws out corruption charges against Zuma
Associated Press - September 12, 2008
Clare Nullis
PIETERMARITZBURG, South Africa (AP) - A South African judge threw out fraud and corruption charges against ANC President Jacob Zuma on Friday, effectively clearing the way for the 66-year-old former freedom fighter to become the country s next president. Judge Chris Nicholson s ruling included biting criticism of prose


Parents change kids' worlds with adoption
Associated Press - September 11, 2008
Aaron Dohogne
CAPE GIRARDEAU, Mo. - Since 1998, families in the U.S. have adopted an average of 2,576 children per year from Guatemala . In Cape Girardeau, eight families have adopted nine children - seven girls and two boys - from the Latin American country. Most of the families said they adopted from outside the U.S. for spiritual


DC hopes needle exchanges curb soaring AIDS rate
Associated Press - September 11, 2008
Brian Westley
WASHINGTON - Reggie Jackson spends much of his day inside a Winnebago, riding through the city s hard-scrabble neighborhoods to hand out clean syringes in exchange for dirty ones. We re saving lives, man, Jackson says. He s on a mission to protect drug addicts from HIV, which Jackson learned he had in 1990 after years


South Africa's Zuma defends criticism of judges
Associated Press - September 9, 2008
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa : The head of South Africa s governing party defended his right to criticize judges Tuesday, speaking to a friendly audience three days before a hearing in his corruption case. African National Congress President Jacob Zuma has been accused of undermining the judiciary in South Africa s fledg


Gates Foundation looks for unorthodox projects
Associated Press - September 9, 2008
SEATTLE - The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation is looking for unorthodox, unproven ideas for fighting diseases like AIDS, malaria and pneumonia. The second round of the foundation s Grand Challenges Explorations grants will give $100,000 each to projects with potential. The ideas are welcomed from all kinds of scien


Pennsylvania woman reaches plea bargain in AIDS fraud
Associated Press - September 8, 2008
EASTON, Pa. - A 29-year-old eastern Pennsylvania woman who pretended to have AIDS to collect medical and welfare benefits has worked out a plea bargain. Cassey Jo Weierbach faces up to 17 years in prison when sentenced Nov. 3 in Northampton County Court. The Bethlehem woman pleaded no contest Monday to one count of fel


EVMS gets $100M HIV research grant
Associated Press - September 8, 2008
NORFOLK, Va. - Eastern Virginia Medical School is receiving a $100 million grant to develop a product to prevent the transmission of the virus that causes AIDS. The federal grant awarded by the U.S. Agency for International Development is the largest in the Norfolk school s history. Officials say the grant will further


AIDS support group set to march in Mississippi
Associated Press - September 7, 2008
An AIDS support group is set to march from Jackson to Oxford on Sept. 13 in a demonstration it hopes will lead to a national strategy to combat the spread of the disease. The Campaign to End AIDS group will begin the march in Jackson and end it in Oxford on Sept 23. The group says it wants to urge the federal governmen


Miss Universe returns home to Venezuela
Associated Press - September 7, 2008
CARACAS, Venezuela : Venezuelans have welcomed home newly crowned Miss Universe Dayana Mendoza, the fifth beauty queen from the country to win the title. The 22-year-old Mendoza said after arriving Saturday that her triumph is dedicated to the Venezuelans, who have always supported me, who have believed in me. She


Illinois Lottery reports record sales
Associated Press - September 7, 2008
SPRINGFIELD, Ill. - The Illinois Lottery had a record fiscal year 2008 with more than $2 billion in sales. The lottery reported in a statement last week that its $2.078 billion in sales is the most it has earned in its 34-year history. The figure is 2.8 percent more than fiscal year 2007 sales. Lottery officials say of


'Rent' brings down the curtain on Broadway run
Associated Press - September 7, 2008
Michael Kuchwara
NEW YORK - They cheered, they cried and gave the show a standing ovation even before the first note was sung. Broadway said goodbye Sunday to Rent, 12 years and 5,124 performances after it first became a rock musical with a message for theatergoers of all ages. Like we did when we opened, we dedicate this performance t


Oregon marijuana center closes over squabble
Associated Press - September 7, 2008
EUGENE, Ore. - The medical marijuana group Compassion Center is trying to regroup after an internal power struggle that peaked when one board member removed patients medical files, sued to dissolve the organization and tried to start her own rival group. The center, founded in 2001, closed in July, leaving about 2,000


HIV-positive man sues McDonald's after firing
Associated Press - September 6, 2008
DYERSVILLE, Iowa - A former McDonald s employee filed a complaint with the Iowa Civil Rights Commission alleging he was unlawfully fired because he s a gay man with HIV. Daniel Carver, 46, alleges that what began as a lack of promotions and fewer hours escalated to derogatory names, violence and death threats. Carver a


Swazis hold 40th birthday of king, independence
Associated Press - September 6, 2008
Clare Nullis
MBABANE, Swaziland - The Swazi king, bare-chested and wearing a traditional leopard skin loin cloth, celebrated his 40th birthday and his nation s 40th independence day in lavish style Saturday - hosting an extravaganza that contrasted sharply with the biting poverty of his subjects. King Mswati III toured the nati


FDA posts list of potential problem drugs
Associated Press - September 6, 2008
Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar
Washington - The government on Friday began posting a list of prescription drugs under investigation for potential safety problems in an effort to better inform doctors and patients. The first list is a bare-bones compilation naming 20 medications and the potential issue for each. It provides no indication of how wides


Crystal man accused of not disclosing HIV status
Associated Press - September 5, 2008
STANTON, Mich. - A Crystal man is accused of having unprotected sex with two women without telling them he carries the virus that causes AIDS. Thirty-two-year-old Gerald Campbell Jr. is to be arraigned Thursday in Montcalm County Circuit Court. Campbell is being held in the county jail following a preliminary hearing t


New Grady CEO focused on finding paying patients
Associated Press - September 5, 2008
Errin Haines
ATLANTA - While Grady is the region s only Level 1 trauma center, it can no longer afford to be the only safety net hospital in metro Atlanta, the health system s new chief executive officer said on Friday. After a week on the job, Michael Young said the public hospital must attract more paying patients while continuin


UN says US, Japan, EU not doing enough on poverty
Associated Press - September 4, 2008
Edith M. Lederer
UNITED NATIONS - In criticism aimed primarily at the United States , Japan and the European Union, a U.N. report said Thursday that rich nations haven t delivered on promises to help the world s poorest nations and must increase aid by $18 billion a year. The report also criticized the failure of rich and poor coun


AIDS-stricken Swaziland feels less than overjoyed as king and country celebrate 40th birthday
Associated Press - September 4, 2008
Clare Nullis
MBABANE, Swaziland (AP) - Swaziland and its king are throwing a joint 40th birthday bash this weekend, but the mood is far from celebratory in this small southern African land of paupers and princes, mud huts and palaces. The government calls them the 40-40 festivities, marking King Mswati III s birthday and the annive


Pharmacist gets probation for selling fake Lipitor
Associated Press - September 4, 2008
KANSAS CITY, Mo. - Former Kansas City-area pharmacist Doug Albers has received five years probation for selling fake or misbranded medication. The sentence Wednesday came nearly one year after Albers admitted his involvement in an alleged conspiracy to sell $42 million in stolen, misbranded and bogus pharmaceutical dru


Bon Jovi helps build homes for poor, AIDS patients
Associated Press - September 2, 2008
Angela Delli Santi
NEWARK, N.J. - One of New Jersey s best-known rock n rollers has teamed up with the state to provide affordable housing in the state s largest city. Jon Bon Jovi s Philadelphia Soul Charitable Foundation is providing $1 million toward construction of a 51-unit building that will cater to homeless people with special ne


McCain has opposed spending on teen pregnancy prevention programs, sex education
Associated Press - September 2, 2008
Sharon Theimer, Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - Republican John McCain, whose running mate disclosed that her unmarried 17-year-old daughter is pregnant, has opposed proposals to spend federal money on teen-pregnancy prevention programs and voted to require poor teen mothers to stay in school or lose their benefits. Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin s announ


More Americans adopting HIV-positive children from abroad, particularly Ethiopia
Associated Press - September 1, 2008
Anita Powell
ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia - Solomon Henderson inherited just three things from his birth parents, who left him at an Ethiopian orphanage when he was 1 year old: a picture of Jesus, a plastic crucifix and HIV. As one of some 14,000 Ethiopian children born with the virus every year, Solomon s prospects for survival - much le


Zimbabwe doctors' advice: Don't get sick
Associated Press - August 31, 2008
Angus Shaw
HARARE, Zimbabwe - The advice of doctors to Zimbabweans is, don t get sick. If you do, don t count on hospitals - they re short of drugs and functioning equipment. As the economy collapses, the laboratory at a main 1,000-bed hospital has virtually shut down. X-ray materials, injectable antibiotics and anticonvulsants h


Urban medical schools feel weight of uninsured
Associated Press - August 28, 2008
Corey Williams
DETROIT - Dr. Herbert Smitherman nervously monitors the city s fluctuating unemployment rate and sinking economy. As one of about 750 Wayne State University Medical School physicians, he looks at the deluge of job cuts in Detroit s auto, manufacturing and other industries and sees even more people lining up for health


Sterilization problems prompts tests on patients
Associated Press - August 28, 2008
Fresno, CA (AP) -- Fourteen surgical patients at a Clovis hospital are being called back for tests because doctors may have used on them instruments that were not fully sterilized. Officials at Clovis Community Medical Center say the chance of infection or exposure to HIV or hepatitis is remote. The instruments were us


In NYC, new HIV infections 3 times national rate
Associated Press - August 27, 2008
NEW YORK (AP) - New data show New York City residents are contracting the virus that causes AIDS at three times the national rate. The city health department said Wednesday that almost 4,800 New Yorkers were infected with HIV in 2006. That number represents 72 of every 100,000 residents, compared to a national rate of


Detained Chinese activist returns to Beijing
Associated Press - August 26, 2008
Audra Ang, Associated Press Writer
BEIJING, China (AP) -- A Chinese human rights activist detained by police during the Olympic Games said Tuesday that she had returned to Beijing and that her dissident husband was being mistreated in prison. Zeng Jinyan was one of several activists taken away during the games as part of Beijing s efforts to clear the c


Police: Man who bit officer tests positive for HIV
Associated Press - August 25, 2008
ATLANTA - Police in Atlanta say a man who bit an officer s arm and said he has HIV has tested positive for the disease. Police spokesman Ron Campbell says 41-year-old Ross Deadwyler told the officer he was HIV positive after biting him early Saturday. Campbell would not give the officer s name but says he s at home tak


Finn gets 10 years for infecting women with HIV
Associated Press - August 25, 2008
HELSINKI, Finland : A Finnish court has sentenced a man to 10 years in prison for infecting five women with the AIDS virus and having unprotected sex with 14 others although he knew he was infected. The court says it found Aki Hakkarainen guilty of five counts of aggravated assault and 14 counts of attempted aggravated


Managed care urged for city's Medicaid HIV/AIDS cases
Associated Press - August 24, 2008
ALBANY, N.Y. -- The New York state Medicaid director is recommending that New York City residents with HIV/AIDS and receiving Medicaid benefits should be required to use health maintenance organizations. The New York Department of Health is expected to issue a final decision in the next few weeks on Medicaid Director D


On street, D.C. needle swap 'saving lives'
Associated Press - August 24, 2008
Reggie Jackson spends much of his day inside a Winnebago, riding through the District s hardscrabble neighborhoods to hand out clean syringes in exchange for dirty ones. Mr. Jackson is on a mission to protect drug addicts from HIV, for which he tested positive in 1990 after sharing needles to shoot heroin and crack coc


Details of tainted blood scandal come to light
Associated Press - Sunday, August 24, 2008
Gregory Katz, Associated Press
Peebles, Scotland -- Robert Mackie trembles with rage when he describes how he and his wife were kept in the dark about his HIV infection - and how doctors published his medical data in journals years before they gave him the devastating news. Mackie is one of about 5,700 British hemophiliacs who received tainted blood


US expresses concern for Chinese activists
Associated Press - Friday, August 22, 2008
Audra Ang, Associated Press Writer
BEIJING, China (AP) - The United States is concerned about two prominent Chinese human rights activists who went missing just before and during the Beijing Olympics, an embassy spokeswoman said Friday. In a meeting this week with Foreign Ministry officials, U.S. Ambassador Clark T. Randt brought up the cases of Hua Hui


Northern Indiana county warns of hoax STD calls
Associated Press - August 21, 2008
SOUTH BEND, Ind. - At least 10 people have received automated calls purportedly from the St. Joseph County Health Department telling them they might have contracted a sexually transmitted disease. The health agency says the messages are a hoax and that it would never leave personal medical information on an answering m


Wording proposed for Michigan ballot measures
Associated Press - August 19, 2008
LANSING, Mich. - State election officials late Tuesday released their proposed 100-word statements of purpose for three ballot proposals targeting the November election. The Board of State Canvassers could vote on the ballot wording Thursday, while deciding whether the issues qualify for the ballot. The proposed wordin


Safe sex ring tone sings 'Condom, condom!'
Associated Press - August 19, 2008
Sam Dolnick
NEW DELHI, India (AP) -- A cell phone ring tone that sings Condom, condom! has been launched to promote safe sex in India, where condoms carry a strong social stigma and HIV and AIDS are growing problems, health experts said Tuesday. The a cappella ring tone features a professional singer chanting the word condom more


Mom, daughter lead Kenyan village in AIDS recovery
Associated Press - August 17, 2008
Barbara Borst
RABUOR, Kenya - Loyce Mbewa-Ong udi was late. Family and friends milled around her parents house in the green hills overlooking Lake Victoria, waiting for the daughter from America to return home. At last the taxi bounced over the ruts and made a sharp turn into the compound of small brick and stucco houses. Loyce spra


Blood transfusions give Argentine patients HIV
Associated Press - August 15, 2008
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (AP) -- Two intensive-care patients contracted HIV after receiving blood transfusions at public hospitals in the Argentine province of Cordoba, a newspaper reported Friday. An unidentified donor gave blood at a Cordoba city hospital in December, testing negative for HIV, Health Minister Oscar Go


HIV positive priest accused of sex abuse dead
Associated Press - August 13, 2008
FORT WORTH, Texas - A former priest who was HIV positive and accused of sexually abusing minors in Texas and Rhode Island has died, the Catholic Diocese of Fort Worth announced Wednesday. Philip Anthony Magaldi died Tuesday in a North Texas health care facility. Earlier this year, the 72-year-old Magaldi told officials


Countries targeted by new WFP assistance program
Associated Press - August 12, 2008
Some of the countries that will receive aid under a $214 million campaign by the World Food Program to ease the effects of high food and oil prices in 16 trouble spots: - ETHIOPIA: Increased feeding programs for malnourished children and other assistance for nation where more than 10 million people affected by severe d


Florida football town's future looks grim
Associated Press - August 11, 2008
Antonio Gonzalez
BELLE GLADE, Fla. - Surrounded by a sea of sugarcane, this poverty-ravaged town on the southeastern edge of Lake Okeechobee has long been one of the country s most fertile football areas. It s a place where running backs of the future are said to gain speed chasing rabbits, where college coaches begin recruiting trips


FDA approves Gilead AIDS drug for hepatitis B
Associated Press - August 11, 2008
Marcus Wohlsen
SAN FRANCISCO - Gilead Sciences Inc. prepared to expand its reach further beyond AIDS drugs Monday after federal regulators approved the biotech drug maker s signature anti-HIV therapy as a hepatitis B treatment. Gilead announced that the Food and Drug Administration is joining regulators in Europe,


Appeals court allows investor suit against Gilead
Associated Press - August 11, 2008
SAN FRANCISCO - A federal appeals court has reinstated a lawsuit against Gilead Sciences Inc. claiming the biotech drug maker cost investors money by improperly marketing a top-selling AIDS drug. The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals on Monday reversed a lower court s decision dismissing the suit filed by disgruntled s


Forum ends with call for better HIV laws
Associated Press - August 10, 2008
MEXICO CITY - The 17th International AIDS Conference ended here Friday with a call to reverse laws that criminalize and stigmatize groups at risk for HIV. Criminalization is a poor tool for regulating HIV infection and transmission, Edwin Cameron, a justice of the Supreme Court of Appeal in South Africa


War and poverty driving up HIV cases in Sudan
Associated Press - August 10, 2008
KHARTOUM, Sudan : Poverty and the movement of war-displaced populations have driven the number of HIV/AIDS infections higher in Sudan, though a lack of data is preventing health officials from getting a full picture of the virus spread, experts said Sunday. Sudanese and United Nations AIDS experts told reporters in the


HIV-positive Indian couple commits suicide
Associated Press - August 9, 2008
MUMBAI, India (AP) -- An Indian couple poisoned their three young children, then hung themselves from a ceiling fan because they were depressed about being HIV-positive, police said Saturday. A relative found the bodies of Ishwar Thevar, 39, a film distributor, and his wife as well as their two sons and a daughter in a


Global AIDS prevention gives short shrift to gays
Associated Press - August 8, 2008
Julie Watson, AP Medical Writer
MEXICO CITY, Mexico (AP) -- Jorge Saavedra s moment of truth came in the middle of an impassioned speech to 5,000 people about the paltry amount of money being spent to stop the spread of AIDS among gay men. The Mexican federal official paused, then said publicly for the first time that he was gay. As he held up a


Gift cards key to new AIDS prevention strategy
Associated Press - August 8, 2008
Mike Stobbe, AP Medical Writer
ATLANTA (AP) -- Could the AIDS virus be stopped with gift cards? Desperate for a way to stop the escalating spread of HIV among young gay men, public health officials are looking to novel strategies, such as enlisting local gay opinion leaders to urge their peers to practice safe sex. Promising signs from such a projec


Drug price hikes draw scrutiny from lawmakers: Drug companies increasingly hiking prices on specialty drugs by more than 100 percent
Associated Press - August 8, 2008
Matthew Perrone, AP Business Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) -- Pharmaceutical companies are increasingly hiking the prices of specialty medications by 100 percent or more -- sometimes much more -- attracting scrutiny from lawmakers who have pledged to lower health care costs. Drug prices have historically outpaced those of other consumer goods, with the average


New medical board chief named
Associated Press - August 6, 2008
CARSON CITY, CA (AP) -- Louis Ling has been selected as executive director of the Nevada Board of Medical Examiners, replacing Tony Clark who s retiring later this year from the panel which has been under scrutiny for its handling of a hepatitis C crisis. Ling, 46, currently legal counsel for the state Board of Pharmac


Ex-President Clinton to fight AIDS in US
Associated Press - August 5, 2008
MEXICO CITY: Former President Bill Clinton said Monday that his foundation is going to focus its efforts on fighting AIDS in the United States , especially among blacks. Speaking at an AIDS conference in Mexico City, Clinton said he was spurred to action after the U.S. Center for Disease Control reported that 40 percen


Court has HIV-positive Mexican soldier reinstated
Associated Press - Tuesday, August 5, 2008
A Mexican soldier has won his job back six years after he was kicked out of the military for testing HIV positive. The soldier from western Mexican state of Jalisco was removed from his job after 20 years of service. But a federal court has ruled in his favor. The Center for Justice, Peace and Development helped fight


Activists, UN want HIV travel restrictions erased: Applaud U.S. for ending travel ban
Associated Press - August 5, 2008
MEXICO CITY (AP) - AIDS experts praised the United States on Tuesday for ending its two-decade ban on HIV-positive people entering the country, and said travel restrictions by dozens of other countries are hurting efforts to control the epidemic. U.S. President George W. Bush signed legislation last week repealing a ru


12-year-old with HIV applauded at AIDS conference
Associated Press - Monday, August 4, 2008
MEXICO CITY: Keren Dunaway was 5 when her parents used drawings to explain to her that they both had the HIV virus ? and so did she. Now the 12-year-old is one of the most prominent AIDS activists in Latin America and a rarity in a region where few children are willing to break the silence and tell their classmates the


Bill Clinton: nutrition key to AIDS fight
Associated Press - Monday, August 4, 2008
DAKAR, Senegal : Former U.S. President Bill Clinton said Sunday that keeping HIV-infected children in the developing world well-fed amid the pressures of skyrocketing global food and fuel prices will be crucial to fending off the deadly virus. Speaking on the final day of a brief, four-nation Africa tour that began las


Abbott faces more litigation over AIDS drug
Associated Press - August 4, 2008
Paul Elias
SAN FRANCISCO - When Abbott Laboratories Inc. hiked up the price of a popular AIDS drug by 400 percent in 2003, executives prepared for the inevitable public relations hit, but assured themselves the backlash would be brief. Nearly five years later, the accusations against Abbott are still flying. The North Chicago


HIV-positive migrants accuse US of neglect
Associated Press - August 4, 2008
Julie Watson
MEXICO CITY - Olga Arellano sobs as she recalls how her HIV-positive daughter spent two months succumbing to infections in a U.S. migrant detention center, complaining that she didn t see a doctor or get the right medicine. Fellow inmates also begged for help after Victoria Arellano started vomiting blood in their hold


Bill Clinton in Africa looks at fight against AIDS
Associated Press - August 3, 2008
Todd Pitman
DAKAR, Senegal - Former President Clinton said Sunday that keeping HIV-infected children in the developing world well-fed amid the pressures of skyrocketing global food and fuel prices will be crucial to fending off the deadly virus. Speaking on the final day of a four-nation Africa tour that began last week, Clinton s


Obama backs national AIDS strategy
Associated Press - August 3, 2008
CHICAGO - Presidential Democratic hopeful Barack Obama says he supports the development of a national AIDS strategy to combat the spread of HIV. His comments come on the heels of new national data indicating the number of HIV infections may be 40 percent higher than previously reported. Obama says in a statement releas


Mixed results for growth hormone in HIV patients
Associated Press - August 3, 2008
Lindsey Tanner
CHICAGO - A hormone better known for illicit use among athletes can help treat troublesome complications from the AIDS virus, but with potentially risky side effects, a small study found. Low-dose injections of human growth hormone, HGH, reduced fat deposits around internal abdominal organs by about 10 percent. In add


CDC underestimated new HIV cases by 40 percent
Associated Press - Sunday, August 3, 2008
Mike Stobbe, AP Medical Writer
ATLANTA, (AP) -- The number of Americans infected by the AIDS virus each year is much higher than the government has been estimating, U.S. health officials reported, acknowledging that their numbers have understated the level of the epidemic. The country had roughly 56,300 new HIV infections in 2006 - about a 40 percen


12-year-old with HIV to open world AIDS conference
Associated Press - Sunday, August 3, 2008
Alexandra Olson, Associated Press Writer
Keren Dunaway was 5 when her parents used drawings to explain to her that they both had the HIV virus - and so did she. Now the 12-year-old is one of the most prominent AIDS activists in Latin America and a rarity in a region where few children are willing to break the silence and tell their classmates they have HIV fo


Annie Lennox urges women to invigorate AIDS fight
Associated Press - August 2, 2008
MEXICO CITY - Annie Lennox says complacency threatens to slow the fight against AIDS. The singer-songwriter is participating in the international AIDS conference in Mexico City this week as an ambassador for Oxfam. On Saturday, she urged artists, musicians, filmmakers and women to keep the issue at the forefront. She s


Gilead to sell HIV drug in 12 additional countries: Gilead will take lead role in selling Atripla in 12 countries under agreement with Merck
Associated Press - August 1, 2008
Erika Kinetz
NEW YORK (AP) -- Biotechnology company Gilead Sciences Inc. said Friday it plans to begin selling its HIV drug Atripla in 12 countries including Russia , Mexico and Australia . Atripla is a daily HIV treatment that combines two Gilead drugs,


WHO approves 18th Ranbaxy HIV drug
Associated Press - August 1, 2008
Erika Kinetz
NEW DELHI (AP) -- Ranbaxy Laboratories Ltd., India s largest pharmaceutical company, said Friday that the World Health Organization had included another of its HIV-fighting drugs on its prequalification list. That brought to 18 the number of Ranbaxy antiretrovirals the WHO has approved as safe, effective and high quali


AIDS bill sets unclear treatment target
Associated Press - July 31, 2008
Katharine Euphrat
WASHINGTON - The global AIDS bill signed by President Bush on Wednesday sets a goal of treating more than the 2 million-patient target set in 2003, but how much more isn t clear. In signing the bill, President Bush said, With this funding, we will support treatment for at least 3 million people. However, the bill itsel


Teen prostitution up after Kenya's election crisis
Associated Press - July 31, 2008
Mathews Ndangi And Elizabeth A. Kennedy
ELDORET, Kenya (AP) -- This time last year, Janet Kimani spent her days at school and her nights fighting with her little brothers over what to watch on the family s flickering TV set. Now, she sleeps all day and sells her skinny, 14-year-old body at night for $3 an hour. There are so many of us girls on the streets th


Novice rides 350 miles in NY to raise AIDS funds
Associated Press - July 30, 2008
LAKE PLACID, N.Y. - A novice rider has bicycled 350 miles from Jones Beach on Long Island to upstate Lake Placid to honor his late brother and raise money for AIDS research. Tom Monks wheeled into Lake Placid at noon Wednesday. The self-described average guy from Long Island told the Plattsburgh Press-Republican that t


AIDS patients, Abbott agree to settle lawsuit
Associated Press - July 30, 2008
Paul Elias
SAN FRANCISCO - Drug company Abbott Laboratories Inc. agreed Wednesday to pay between $10 million and $27.5 million to settle an antitrust lawsuit filed by AIDS patients over the company s 400 percent price hike of a popular HIV drug. The ultimate payout depends on the resolution in an appeals court of three technical


Bush signs bill to triple AIDS funding
Associated Press - July 30, 2008
Katharine Euphrat
WASHINGTON - President Bush signed legislation Wednesday that triples U.S. funding to fight AIDS, malaria and tuberculosis around the world. The five-year, $48 billion plan renews a program credited with saving millions of lives in Africa alone and is widely seen as one of the major achievements of the Bush presidency.


Panel considers health 'standards and sanctions'
Associated Press - July 29, 2008
Ken Ritter
LAS VEGAS - A top Nevada health official told lawmakers Tuesday that new laws could streamline oversight and responses to a public health threat such as the hepatitis C outbreak that prompted a massive patient notification effort earlier this year. The only way to effect change is through standards and sanctions, said


Portland mayor may pull out of Zimbabwe trip
Associated Press - July 29, 2008
PORTLAND, Ore. - Portland Mayor Tom Potter is having second thoughts about a trip to Zimbabwe , torn by political unrest. The mayor wants to go along on a trip planned by Portland residents and the nonprofit Portland-Mutare Sister City Association. Mayoral spokesman John Doussard says Potter wants to make sure everybod


UN: AIDS epidemic stable
Associated Press - July 29, 2008
LONDON: Fewer people are dying of AIDS, more patients are on HIV medication and the global AIDS epidemic is stable after peaking in the late 1990s. But the United Nations AIDS agency warned in its yearly report Tuesday that governments will need to continue setting aside millions of dollars for AIDS in the coming decad


Beijing shuts out and pressures unwanted voices ahead of Olympics
Associated Press - July 29, 2008
Henry Sanderson
BEIJING (AP) - Lu Jun, a campaigner for the rights of millions of Chinese with hepatitis B, seems an unlikely threat to the Beijing Olympics. But the popular Web site he runs was blocked in May. This month, police detained him for four hours when he returned to China from a hepatitis conference in Los Angeles. They wan


Iranian president: 'Big powers' going down
Associated Press - July 29, 2008
George Jahn
TEHRAN, Iran - Iran s president on Tuesday blamed the U.S. and other big powers for global ills such as nuclear proliferation and AIDS, and accused them of exploiting the U.N. for their own gain and the developing world s loss. But, President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said, time was on the poor countries side. The big


Bush eager to sign bill tripling AIDS assistance
Associated Press - July 26, 2008
Deb Riechmann
WASHINGTON - President Bush said Saturday he s eager to sign legislation that triples money to fight AIDS and other diseases around the world - an initiative that has won him praise from some of his harshest critics. In a rare case of cooperation between the White House and the Democratic-controlled Congress, lawmakers


Catholics to pope: Lift the birth control ban
Associated Press - July 25, 2008
VATICAN CITY (Map, News) - More than 50 dissident Catholic groups from around the world have written an open letter asking Pope Benedict XVI to lift the church s ban on birth control. Taking a half-page ad in the Italian daily Corriere della Sera, the groups said Friday that the Church s ban on artificial birth control


How they voted: House roll call on AIDS bill
Associated Press - July 24, 2008
The Pennsylvania vote in the 303-115 roll call Thursday by which the House passed a bill that would triple the money to fight AIDS, malaria and tuberculosis around the world. A yes vote is a vote to pass the bill. Voting yes were 228 Democrats and 75 Republicans. Voting no were 1 Democrat and 114 Republicans. X den


A look at key parts of the global AIDS bill
Associated Press - July 24, 2008
The global AIDS bill Congress is preparing to send President Bush would: -Approve $48 billion over the next five years for HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria programs in Africa and other afflicted areas of the world. It also would approve $2 billion for American Indian health, water and law enforcement programs. -Sti


Congress OKs $48B for global AIDS fight
Associated Press - July 24, 2008
Jim Abrams
WASHINGTON - The House voted Thursday to triple money to fight AIDS, malaria and tuberculosis around the world, giving new life and new punch to a program credited with saving or prolonging millions of lives in Africa alone. The 303-115 vote sends the global AIDS bill to President Bush for his signature. Bush, who firs


Congress votes to triple money for AIDS victims
Associated Press - July 24, 2008
Jim Abrams
WASHINGTON - Congress is sending President Bush legislation that triples funds for a global AIDS relief program credited with saving millions of lives in Africa and elsewhere in the world. The House vote was overwhelmingly in favor of the bill, which approves spending $48 billion over the next five years to fight AIDS,


Bristol-Myers, Eli Lilly post strong 2Q results
Associated Press - July 24, 2008
Linda A. Johnson
TRENTON, N.J. - Like other major drugmakers, Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. (BMY, News) and Eli Lilly & Co. saw benefits from the weak dollar in the second quarter, as sales grew at a faster rate overseas, but both also posted improvements in their U.S. businesses. The two, already are in the middle of restructuring


Officials: Search for HIV vaccine needs overhaul: Researches call for new people, ideas
Associated Press - July 24, 2008
Kevin Freking
WASHINGTON - Scientists will have to take enormous intellectual leaps to develop an AIDS vaccine in the coming years, say researchers clearly frustrated by the failure of a once-promising shot. The researchers, including a top National Institutes of Health official, want new people with new ideas to step up and join th


Serono official pleads guilty in AIDS device case
Associated Press - July 23, 2008
BOSTON - A medical director for Serono Laboratories Inc. has pleaded guilty to promoting off-label use of computer devices in an effort to boost sales of an AIDS drug. U.S. Attorney Michael Sullivan says Norma Muurahainen of Hull pleaded guilty Wednesday to three misdemeanor counts of causing the introduction into inte


Vigorous debate held on 'don't ask, don't tell'
Associated Press - July 23, 2008
Erica Werner
WASHINGTON - Opponents of the don t ask, don t tell policy on gays in the military denounced it as cruel and unpatriotic Wednesday. Supporters insisted it was needed to maintain military morale, and raised the prospect of a rise of HIV infection among service members if gays are allowed to serve openly. The heated exch


A rare Tibetan critic sues China's government
Associated Press - July 23, 2008
Audra Ang
BEIJING - The poet Woeser has long been a rarity - a Tibetan living in China who doesn t flinch from publicly criticizing the Chinese government. Now the activist is taking another unusual step. After being repeatedly denied a passport for three years, the Beijing resident has sued the government demanding to be given


Gates Foundation breaks ground on new headquarters
Associated Press - July 22, 2008
Donna Gordon Blankinship
SEATTLE - Across the street from the Space Needle and Paul Allen s tribute to Jimi Hendrix and rock music, Allen s old friend Bill Gates is building his headquarters for charitable giving, something sure to become another Seattle tourist attraction. The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation broke ground Tuesday on its ne


Woman with HIV gets 3 years for spitting in face
Associated Press - July 22, 2008
COLUMBUS, Ga. - A woman diagnosed with HIV has been sentenced to three years in prison for spitting in another woman s face and proclaiming I hope you get AIDS. The woman, 43-year-old Audrey D. Lewis, pleaded guilty Monday to aggravated assault. Police said a 24-year-old went to lock the apartment door of a friend who


Miss Universe glad to put modeling career on hold
Associated Press - July 22, 2008
Sigal Ratner-Arias
NEW YORK - Dayana Mendoza put a promising modeling career on hold to go for - and win - the Miss Universe crown. Being a model is just great. You show a brand, a beautiful dress, said the 22-year-old Venezuelan. But being Miss Venezuela and Miss Universe, you have the opportunity to go all over the world and have conta


Texas county debates use of needle-exchanges
Associated Press - July 22, 2008
Elizabeth White
SAN ANTONIO - Bill Day is a familiar face out under the San Antonio viaducts, where skinny addicts shoot drugs into their bruised arms. Day, 73, is the source of something many of them desperately need: clean syringes, which Day sees as his calling from God to prevent the spread of disease. Authorities see it different


Obama, McCain to stump at Orange County church
Associated Press - July 21, 2008
LAKE FOREST - Republican Sen. John McCain of Arizona and Democratic Sen. Barrack Obama of Illinois will make their first joint appearance of the presidential campaign next month at an Orange County mega church, its pastor said today. McCain, the presumptive Republican presidential nominee, and his Democratic counterpar


HIV cases on the rise, funding low in the South
Associated Press - July 20, 2008
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. - The Deep South s poor residents are plagued by HIV and the region isn t receiving its fair share of federal money for prevention and support, according to a report to be released Monday. The report by the Southern AIDS Coalition says federal funding for treatment, education and support services is co


Zimbabweans use blogs, text messages for info
Associated Press - July 20, 2008
Sabrina Shankman
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa -- The photographs of the tortured body of an opposition official are blurry but chilling. Posted on the This is Zimbabwe blog, they show charred, lacerated limbs and blank eyes staring out from the face of the official, Gift Mutsvungunu, frozen in a death grimace.


Dignitaries attend grand party for Mandela's 90th
Associated Press - July 19, 2008
Celean Jacobson
QUNU, South Africa - Songs, laughter, teasing and tender words marked Nelson Mandela s 90th birthday celebration Saturday as presidents, village elders and African royalty joined him for a festive luncheon on his rural homestead. The Nobel Peace Prize winner celebrated privately with his family in this rural southeaste


Needle-exchange operator, DA clash
Associated Press - July 18, 2008
Elizabeth White
SAN ANTONIO - Bill Day, 73 and neatly dressed, doesn t look like he belongs out under the viaducts where skinny addicts shoot drugs into their bruised arms. But they know him, giving him a look here, a head nod there, as he drives by in his familiar van. Day is the source of something many of them desperately need: cle


Plans for large-scale AIDS vaccine trial dropped: Smaller, more focused study to follow
Associated Press - July 18, 2008
WASHINGTON - Plans for a large-scale trial of a potential AIDS vaccine are being dropped in favor of a smaller, more focused study, the National Institutes of Health said Thursday. The trial of the vaccine, developed by the Vaccine Research Center at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease, had been pl


Seattle police agree to return medical pot records
Associated Press - July 17, 2008
Gene Johnson
SEATTLE - The Seattle police department agreed Thursday to return files on more than 500 medical marijuana patients to the headquarters of a patient support group, two days after seizing them during a search. Prosecutors said no charges will be filed. Douglas Hiatt, an attorney representing activist Martin Martinez, wh


Doctor learns the joy of medical missions
Associated Press - July 17, 2008
Ryan Ori
PEORIA, Ill. - Golf and beaches are nice, but Dr. Bill Edwards has discovered a new type of vacation. After previously never doing medical missions, the pediatric specialist at Children s Hospital of Illinois recently completed his sixth mission trip to Haiti in two years. I m hooked, he said. As a physician, Edwa


Bill Clinton aims to stabilize malaria drug prices
Associated Press - July 17, 2008
Sara Kugler
NEW YORK - Former President Clinton s foundation has signed pricing agreements with several suppliers involved in making a malaria-fighting drug in an effort to stabilize the medication s fluctuating costs and ensure more dependable availability. The foundation described the agreements to The Associated Press ahead of


Charity's chief under fire for salary
Associated Press - July 17, 2008
WASHINGTON - A nonprofit organization that provides meals to homebound HIV-AIDS and cancer patients in the Washington region has come under fire for the generous compensation paid to its longtime executive director. Craig Shniderman was paid $357,000 in salary and benefits last year as head of Food & Friends, and h


Senate agrees to triple anti-AIDS funding: Lift on travel ban must now be negotiated with House
Associated Press - July 17, 2008
WASHINGTON - The Senate voted Wednesday to triple spending for a much-acclaimed program that has treated and protected millions in Africa and elsewhere from the scourges of AIDS, malaria and tuberculosis. The 80-16 vote committed the United States to spending up to $48 billion over the next five years for the most ambi


How they voted: Senate roll call on AIDS bill
Associated Press - July 16, 2008
The 80-16 roll call by which the Senate on Wednesday approved spending $48 billion over the next five years to treat and prevent the spread of AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria in Africa and elsewhere around the world. On this vote, a yes vote was a vote in favor of the bill and a no vote was a vote against it. Voting


Senate nears vote to triple anti-AIDS funding
Associated Press - July 16, 2008
Jim Abrams, Associated Press Writer
The Senate on Wednesday diverted $2 billion from a $50 billion global AIDS bill to improve the lives of American Indians. Senators mainly from the West successfully argued on the need to carve out a small portion of the five-year AIDS spending bill for Indian programs, saying Congress shouldn t forget a humanitarian cr


Grant money to boost Michigan university research
Associated Press - July 16, 2008
Tim Martin
LANSING, Mich. - Michigan Technological University researchers are teaming with a Marquette company to help make an upgraded compact and wireless wearable video system that could be used by the military. Saginaw Valley State University researchers are working to make biodegradable plastics out of corncobs, sugar beet p


Ben & Jerry's makes 'Goodbye Yellow Brickle Road'
Associated Press - July 16, 2008
John Curran
MONTPELIER, Vt.: Ben & Jerry s has done it again: Hoping to honor rocker Elton John before his first-ever Vermont performance, Vermont s crazy-cool confectioner has whipped up a flavor just for him - Goodbye Yellow Brickle Road. The limited-batch ice cream, made from an outrageous symphony of decadent chocolate ice


US ban on visitors with HIV could end soon
Associated Press - July 16, 2008
Jim Abrams
WASHINGTON - A two-decade ban on people with HIV visiting or immigrating to the United States may end soon through a Senate bill aimed at fighting AIDS and other diseases in Africa and other poor areas of the world. The U.S. is one of a dozen countries - including Sudan ,


Human Rights Watch says police abuses, bad policies fueling AIDS epidemic
Associated Press - July 15, 2008
MEXICO CITY: Human rights activists say police abuses and official policies are aggravating the AIDS epidemic. About 400 organizations say police in several nations use anti-prostitution laws to routinely extort sexual favors from sex workers. They also say officers confiscate condoms from AIDS outreach workers and the


Senator: Global AIDS bill to include $2B for tribes
Associated Press - July 15, 2008
Mary Clare Jalonick
WASHINGTON - A bill designed to combat AIDS globally is expected to include $2 billion for American Indians, according to South Dakota Sen. John Thune. Thune, a Republican, and other senators pushing for the Indian money as part of the $50 billion AIDS bill made a deal with Democratic leaders late Tuesday. The agreemen


Austin school district halts funding for 'Rent'
Associated Press - July 13, 2008
AUSTIN - School officials in Austin aren t gonna pay for this year s Rent. Concerned by the content in the smash pop-rock musical, the Austin Independent School District halted $10,000 in planned assistance for what is expected to be the first licensed high school production of Rent in Texas. The school version of the


Senate votes to take up $50 billion AIDS bill
Associated Press - July 12, 2008
WASHINGTON: The Senate voted Friday with a strong show of bipartisanship to take up a stalled global AIDS bill that would vastly expand a President Bush-backed program that has had marked success in combating AIDS in Africa and other affected areas of the world. The vote was 65-3 to begin debate next week on the legisl


Prince Harry balances army duty with charity work
Associated Press - July 12, 2008
Celean Jacobson
MASERU, Lesotho - Prince Harry would like to spend more time helping children in Africa. Britain s royal soldier-humanitarian is in the impoverished African kingdom of Lesotho this week to work with Sentebale - the charity he and Lesotho s Prince Seeiso founded in the memory of Harry s late mother, Princess Diana.


Congress mostly going through the motions for now
Associated Press - July 11, 2008
Laurie Kellman
WASHINGTON - Some fights of the 110th Congress have lost their oomph in the waning months before the November elections, with both parties content to run out the clock on messy matters like the war in Iraq , spending bills and various disputes with the White House. Democrats dropped any pretense of trying to addres


China crackdown targets critics ahead of Olympics
Associated Press - July 10, 2008
Henry Sanderson
BEIJING - Lu Jun, a campaigner for the rights of millions of Chinese with hepatitis B, seems an unlikely threat to the Beijing Olympics. But the popular Web site he runs was blocked in May. This month, police detained him for four hours when he returned to China from a hepatitis conference in Los Angeles. They wanted t


HIV-AIDS service provider selling offices
Associated Press - July 10, 2008
WASHINGTON - The Washington region s largest provider of HIV-AIDS services is selling its administrative offices. The Whitman-Walker Clinic has agreed to sell the property at 14th and S streets in northwest Washington to developer JBG for $8 million. Officials say the deal will allow the organization to eliminate debt


Syphilis rate jumps in Cleveland, Cuyahoga County
Associated Press - July 9, 2008
CLEVELAND - The rate of syphilis is surging in Ohio s most populous county. The Cleveland and Cuyahoga (keye-uh-HOH -guh) County health agencies said Tuesday that 52 people were diagnosed with the sexually transmitted disease in the nine-month period that ended in March. That s double the 26 cases that were reported fr


State employee won't lower flags for Helms: 'I don't see how anybody could celebrate his career'
Associated Press - July 9, 2008
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) - A longtime North Carolina state employee has chosen to retire instead of lowering flags to honor former Sen. Jesse Helms, saying in an e-mail that the late conservative had a doctrine of negativity, hate and prejudice. U.S. and state flags flew at half-staff on Monday and Tuesday following an order


Britain's Prince Harry says his mom would be proud of his charity work in Lesotho
Associated Press - July 8, 2008
BUTHA-BUTHE, Lesotho : Prince Harry worked up a sweat Tuesday as he carted wheelbarrows of wet cement, filled a ditch and hammered nails. The young royal was helping refurbish a school for mentally and physically disabled children under the auspices of a charity he founded in the impoverished African kingdom of Lesotho


Tattoo artists seek stronger laws in Hawaii
Associated Press - Tuesday, July 8, 2008
Mark Niesse, Associated Press Writer
Tattoo artists want safer practices to limit spread of hepatitis and other diseases in Hawaii HONOLULU (AP) -- Hawaii tattoo artists and body piercers are seeking stronger laws to reduce the risk of spreading hepatitis or HIV through dirty needles. They met with lawmakers Monday to discuss updating the 27-year-old lice


G-8 discusses system to follow-up on aid pledges
The Associated Press - Monday, July 7, 2008
RUSUTSU, Japan : An aid group founded by U2 frontman Bono calculates that the Group of Eight top industrialized nations has delivered only $3 billion of the additional $25 billion promised for Africa for everything from AIDS drugs to training peacekeepers. Now the Africans and their allies want a new system to make sur


Paying Up: Africans and aid groups call for new rules to make sure G-8 pays up on pledges
The Associated Press - Monday, July 7, 2008
RUSUTSU, Japan : Top industrialized countries have been in a generous mood when hosting African countries at recent annual summits, pledging billions of dollars for everything from AIDS drugs and tuberculosis treatment to training peacekeepers. But the Africans and their allies say they haven t been keeping their promi


Bush: Russia's new president is 'smart guy'
Associated Press - July 7, 2008
Deb Riechmann
TOYAKO, Japan - President Bush and new Russian President Dmitry Medvedev stood united Monday on issues like Iran and North Korea . But for all their handshakes and smiles, it is clear that thorny issues like missile defense are in a holding pattern until a new


G-8 summit opens with spotlight on aid for Africa
Associated Press - July 7, 2008
Malcolm Foster
RUSUTSU, Japan - Aid for Africa - and whether enough was coming from the world s major economic powers - was in the spotlight Monday as the Group of Eight nations met with seven African leaders at its annual summit. Activists have accused some G-8 countries, particularly France ,


Budget fertility treatments planned for Africa
Associated Press - July 7, 2008
Maria Cheng
BARCELONA, Spain - Doctors are getting ready to introduce a cheap in vitro fertilization procedure across Africa, where women are sometimes ostracized as witches or social outcasts if they cannot have children. Millions of dollars go into family planning projects and condom distribution to prevent pregnancies in Africa


Congress ready to take up pared-down summer agenda
Associated Press - July 6, 2008
Julie Hirschfeld Davis
WASHINGTON - Democrats bent on showing they can govern and Republicans anxious about a sour re-election climate are pushing a pared-down summer agenda in Congress. Lawmakers want to try to save homeowners from foreclosure, avert Medicare cuts and give the government power to spy on suspected terrorists. Gasoline prices


Magic Johnson's wife in public eye on HIV campaign
Associated Press - July 6, 2008
Travis Loller
LOS ANGELES - Magic Johnson s normally camera-shy wife Cookie is emerging as a spokeswoman to urge black women to get tested for HIV. Cookie Johnson, who was two months pregnant when her husband tested positive for HIV in 1991, is appearing with the former LA Lakers star in a five-year, $60 million public service campa


Black pastors set HIV test example in Nashville: Metro Health Department trying to slow spread of HIV
Associated Press - July 5, 2008
Janell Ross
NASHVILLE, Tenn. - Taking an HIV test in the pulpit Sunday morning was itself simple. At Spruce Street Baptist Church, one of Nashville s oldest and most established predominantly African-American congregations, a public health worker opened the test kit and handed the swab it contained to the Rev. Raymond Bowman.


Epic NC politician's life ends on Fourth of July
Associated Press - July 5, 2008
WILMINGTON, N.C.: At Fourth of July parades and barbecues around the Tar Heel state, Jesse Helms supporters recalled this father of the conservative movement as the man who stood up for traditional values and the defeat of communism but still had time to help his constituents. I just remember him not taking junk from a


Clinton avoids partisan politics in Aspen talk
Associated Press - July 5, 2008
ASPEN, Colo. - Former President Bill Clinton avoided partisan politics during an appearance Saturday at the Aspen Ideas Festival, focusing instead on world issues ranging from climate change to food security and AIDS. In an hour-long conversation with his former White House aide Jane Wales, now a vice president at the


Kenyan village gets clinic from brothers it helped
Associated Press - July 5, 2008
Travis Loller
NASHVILLE, Tenn. - When residents of a tiny Kenyan village sold their chickens and cattle to buy Milton Ochieng s $900 plane ticket to Dartmouth College, they told him they wanted something in return. Eight years later, he s a Vanderbilt University Medical School graduate preparing for his residency. In his home villag


Former Republican NC Senator Jesse Helms dies at 86
Associated Press - July 4, 2008
RALEIGH, N.C.: When telling stories about Jesse Helms after his death on the Fourth of July, the politician who took his place in Congress recalled how the iconic North Carolina senator liked to invite pages to sit down and chat over ice cream. Can you imagine how excited these young people would be, sitting and having


Jesse Helms: a polarizer, not a compromiser
Associated Press - July 4, 2008
WASHINGTON: Compromise, hell! Jesse Helms screamed in a 1959 editorial that captured what would become the legacy of his Senate career and his place in the conservative movement. Jesse Helms mostly was a polarizer, not a compromiser. He would rather win elections by a razor s edge than change his conservative positions


Jesse Helms quotes on life and politics
Associated Press - July 4, 2008
Some quotes of Jesse Helms, who died on the Fourth of July at age 86: I m so old-fashioned I believe in horse whipping. - During a debate in 1991 on an AIDS-related amendment. Well, there is no joy in Mudville tonight. The mighty ultraliberal establishment, and the liberal politicians and editors and commentators an