2008

OPINION: Fighting AIDS with humor
Chicago Tribune - September 1, 2008
In the early days of the epidemic, a diagnosis of AIDS meant a meeting with the grim reaper was not far off, a fate of emaciation and enervation leading to a shockingly quick demise. But in the last two decades, therapies have improved, treatment has become more advanced, and more and more of those infected are living


AIDS Foundation of Chicago awarded HUD grant: Funds will help low-income patients get housing
Chicago Tribune - August 13, 2008
The AIDS Foundation of Chicago has been awarded a three-year grant of almost $1.4 million from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development to help low-income people with HIV/AIDS. The funds will provide housing subsidies and support services to 33 households a year, the foundation said. The foundation is the l


More AIDS help urged for kids
Chicago Tribune - August 7, 2008
MEXICO CITY - The global response to the AIDS epidemic has short-changed children, health workers at the International AIDS Conference said here Wednesday. Although governments and donors provide large amounts of money for HIV treatment in the developing world, too little of that money reaches children, said Linda Rich


AIDS adds sting to Afghanistan misery: In a nation already suffering from plagues both natural and man-made, the rising prevalence of HIV-exacerbated by ignorance and drug addiction-threatens to become an epidemic
Chicago Tribune - August 5, 2008
Kim Barker, kbarker@tribune.com
KABUL, Afghanistan - The man, thin as a coat rack, said he started shooting heroin because a friend told him it was easier to quit the needle than to stop smoking the drug. His friend died, and now the young man is dying too. The addict is 28, but sharp cheekbones and tiny wrinkles around his lips make him look much ol


AIDS deaths drop; new cases don't
Chicago Tribune - July 30, 2008
The number of AIDS deaths worldwide dropped 10 percent to 2 million in 2007, as did the number of new infections in children, because of increasing access to treatment, the United Nations reported Tuesday. Condom use and prevention efforts increased in many countries and adolescent sex declined in some of the most heav


Group: Blacks slighted in U.S. HIV fight
Chicago Tribune - July 30, 2008
LOS ANGELES - A report issued Tuesday by the Black AIDS Institute in Los Angeles criticized the federal government s efforts to fight the disease among African-Americans. Seven of the 15 poor countries receiving assistance from Washington s global anti-AIDS programs have fewer infected people than the 500,000 U.S. blac


In war against AIDS, South losing ground: Report finds deaths outpace funds, Tribune's Dahleen Glanton writes
Chicago Tribune - July 30, 2008
Dahleen Glanton, dglanton@tribune.com
ATLANTA-For almost a decade, AIDS activists have been trying to bring attention to the rising number of HIV/AIDS cases in the South. Now, in a report this week, they warn the disease has created a catastrophic situation in the region. The South has long battled health disparities, but HIV/AIDS has been one of the most


Rwandan girls visit Chicago: Program highlights effect of HIV, AIDS on youths
Chicago Tribune - July 30, 2008
Deanese Williams-Harris, dawilliams@tribune.com
Some of them had never seen a lake. For others, it was their first time riding in an airplane. Almost all complained American-prepared sweet potatoes are too sweet. The five Rwandan teens arrived in Chicago earlier this week to see how their exchange-student counterparts live as part of a program sponsored by WE-ACTx,


Researchers: AIDS drug shows promise
Chicago Tribune - July 29, 2008
New research offers more evidence that a new AIDS drug brings significant benefits to patients for whom other treatments have failed. Raltegravir (Isentress) almost doubles the likelihood that patients will beat back the AIDS virus despite being immune to other medications, according to a study in the July 24 issue of


Kids get free back-to-school checkups, supplies on W. Side: Organizers say event has grown in its second year
Chicago Tribune - July 27, 2008
Russell Working, rworking@tribune.com
When Lugman Muhammad showed up at a West Side back-to-school health screening Saturday, the Chicago 12-year-old got a free checkup, an armload of school supplies and a plastic piggy bank. He also got a warning from a health-care worker, who told him that kids even younger than Muhammad have tested positive for HIV.


OPINION: In inner city, risk is reality of sex
Chicago Tribune - July 20, 2008
Johnathon E. Briggs
I ve got news for fans of Sex and the City : If that TV show, now a hit movie, were about black women, HIV might have been diagnosed in one of them. That s right. If the show had been Sex in the Inner City chronicling the sexually liberated adventures of four black women-let s call them Wanda, Jalissa, Tracy and Kim-on


U.S. blasts jail conditions: Report cites beatings, lax medical care at CookSheriff calls 98 pages of criticism 'unprofessional,' defends reform program
Chicago Tribune - July 18, 2008
Jeff Coen, jcoen@tribune.com; Hal Dardick, hdardick@tribune.com; and Matthew Walberg, mwalberg@tribune.com
In a scathing report released Thursday, federal authorities said that a culture exists at Cook County Jail in which inmates are systematically beaten by guards and medical care is so substandard that some inmates have died. The Justice Department threatened legal action if steps aren t taken to ensure that inmates bas


Syphilis on rise among men with same-sex partners: Study: Sex partners often found online
Chicago Tribune - July 14, 2008
Deborah L. Shelton, dshelton@tribune.com
Men who have sex with men are more likely to turn to the Internet to find sex partners than meet them at bars or clubs, according to a new report by the Chicago Department of Public Health. The trend is significant because health experts believe Internet hookups are helping to fuel a syphilis epidemic among men with sa


Across Midwest, interest in medical marijuana grows: Michigan vote seen as test for region on issue
Chicago Tribune - July 12, 2008
Tim Jonesm, tmjones@tribune.com
The move to legalize medical marijuana is advancing in the Midwest, with Michigan poised to be the first state between the Rockies and New England to sanction the use of the illegal drug by terminally or seriously ill people. Michigan voters will decide in November whether to authorize marijuana use, if a doctor determ


Israeli expertise in ritual helps Africa combat AIDS: Docs trained in adult male circumcisions
Chicago Tribune - July 8, 2008
Joel Greenberg, jogreenberg@tribune.com
JERUSALEM - Inon Schenker, an AIDS prevention specialist, pulled out a medical logbook from a shelf and opened it to a page filled with handwritten entries. The notations, from 1993, recorded ritual circumcisions performed on Jewish men from the former Soviet Union at the height of the wave of Immigration to


Program enlists Austin residents to spread word on healthy living
Chicago Tribune - July 1, 2008
Deborah L. Shelton, dshelton@tribune.com
During a brainstorming session on ways to implement health interventions for residents of Chicago s Austin neighborhood, someone tossed out an idea that struck a chord. How about inviting small groups of neighborhood residents to meetings in intimate settings similar to the homey way families swap stories around a kitc


HIV/AIDS diagnoses up for gay men; tomorrow's testing day
Chicago Tribune - June 26, 2008
Judith Graham, jegraham@tribune.com
On the eve of National HIV Testing Day comes this disappointing news from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The number of gay men diagnosed with HIV/AIDS is steadily rising, even as infection rates among heterosexuals and drug users have slowed. That s disappointing because gay men have been at the c


Ask Amy: Sister of gay man will not stop telling friends he's HIV-positive
Chicago Tribune - May 24, 2008
Amy Dickinson
Dear Amy: I am a gay man living in a small town. Years ago, I confided in my sister that I am HIV-positive, and in the ensuing years she has told many of her friends, despite my having asked her not to tell anyone. Our social circles overlap, so I ve had to ask these friends not to tell anyone. My sister apologizes whe


Blagojevich criticized for leaving state boards understaffed Audit finds a third of panels lack required appointees
Chicago Tribune - May 22, 2008
David Mendell, dmendell@tribune.com and Ray Long, rlong@tribune.com
Long under fire for installing political donors on state boards and commissions, Gov. Rod Blagojevich was criticized in a state audit released publicly Thursday for failing to make enough board appointments. Auditor General William Holland found about one third of state panels do not have the legally required number of


Health clinic for Mayas: Guatemalan Mayas difficult to reach
Chicago Tribune - April 30, 2008
Anna Gorman
LOS ANGELES-The Maya women sit patiently in the lobby of Clinica Oscar Romero, playing with their children and speaking in their native dialects of Kanjobal and Quiche. Idalia Xuncax knows all of the women. She is their guide, translator and advocate in a health-care world foreign from their villages in


HIV-positive men find a true home and friends at Jo-Ray House
Chicago Tribune - April 20, 2008
Deanese Williams-Harris, dawilliams@tribune.com
One of the disease s most crippling effects is social isolation, says a resident aided by the home s founder, Ida Byther-Smith After years of living a street life, Woody Easley has finally found a home, and a new life, at a residential facility in Chicago s Roseland neighborhood. Easley, 60, was asked to leave another


Abbott's net income surges: Items amplify gain; Humira, Kaletra fuel sales growth
Chicago Tribune - April 17, 2008
Bruce Japsen, bjapsen@tribune.com and James P. Miller, jpmiller@tribune.com
Abbott Laboratories , once again benefiting from growth of its Humira rheumatoid arthritis drug and its AIDS pill Kaletra , said Wednesday that net earnings climbed 34.5 percent in the latest quarter on a 13.8 percent upturn in sales. The comparison is skewed upward by one-time factors in the year-ago quarter


Let's talk about (not having) sex
Chicago Tribune - April 16, 2008
Jessica Reaves
Taylor Moore s spirited crusade for chastity is a tough sell to jaded teens. But she has faith in her message. On a bitterly cold Tuesday evening in February, the pews of Salem Baptist Church in Champaign were packed with teenagers who had been hustled into the warmth of the sanctuary by a lone parent or teacher. The g


Court blocks $2 million jury award to woman with AIDS: She accused fiance's parents of failing to tell her their son was dying of AIDS
Chicago Tribune - April 3, 2008
Michael Higgins, mjhiggins@tribune.com
A woman who sued her fiance s parents for allegedly covering up that he was dying of AIDS is not entitled to a $2 million jury award she received in 2004, the Illinois Supreme Court ruled Thursday. The woman, who is identified in court papers only as Jane Doe, had reason to doubt the health of her fiance, Albert Dillin


Pastors need to inspire, not divide
Chicago Tribune - March 31, 2008
Dawn Turner Trice, dtrice@tribune.com
As more details about Mr. [ Jeremiah] Wright and his many brothers-in-arms black preachers are exposed in our media, it turns out that not only is Wright s version of black liberation theology common in many Chicago-area black churches, but it has been going on for decades! This is an edited excerpt from an e-mail Al S


Which way is right? Speech highlights views about race that are different as black and white
Chicago Tribune - March 26, 2008
Kathleen Parker, kparker@kparker.com
WASHINGTON - Barack Obama s race speech didn t adequately answer the key question of his relationship with the Rev. Jeremiah Wright Jr., but his comments were revelatory in important ways. What Obama highlighted, if indirectly, is the dormant disconnect between much of black and white America. And what he revealed, if


Vincent L. Gillon 1954-2008 - Ex-addict went on to help others: Director of Evanston counseling service also aided families
Chicago Tribune - March 25, 2008
Trevor Jensen, ttjensen@tribune.com
Vincent L. Gillon knew what he was talking about when he counseled troubled men and women at Carepoint Adult, Child and Family Association, the Evanston social services agency he started in 1998. Mr. Gillon spent years as a heroin addict before he cleaned up, earned a master s degree and had a second chance in life wor


Teens have sex but don't have the facts
Chicago Tribune - March 17, 2008
Dawn Turner Trice, dtrice@tribune.com
Alternatives, a North Side youth agency, recently held three forums for teenagers ages 14 to 19. The series was called Let s Talk about Sex. And talk, they did. In a co-ed forum, the teens pondered contraception. One well-meaning young man stood and said aluminum foil could be used in lieu of a condom. Other teens offe


Topic too complex for kids? Debatable
Chicago Tribune - March 9, 2008
Gerry Smith, gfsmith@tribune.com
It was a question typically reserved for policy experts at think tanks: Should the federal government increase its public-health aid to sub-Saharan Africa? But at Kenwood Academy High School on Saturday, more than 100 Chicago public school students tackled the issuein the city s first middle school debate league champi


Riverdale event combines black history with lessons on HIV and AIDS: Seniors, teens gather for a celebration and a serious message in Riverdale
Chicago Tribune - February 20, 2008
Lolly Bowean, lbowean@tribune.com
When she was a teenager, Riverdale Mayor Zenovia Evans said she often ditched class at her high school to hang out at the local sweet shop. But after her mother found out and punished her, Evans shaped up and never missed a day of school, she said Tuesday at a Black History Month celebration at the Riverdale Senior, Yo


Past its time, but 'Rent' still sings
Chicago Tribune - February 15, 2008
Chris Jones, cjones5@tribune.com
With its pay phones, answering machines, little arty film cameras, and snippy references to the Gap, Rent has become a bona-fide period piece. In art, at least, people don t talk so much about the HIV drug AZT anymore. And, for reasons good and bad, I m not sure anyone would now pen a lyric like: one song, before the


Chicago to mark Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day
Chicago Tribune - February 7, 2008
Several Chicago organizations are planning events Thursday to commemorate National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day, which promotes HIV testing and education in the African-American community. Near North Health Service Corp. will hold free HIV testing from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. at two city health centers: Komed-Holman Health Ce


Funds for needle exchanges sought
Chicago Tribune - February 7, 2008
NEW YORK - Seeking to stem the HIV/AIDS epidemic among black Americans, the NAACP, the National Urban League and other groups Thursday urged Congress to repeal a 20-year-old ban on federal funding for needle exchange programs. More than 200 such programs have been established locally and regionally to reduce HIV infect


School sex ed lacking in Illinois, study finds Many Illinois teachers have neither training nor textbooks to do job
Chicago Tribune - January 31, 2008
Stephanie Banchero, sbanchero@tribune.com
Doctors should begin teaching adolescent sex education, a new study argues, because schools in Illinois aren t doing a good enough job. The study, to be published Thursday in the American journal Obstetrics & Gynecology, found that one-third of sex education teachers in Illinois public schools were not teaching com


Abbott expands nutritionals, Kaletra AIDS drug for kids
Chicago Tribune - January 30, 2008
Bruce Japsen, bjapsen@tribune.com
Moving to capitalize on increased demand for nutritional products in the booming economies of Southeast Asia, Abbott Laboratories is spending more than $280 million in Singapore to build what will be the company s largest nutritional product-making plant. Asia is one of the fastest-growing markets for Abbott s more


HIV prevention counselor: He educated teens on risky behavior, importance of testing
Chicago Tribune - January 27, 2008
Ttjensen@tribune.com
Earnest E. Hite Jr. learned he was HIV positive in the late 1980s, which spurred him to focus on advocacy work that included starting a support organization for gay African-American teenagers. Mr. Hite, who was an HIV prevention counselor, died Monday, Jan. 14, in a car accident. He lost control of his vehicle as he tr


Doctors fear bulletproof bug: Infection unfazed by common drugs
Chicago Tribune - January 23, 2008
Judith Graham, jegraham@tribune.com
When an HIV-infected patient walked into Dr. Daniel Berger s North Side office with a nasty sore on his wrist, the physician suspected the culprit was a bacterium known as MRSA. The test results, however, were unexpected. Yes, this was methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, but it was unresponsive to two medicati


State is urged to boost training in health care U. of I. trustees seek an extra $150 million over the next 5 years
Chicago Tribune - January 18, 2008
Jodi S. Cohen
University of Illinois trustees voted Thursday to ask Springfield for $150 million over five years to train future doctors and other health professionals. Their latest plea comes after several years of unsuccessful attempts to lobby state leaders, including a public awareness campaign. University leaders also plan to r


HIV event offers teens lessons, peace of mind
Chicago Tribune - January 6, 2008
Gerry Smith, gfsmith@tribune.com
As she waited for the results from her first HIV/AIDS test, Chloe Rose Jackson felt confident. After all, the 15-year-old said, she wasn t even sexually active. But then she watched a skit at Trinity United Church of Christ in which a girl discovers she s HIV-positive. The girl blames her boyfriend, only to discover th



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