| 9/23/2013 | National News | International News | Private Hospitals Not Reporting TB Cases INDIA :: TB The Hindu (Chennai) (09.20.2013) :: By R. Sairam | | Lack of TB case reporting by private hospitals in parts of India could affect efficiency in fighting the disease, according to health officials. Hospitals must report all TB diagnoses, per a 2012 government order by the Union Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, but private institutions worried about data security and losing patients. The reluctance to report all TB cases affect data collection, which then could alter the structure of policies to combat the disease, said M. Sakthivel, deputy director of medical services (TB).
The Government of India provided assistance to all patients with multi-drug resistant TB whether they received treatment at government or private hospital. A government-developed application collected diagnosis reports to provide immediate surveillance of TB cases. Private hospitals then could send case details through other channels of communications.
The World Health Organization (WHO) estimated India’s TB rate at 203 out of 1,000,000 people. According to Indian officials, the major city of Ciombatore should report between 7,100 and 7,300 cases per year, but they were reporting only 2,430 cases annually. Of 400 district hospitals, fewer than 10 percent reported TB cases on a consistent basis, Sakthivel told a local news organization. | Read Full Article | Share this Article | Back to Top | | | Medical News | An AIDS Cure in Two Years? Prostratin Could Make It Possible UNITED STATES :: HIV/AIDS Healthline (09.09.2013) :: By David Heitz | | Scientists researching a cure for HIV have projected that a cure could be available in 18 to 24 months. The researchers were working on two natural compounds––prostatin and bryostatin––that they reproduced in the laboratory for medical purposes. Prostratin comes from the bark of the Samoan mamala tree. Paul Cox, an ethnobotanist and director of the Institute of Ethnomedicine in Wyoming, heard of the bark from a Samoan healer. Paul Wender, a chemist from California’s Stanford University, found in experiments with prostratin that it flushed out the virus from cells where it was hiding. Drugs are able to kill the virus when it is in the open, but not when it is hiding in cells. When patients stopped taking their medication, the virus resurfaced and quickly multiplied.
Wender was able to recreate the drug and design new variants and has made it 100 times more powerful than that obtained from the tree. The AIDS Research Alliance (ARA), a Los Angeles nonprofit dedicated to finding a cure for AIDS, is developing prostratin. Dr. Stephen Brown, medical director of ARA, stated that the organization was two thirds of the way through necessary experiments before the drug would be ready for market. Researchers had performed initial tests on animals and now were conducting tests on blood from AIDS patients who had been on immunosuppressive therapy.
Bryostatin, a compound that comes from a sea creature called bryozoa, also has healing qualities. It was discovered by Robert Pettit, a University of Arizona chemistry professor. Wender created bryostatin variants 1,000 times more powerful at flushing HIV from cells than prostratin. However, additional work is necessary before it could be considered a successful drug candidate.
The National Institutes of Health is helping to fund Wender’s research.
The study was presented before the 246th American Chemical Society National Meeting, September 8–12, in Indianapolis, Ind. | Read Full Article | Share this Article | Back to Top | | | Local and Community News | News Briefs | | Syphilis Rates Soar in Broward; Tests Urged FLORIDA :: STDs Miami Herald (09.21.2013) :: By Gustavo Solis | | In response to a rise in syphilis rates in Broward County, Fla., health officials mailed 22,000 notices last week to encourage residents to get tested. The AIDS Healthcare Foundation (AHF), the largest US AIDS organization, distributed the flyers. Albert Ruiz, director of AHF’s public health division, said that although Broward County had the highest syphilis rate in the state, the county was contending with a curable disease, especially if caught and treated early. Since 2000, the county had seen a 400-percent increase in reported cases, and according to the Florida Department of Health, the county reported 613 cases in 2012. Within the first 10 days of sending out the flyers, six residents had sought out syphilis screenings at the AHF Broward Wellness Center. The center opened on September 3 and offers free testing and treatment for syphilis, HIV, chlamydia, and gonorrhea. | Read Full Article | Share this Article | Back to Top | | | | |
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