April 7, 2003
Pape, a professor of New York's Cornell University, will use $1.7 million from the fund to expand testing, treatment and counseling to 25 new centers in hospitals and clinics throughout the country.
The Global Fund is also sending $2.5 million this year to help a network of hospitals and clinics in Haiti's impoverished central plateau. Dr. Paul Farmer said the money should more than double the number of patients seen regularly there, to about 8,000. His Boston-based nonprofit Partners in Health is already obtaining cheaper generic drugs, but urgent needs remain. "We lose patients every week because we don't have enough meds," said Farmer.
In other areas, even simple care is unobtainable. A $22.5 million loan approved by the Inter-American Development Bank would help reorganize Haiti's troubled health system, but it is part of $500 million in aid blocked since disputed elections in 2000. President Jean-Bertrand Artistide criticizes the United States for blocking aid to the government. Nevertheless, the United States is giving about $15 million to nonprofit groups for HIV/AIDS in Haiti over the next two years.
While Haiti accounts for most Caribbean HIV cases, doctors say prevention programs are helping. Studies suggest the percentage of sexually active adults infected -- now estimated at 4.5 percent -- has been declining.
Back to other CDC news for April 7, 2003
Previous Updates | Search the CDC archive
Excerpted from:
Associated Press
04.04.03; Ian James