TAC to challenge drug prices
AIDS activist group, the Treatment Action Campaign (TAC), is squaring up for another challenge to drug companies, this time around high prices being charged for life prolonging anti-retroviral medication.
AIDS activist group, the Treatment Action Campaign (TAC), is squaring up for another challenge to drug companies, this time around high prices being charged for life prolonging anti-retroviral medication.

It'€™s been two decades since Dr Peter Piot, now head of UNAIDS, first saw patients from central Africa with a mysterious illness that we today know to be HIV/Aids. Since then he has made it his mission to keep the epidemic on the international political agenda. Kathryn Strachan spoke to Dr Piot during his recent visit to South Africa
A national hotline has been established to mobilise the community goodwill that exists towards AIDS orphans, according to the Department of Health. Kerry Cullinan reports.
A "village for the vulnerable" keeps 350 families from starvation. Kerry Cullinan reports.
The Aids epidemic, unless it is brought under control, is one of the greatest threats to sustainable development in many parts of the world, Peter Piot, executive director of UNAids said.
29-year-old Nombeko Mpongo of Gugulethu is one of thousands rape survivors who do not have access to anti-retrovirals. She contracted HIV after four men raped her in 1997. Nombeko said although it was difficult at first to talk about the ordeal she's learned that there is life after HIV. Now she helps other HIV positive people to fight for their survival.
Within three weeks, the country'€™s top HIV/AIDS scientists will present the Department of Health with a range of recommendations on how to deal with HIV/AIDS. Kerry Cullinan reports.
It'€™s almost two years since the first Living with AIDS programme went out on air. In this audio report, we listen back to some of the voices of people whose lives and work highlight key issues that still challenge our society.
Before 1994, families were murdered and houses burnt in clashes between the ANC and IFP. Once again political tension between the two parties is on the rise, yet the wounds of the past have still not healed.
It is the duty of the parents especially to educate their children about HIV/AIDS and the use of condoms. Boyce Mgcina a traditional healer from Izifo Zonke Traditional Healers and an HIV/AIDS counselor at Zola Clinic in Soweto says in most cases fathers become not just heads of the house but also role models to their children '€“ girls and boys irrespective. Mgcina says traditional healers should talk often about HIV/AIDS during imbizos.
Spain is  the European country most affected  by the HIV/AIDS pandemic. According to Michael Meulbroek of Projecte Del Noms, an organization that helps people with information and counselling on HIV/AIDS,  the Spanish government  refuses to supply condoms and offers no treatment for people  with HIV/AIDS. The 2001 UNAIDS Report on the pandemic says there are 130 000 people living with AIDS in Spain -  26 000 are women and 1 300 children.

There are many messages in our media about how to prevent the spread of HIV/AIDS, but there is comparatively little public information on living with the virus. In this audio report we meet the presenters of the latest series of Beat It - the only TV programme that offers practical information about managing HIV/AIDS and ensuring a better quality of life. Nombeko Mpongo and Vuyani Jacobs are both HIV positive and draw on their personal experiences in hosting the TV series. Beat It! is on e-tv on Tuesdays at 4.30pm and repeated on Sundays at 11.30am. It runs for 12 weeks and ends on November 3, 2002.
What would make you change your sexual behaviour to ensure you were safe from risk? In this audio report, the head of the Centre for the Study of AIDS, Mary Crewe, talks about the shortcomings of many of the messages that have been used in South Africa to prevent the spread of HIV/AIDS. She argues that until messages acknowledge the context in which people are living and recognise the importance that emotions like desire have in motivating sexual behaviour, AIDS prevention messages are unlikely to help people change their risky sexual practices.
It's been sixteen years since President Yuweri Museveni came to power and throughout this time he has maintained a commitment to fighting HIV/AIDS. HIV/AIDS is listed among the top three priorities of government which include peace and security and economic empowerment. And this commitment is paying off. Uganda has reduced its HIV prevalence rate from a high of 30 percent to between 6 and 8 percent today. The credit for this effort comes from a multi-sectoral response which includes the efforts of non-government organisastions, religious groups, communities and, above all, the political will from the government says Dr Alex Coutinho of the Uganda AIDS Commission.

Creative brilliance by a group at UCT's Mechanical Engineering department has seen the development of novel prostheses for cancer patients at a fraction of the cost. For many patients the alternative is having the limb amputated. Jonathan (19), the first patient to receive a prosthesis recently had a check-up, over a year after receiving the implant. He spoke to Health-e about the experience of having to learn to walk all over again.