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CHICAGO (AP) — Illinois last week became the first state with a law specifically
allowing HIV-positive people to donate organs to others with the virus, but for
anyone to actually use the state law, federal rules will have to change. Currently,
organs from HIV-infected patients are discarded to prevent them from being transplanted
into uninfected patients and spreading the virus that causes AIDS. But those
organs could prolong the lives of people who already have HIV, many of whom are
living longer because of advances in medicine, said Dr. Patrick Lynch, a hepatologist
at Northwestern Memorial Hospital who helped write the legislation. “When
those laws were originally put on the books, they made sense. HIV was, unfortunately,
a death sentence back then,” Lynch said. “That doesn’t make
sense anymore.” But before HIV-positive organ donations can be performed
in Illinois, officials will have to work with the United Network for Organ Sharing — which
coordinates the nation’s organ transplant system under contract with the
government — to change U.S. Department of Health & Human Services regulations
that prohibit it.
BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) — Male circumcision may have prevented HIV infection
in some cases but the evidence is still not strong enough to make it a policy
in the fight against AIDS, a leading researcher said last week. Recent evidence
from a study in Uganda revealed that while no circumcised men in a test group
got infected after having sex with HIV-positive women, nearly 17 percent who
were not circumcised got infected, said Quarraisha Abdool Karim, an epidemiologist
from University of Natal in South Africa. Some studies suggest that the mucous
lining of the inner foreskin is more susceptible to HIV infection than that
of a woman’s cervix. At the same time, the inner foreskin has glands
that secrete an enzyme that kills HIV, she told a plenary session at the International
AIDS Conference. She did not say how many men were tested in the Uganda study.
BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) — Shouting activists held up a speech last week
by the top U.S. official on AIDS when they massed in front of the conference
stage and tried to hand him a placard mocking Washington’s policy on
HIV. Randall Tobias, the U.S. global AIDS coordinator, was at a podium to address
the 15th International AIDS Conference but sat down to wait out the minutes-long
protest before launching his speech, which drew near-constant heckling. “He’s
lying,” the protesters chanted. “People dying.” The placard
looked like a check for $15 billion — the amount the U.S. government
has pledged over five years to help curb HIV and help its sufferers — but
the check was made out to pharmaceutical companies and “right-wing” extremists.
Conference organizers pleaded for calm, and the protesters sat down facing
the audience during the speech. The activists say the U.S. funding comes with
too many strings — requiring some of it to go toward programs emphasizing
abstinence as the best policy against HIV transmission even though most experts
say condoms are the best first line of defense.
NEW YORK (AP) — Black men between the ages of 40 and 54 are nearly three
times as likely as other New Yorkers to have HIV or AIDS, according to a new
report by the New York City Department of Health & Mental Hygiene. Only
gay and bisexual men and injecting drug users have higher rates of infection,
said the report released last week at the International AIDS Conference in
Bangkok, Thailand. Citywide, one of every 14 middle-aged black men are infected
with the virus, the report found. In Manhattan alone, the infection rate is
one in seven. Many middle-aged black men are not being tested in the early
stages of infection and do not know they need treatment, the report said.
NEW YORK — Researchers released a study on the effects the popular gay
party drug crystal methamphetamine has on the brain and it was worse than scientists
expected to find, according to the New York Times. The first high-resolution
MRI study of methamphetamine addicts shows a “forest fire of brain damage,” said
Dr. Paul Thompson, an expert on brain mapping at the University of California
Los Angeles. “We expected some brain changes but didn’t expect
so much tissue to be destroyed.” The study, published in the June 30
issue of the Journal of Neuroscience, shows the ...
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