Zahira Kharsany interviews DAVID ALNWICK, UNICEF HIV Advisor
JOHANNESBURG, Dec 1 2008 (IPS) – According to the United Nations Children s Fund, early diagnosis and treatment greatly increase survival rates for HIV-positive newborns. but fewer than one in ten infants born to HIV-positive mothers in 2007 was tested for HIV within two months of birth.
Children and Aids: Third Stocktaking Report 2008 , released by the United Nations Children s Fund on World AIDS Day, warns that without the right treatment, half of children with HIV will die before their second birthday.
The UNICEF report focuses on what is known as the four Ps . These are the prevention of mother-to-child transmission of HIV, providing pediatric treatment and care, preventing infection among adolescents a…
Antoaneta Bezlova
BEIJING, Jan 23 2009 (IPS) – Days before families across China sit down for the Chinese New Year s feast, the country s leaders have moved to restore public confidence in the safety of their repast. A Chinese court has sentenced two men to death and awarded stiff sentences to others implicated in the country s worst food-tampering scam.
The nationwide scandal surrounding milk powder tainted with the industrial chemical melamine that killed at least six infants and sickened nearly 300,000 others followed an initial cover up and prolonged investigation that only provoked more public anger.
Anticipation that the harshest sentences would be issued were running high and the sentences handed down, stiff as they are by international standards, left many col…
Natalia Ruiz Díaz
ASUNCIÓN, Mar 10 2009 (IPS) – Graciela Samaniego has her bags packed. Along with a number of fellow nurses, she is ready to leave her job at a public hospital in the Paraguayan capital and fly to a city in northern Italy, where she will work in a nursing home.
I m going because I want to build a house. With what I earn here, despite all the years I ve been working, it s simply impossible, she tells IPS.
The group of nurses recruited to work in Italy mention different reasons for going, from the dream of having a home of their own to ensuring financial stability for their children.
The preparations for their departure have been kept under close wraps since an attractive job offer began to make its way through the ranks of nurses in this lan…
Joshua Kyalimpa
KAMPALA and Gombe, UGANDA, Apr 6 2009 (IPS) – Primary health care in Uganda is hampered by a shortage of doctors and nurses, but trained volunteers from the community are stepping into the breach.
Village health team focal person Robert Kito giving guidelines to his team members at Gombe hospital compound. Credit: Joshua Kyalimpa/IPS
Robert Kito goes from door to do…
Jim Lobe*
WASHINGTON, May 8 2009 (IPS) – True to his promises to bolster Washington s soft power abroad, President Barack Obama released details of his fiscal year (FY) 2010 budget that included significant increases in development assistance and other civilian-oriented tools of U.S. foreign policy.
If approved, the 2010 budget, combined with a pending FY09 supplemental budget that Congress is likely to approve in the coming weeks, would also go a long way to paying U.S. arrears to the United Nations and its peacekeeping operations and, for the first time in some 25 years, would ensure that Washington pays its dues to the U.N. body in a timely fashion, rather than one year late.
We re very pleased with this budget. It s as good as could be expected, said Don Kraus, d…
Busani Bafana interviews NOMA NESENI, WSSCC water, sanitation and health coordinator
BULAWAYO, Jun 11 2009 (IPS) – As part of the International Year of Sanitation in 2008, Zimbabwe developed a national strategy for sanitation, launched in February 2008. Just five months later, a cholera outbreak that was to claim over 4,000 lives began.
Lack of water, a large homeless urban p…
Antoaneta Bezlova
BEIJING, Jul 6 2009 (IPS) – When China s population control was imposed in 1980, it was meant to be a temporary measure which the government promised to phase out in three decades. It was intended to halt the baby boom of the 1950s and 1960s.
But as China is preparing to mark the 30th anniversary of its one-child policy next year, indications are that the policy would remain in place despite mounting opposition from the general public and experts who question its success.
During the annual session of the National Parliament in March, a senior legislator tabled a proposal for further tightening of the family planning rules, arguing that many of China s current problems stemmed from lapses in implementing the policy.
The world s most populous c…
Mario Osava
FORTALEZA, Brazil, Aug 9 2009 (IPS) – Zilá Ferreira and Juraci Lisboa were in the grip of depression since 1996 the former over the death of her mother, and the latter because she was abandoned with seven children under 14.
Mural at one Movimento de Saúde Mental Comunitária do Bom Jardim centre. Credit: Mario Osava/IPS
Both of these Brazilian women, who were 36 years old at the time, began staying in bed for days on end, unable to muster the…
Mel Frykberg
JELAZON, West Bank, Sep 4 2009 (IPS) – Fourteen-year-old Muhammad Nayif s mother broke down as she spoke to IPS. Nayif died after being shot three times in the chest by Israeli soldiers Monday night.
Palestinian medical personnel who tried to reach the critically injured boy near the Jelazon refugee camp north of Ramallah were threatened at gunpoint by Israeli soldiers and shot at.
We were sure that the boy was seriously wounded and needed urgent medical attention, said Sameh Barghouti a medic in the Palestinian Red Crescent Society (PRCS) ambulance which tried to evacuate the youngster.
But the soldiers pointed their guns at us and told us to go back. When we asked to speak to their captain they shot rubber coated metal bullets and teargas cani…
Julio Godoy
BERLIN, Nov 18 2009 (IPS) – Africa, the continent already most affected by hunger and food scarcity, is likely to see its woes increased due to climate change and the changing rain patterns it provokes, experts and scientists say.
According to data gathered by the German Institute for Meteorology and Climate Research, variability in the rain patterns in Africa, especially in the Western region, has substantially increased since the early 1980s.
Harald Kunstmann, director of the institute, says that while in the Sahel region the drought that set in through the 1970s and 1980s has not radically changed, in the Volta delta region the yearly rain precipitation amount remains constant as a whole, but now follows erratic patterns.
For the Volga delta, we…