Health

Working together to fight HIV/AIDS

Deputy President, Jacob Zuma says government has allocated about R3.3 billion to fight HIV/AIDS over the next three years through a comprehensive HIV/AIDS strategy that includes prevention, treatment, care and support. He says an additional R350 million has been set aside for home and community-based care and support programmes and that over the past two years an estimated eleven thousand health workers have been trained to manage opportunistic infections. For the next three years about 100 health workers per province will be trained annually to manage HIV/AIDS. Zuma adds government has also formed partnerships with civil society including traditional leaders, traditional healers, non-governmental orgranisations (NGO'€™s), community-based organizations (CBO'€™s) , trade unions and faith-based organizations. Thandeka Teyise compiled this report.

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Funding the Fund

Health activists are pulling out all the stops to address the R13-million shortfall faced by the Global Fund to Fight HIV/AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria. By launching the '€œFund the Fund'€ campaign they are aiming to pressure wealthy nations to contribute urgently needed funds.

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AIDS Treatment: Common goal, different approaches, but where to?
Living with AIDS programme 119

The battle for AIDS treatment is getting escalating with the TAC intensifying its civil disobedience campaign on the one hand and government buying media space in newspapers to do damage control on its confusing position on the protracted AIDS debacle on the other.

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Living with AIDS programme 119

Civil disobedience campaign reminiscent of apartheid struggle
Living with AIDS # 118

The sign-off on the proposed NEDLAC Framework Agreement with government, business, labour and AIDS community on a National HIV/AIDS Prevention and Treatment Plan still remains a bone of contention. In an effort to force government back to negotiations on the plan and to secure its commitment to it, the Treatment Action Campaign has mobilised 600 of its members nationally to participate in a civil disobedience campaign, scheduled to take place tomorrow '€“ Human Rights Day. Khopotso Bodibe of Health-e News Service spoke to one of the expected participants in the campaign and filed this report.

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Living with AIDS # 118

Global picket for treatment plan

CAPE TOWN - AIDS activists from around the world have been invited to join South Africans on April 27 and 28 in civil disobedience and protest campaigns should Government fail to implement a national treatment plan.Speaking at the opening of the International Treatment Preparedness Summit in Cape Town, Treatment Action Campaign chairperson Zackie Achmat called on delegates from 67 countries to picket outside South African embassies.

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Lack of access causes deaths

Preventable, treatable and curable diseases such as tuberculosis, pneumonia and thrush, for which there are often free or cheap drugs, are causing the deaths of hundreds of thousands of HIV-positive people, the United States based Treatment Action Group (TAG) has revealed.Speaking at the Treatment Preparedness Summit recently held in Cape Town, TAG executive director Mark Harrington said that treatable and curable opportunistic infections were responsible for the deaths of most people infected with HIV/AIDS. Anso Thom reports.

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