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 HIV Information - October 7, 2008
| Reuters reports one in four new infections occurs in Asia, home to more than half the world's people, and 1,500 in the region die from the disease each day. Officials and aid workers said the risk of AIDS in areas struck by the tsunami had increased due to the breakdown in basic services and health-care systems, which left many people without access to condoms | | Pfizer Inc. announces it is calling off development of two experimental drugs because of poor trial results. Pfizer has been developing an HIV therapy and a treatment for asthma and lung disease in collaboration with Germany's Altana AG. According to an Associated Press report, Pfizer had to scrap its development program midway when experiments didn't show any favorable results for the patients | | The World Heath Organization's (WHO) plan to get three million people in the poorest parts of the world onto anti-AIDS drugs by 2005, has reportedly fallen short. According to a WHO report, only one million people are currently receiving life saving AIDS treatments, leaving the organization almost certain that they will not be able to meet their goal | | An experimental AIDS vaccine developed at Hadassah University Medical Center in Jerusalem, is giving hope to scientists as it shows signs of protecting patients' weakened immune system from infections. The vaccine was developed by Dr. Rivka Aboulafia-Lapid and colleagues at Hadassah, along with scientists at Kaplan Medical Center and the Weizmann Institute of Science in Rehovot, and is currently undergoing clinical trials | | CBC News reports the surfacing of a potentially fatal sexually transmitted disease that rarely appears in industrialized countries in Canada. According to the report, there are currently 22 cases of lymphogranuloma venereum reported to the country's public health agency. An analysis in the May 31 online edition of the Canadian Medical Association Journal first announced the potential outbreak | |
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