Tanzanian soldiers test anti-Aids drug

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Tanzanian soldiers test anti-Aids drug

BBC News - Tuesday, 2 October, 2001


A potential Aids drug developed by a subsidiary of the South African state oil company, CEF, is being tested in military clinics in Tanzania.

The drug, which is derived from coal, is being given to about 350 soldiers who have tested positive for HIV, the virus that causes AIDS.

It is designed to strengthen the human immune system's ability to fight off infections.

The drug's developers say there've been extensive laboratory tests in South Africa.

But the BBC science correspondent says the research does not appear to have been published in any medical journal.


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