AfricaFocus Bulletins with Material on Health - 2011-2012
Feb 7, 2011 Africa: Penalizing Transparency
http://www.africafocus.org/docs11/gf1102.php
"When any entity gives multi-million dollar grants, there will
always be corruption. The key issue is what is being done to
unearth the corruption and minimise losses. The Global Fund is far
better at investigating allegations of corruption and at recovering
stolen monies than most or all other major aid donors. ... Another
thing that distinguishes the Global Fund from other donors is its
willingness to publish the details of the corruption that it has
unearthed." - Global Fund Observer, January 27, 2011
Apr 27, 2011 Senegal: Music to Fight Malaria
http://www.africafocus.org/docs11/mal1104.php
Music may seem an unlikely way to fight malaria. But Senegal's
highly successful program has relied not only on medical
expertise but also on the star power of Youssou N'Dour and a
national song competition called "Xeex Sibbiru" (Let's Beat
Malaria). Support from prominent figures in the society,
including religious leaders as well as music stars, has helped
to dramatically increase prevention and treatment coverage.
May 16, 2011 Africa: AIDS Research "Game Changer"
http://www.africafocus.org/docs11/hiv1105.php
A new randomized study of AIDS treatment as prevention,
beginning early treatment of infected heterosexual people who
are living in partnership with an uninfected person, has shown
a 96% reduction in risk of infection. ... Instead of taking
this as the game changer it is, notes AIDS activist Brook
Baker, U.S. officials are still taking a "We're too broke to
think" response. And the United States and other donor
countries are opposing firm AIDS treatment targets at the UN
meeting on the issue next month.
Jun 14, 2011 Guinea-Bissau: Drug Trade in Broader Context
http://www.africafocus.org/docs11/gb1106.php
"In Guinea-Bissau, drug trafficking ... is a consequence of the
pre-existing lack of stability that allows smugglers to
establish their networks in the region and operate to and from
there. Ignoring the structural causes of the problem (endemic
poverty, corruption, impunity) will have an even deeper impact
on the local population than the illegal drug trade, and will
leave unaddressed the very conditions that continue to foster
trafficking opportunities in the future." - February 2011
report from Norwegian Peacebuilding Center
Jun 14, 2011 Africa: "War on Drugs" Blowback Effects
http://www.africafocus.org/docs11/wod1106.php
"Vast expenditures on criminalization and repressive measures
directed at producers, traffickers and consumers of illegal
drugs have clearly failed to effectively curtail supply or
consumption. [at the same time] the implementation of the war on
drugs has generated widespread negative consequences for
societies in producer, transit and consumer countries,
[including] the growth of a 'huge criminal black market',
financed by the risk-escalated profits of supplying
international demand for illicit drugs." - Global Commission on
Drug Policy
Jul 5, 2011 South Africa: Taking Leadership in AIDS Fight
http://www.africafocus.org/docs11/hiv1107.php
South Africa's 5th AIDS conference, held from June 7-10 this
year, marked a remarkable turnaround in the country's
efforts against the AIDS pandemic. Achievements noted
included bringing 400,000 additional AIDS patients into
antiretroviral treatment within the last year, raising the
total to 1.4 million; cutting the cost of antiretroviral
therapy in half over six months; and extending treatment
using trained nurses to more than 1,600 health facilities.
Most important of all has been a strong spirit of
collaboration among the government, medical specialists, and
activists.
Oct 20, 2011 Africa: Eliminating Malaria
http://www.africafocus.org/docs11/mal1110.php
"Over the past decade, scaling up the delivery of existing
interventions [against malaria] is estimated to have saved
more than one million lives in Africa alone, with the
majority of these deaths averted since 2007. That was the
year when the big push to improve coverage really hit the
ground." - Dr. Margaret Chan, Director-General, World
Health Organization
Feb 3, 2012 Africa: Paying for Health
http://www.africafocus.org/docs12/hf1202.php
"Simply put, if we allow the fund to fail, many people will
die, and we will forfeit the chance at the "AIDS-free
generation" that U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton
called for in November. This is no time to step back." -
Paul Farmer
Feb 10, 2012 Africa: Counting the Costs of Brain Drain
http://www.africafocus.org/docs12/bd1202a.php
According to a study published in the British Medical
Journal in November 2011, nine sub-Saharan countries
(Ethiopia, Kenya, Malawi, Nigeria, South Africa, Tanzania,
Uganda, Zambia and Zimbabwe) invested some $2 billion in
costs of educating doctors who subsequently emigrated to the
United States, United Kingdom, Australia, or Canada. The
receiving countries gained an estimated $4.55 billion from
these investments, in savings from medical education
that they did not have to finance. The familiar phenomenon
of "brain drain," it is clear, should also be seen as a
subsidy from developing to developed countries.
Mar 1, 2012 Africa: Funding Slowdowns Hit AIDS Programs
http://www.africafocus.org/docs12/hiv1202.php
In the last 15 years, AIDS activists and medical
professionals, in Africa and around the world, have won the
recognition that the fight against AIDS, which
disproportionately affects the African continent, is a
shared global responsibility.
Apr 4, 2012 Africa: BRICS Stepping Up on Global Health
http://www.africafocus.org/docs12/brics1204.php
When the BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa)
countries met for their fourth summit in New Delhi last
month, the event attracted little attention from the Western
press. The New York Times headlined its report "BRICS
Leaders Fail to Create Rival to World Bank," noting that the
summit only created a working group to consider such a new
development bank next year. But the common tendency to
dismiss the group because of its internal diversity risks
ignoring the steady emergence of greater influence for its
members beyond their obvious growing economic weight.
Apr 11, 2012 Africa: Issues for the World Bank
http://www.africafocus.org/docs12/wb1204a.php
Despite the tilted voting structure and the likely victory
of the candidate nominated by U.S. President Obama, the
contest for the new World Bank president, who will be chosen
next week by the World Bank board, has been the subject of
unprecedented open debate. Any of the three candidates
would, in different ways, break the mold of selection of a
white male American economist or foreign policy veteran.
But, of equal importance, and much less discussed, any of
the candidates would also head up an institution with a
contradictory mix of old practices and new ideas, despite
the demise of the market-fundamentalist "Washington
consensus."
Apr 11, 2012 Africa: "New Structural Economics"
http://www.africafocus.org/docs12/wb1204b.php
"I believe that every developing country, including those in
Sub-Saharan Africa, can grow at 8 percent or more
continuously for several decades, significantly reducing
poverty and becoming middle- or even high-income countries
in the span of one or two generations, if its government has
the right policy framework to facilitate the private
sector's development along the line of its comparative advantages and tap into
the late-comer advantages" - Justin Yifu Lin, Chief
Economist, World Bank, in introducing his just published
book New Structural Economics: A Framework for Rethinking Development
and Policy
May 9, 2012 Africa: Decisive Year for Global Fund
http://www.africafocus.org/docs12/gf1205.php
"We write as global health groups, communities affected by
HIV, TB, and Malaria, and researchers from around the world
to urge you not to undermine the founding principle of a
demand-driven Global Fund. We are united against proposals
to set 'envelopes' or 'allocations' for each country, which
would result in limited ambition, scaled back or skewed
plans, and ultimately a failure to get ahead of death and
new infections. Limiting ambition now will only cost more in
the future - in lives and money." - civil society letter to
Global Fund Board
May 24, 2012 Africa: Food Security and Human Development
http://www.africafocus.org/docs12/ag1205a.php
"This [Africa Human Development] Report argues that subSaharan
Africa can extricate itself from pervasive food
insecurity by acting on four critical drivers of change:
greater agricultural productivity of smallholder farmers;
more effective nutrition policies, especially for children;
greater community and household resilience to cope with
shocks; and wider popular participation and empowerment,
especially of women and the rural poor."
Jul 27, 2012 Africa: End of AIDS in Sight, 1
http://www.africafocus.org/docs12/hiv1207a.php
"Even without a vaccine or a cure, it became clear this week
that science has given us the tools we need to dramatically
change the course of the HIV/AIDS pandemic and ultimately
end AIDS. Any argument that this cannot be achieved because
we do not have evidence-based tools is no longer valid.
Science has given us the tools. Now they must be applied." -
Anthony Fauci, at the opening of this week's International
AIDS Conference
Jul 27, 2012 Africa: End of AIDS in Sight, 2
http://www.africafocus.org/docs12/hiv1207b.php
"As leaders and scientists prepare to discuss the latest
initiatives needed to scale up treatment to such a high
level it could potentially end the epidemic, seven million
people still require urgent access to antiretroviral (ARV)
treatment. While the United Nations AIDS agency (UNAIDS)
estimates that 1.4 million more people were put on
antiretroviral therapy in 2011, this pace will have to
double to reach the global goal of 15 million people
receiving treatment by 2015." - Doctors without Borders
Dec 5 2012 Africa: Towards the End of AIDS
http://www.africafocus.org/docs12/aids1212.php
"[Despite significant advances} the epidemic of HIV/AIDS
is far from over. According to the most recent statistics
from UNAIDS, there are still 2.5 million new HIV
infections worldwide and 1.7 million deaths annually from
this disease. Globally, there are 34 million people
living with HIV and half do not know their HIV status.
Nearly half of the people in need of antiretroviral
treatment (6.8 million) do not have access to these lifesaving
medications ... Sub-Saharan Africa continues to
carry a disproportionate burden of disease, representing
69 percent of all people infected with the virus
worldwide." - Susan Blumenthal, M.D. and Melissa Shive
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