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Recent Release: NASTAD, Kaiser Family Foundation Report Provides 'Inventory' Of HIV Prevention Efforts In The U.S.
The National Alliance of State and Territorial AIDS Directors and the Kaiser Family Foundation released a report that "provides the first, comprehensive inventory of HIV prevention efforts at the state and local levels" and is based on a survey of 65 state health departments, including all state and territorial jurisdictions and six U.S. cities. The report "is intended to offer a baseline picture of how HIV prevention is delivered across the country. ... " ("The National HIV Prevention Inventory: The State of HIV Prevention Across the U.S.," July 2009).
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Food Additive May One Day Help Control Blood Lipids And Reduce Disease Risk
Scientists at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis have identified a substance in the liver that helps process fat and glucose. That substance is a component of the common food additive lecithin, and researchers speculate it may one day be possible to use lecithin products to control blood lipids and reduce risk for diabetes, hypertension or cardiovascular disease using treatments delivered in food rather than medication.
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Respironics Issues North American Recall Of SmartMonitor(R)2 Infant Apnea Monitor
Respironics announced today that it has voluntarily recalled 4,992 infant apnea monitors. This recall of the SmartMonitor®2 models 4002 and 4003 is being conducted due to the possibility of an audible alarm failure. Caregivers or parents who are using a SmartMonitor 2 Infant Apnea Monitor for their infant, should contact their homecare provider immediately to determine if their device is affected. However, they should continue using the apnea monitor until it is replaced, unless directed otherwise by a physician.
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World Poverty Gains Reduced, Countries Unlikely To Achieve Most MDGs, U.N. Report Says

The global economic downturn has "reversed a 20-year decline in world poverty" and could "add up to 90 million to the ranks of the hungry in 2009, an increase of six percent over current totals," according to a U.N. report on the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), which U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon launched in Geneva on Monday, Reuters reports (Evans, 7/6). The report found that in terms of health-related MDGs, "mortality rates from tuberculosis were not dropping fast enough to meet the 2015 targets, developing countries were unlikely to reduce child mortality by two-thirds and almost negligible progress was made on decreasing maternal mortality levels in many areas. In addition, donor funding were declining for family planning," SAPA/BusinessDay writes. However, "major progress" has been made in the fights against malaria and measles, and there is a continuing trend of fewer HIV infections, except in Eastern Europe and Central Asia, where infection rates have been rising (7/6). "The latest U.N. report to review progress" on the MDGs predicts that the "world will fail to achieve most of its targets to boost wealth, health and the quality of life in poor countries by 2015," AP/Google.com reports (Engeler, 7/6). "In 2009, an estimated 55 to 90 million more people will be living in extreme poverty than anticipated before the crisis," said "The Millennium Development Goals Report." It warned that a" recent decline in foreign aid - despite pledges from rich powers to increase fund flows - was likely to bring more disease and social disruption in the [global] South," Reuters writes. In a speech to ECOSOC ahead of the G8 meeting, which is scheduled to begin on July 8 in Italy, Ban called on the G8 leaders to increase aid over the next year, noting that their previous pledges were not completely fulfilled. "I urge the G8 to set out, country by country, how donors will scale up aid to Africa over the next year," Ban said (7/6). The total annual aid flow to Africa remains at least $20 billion below what world leaders pledged at a summit in Gleneagles, Scotland, in 2005, according to Ban. WHO Director-General Margaret Chan said the global economic downturn has also led to a significant rise of chronic diseases related to poor diet, AP/Google.com writes. She said fresh fruit and vegetables and other healthy foods are dropped first if households have to cut their budgets. Chan said governments should prioritize chronic disease control and the improvement of mothers" health (7/6). Recently Ban published a related New York Times opinion piece calling for "international solidarity" to combat "multiple crises," including the global economic situation, climate change and extreme poverty. In the article, Ban outlines three areas for action: mobilizing res to monitor the impact of the economic crisis in developing countries in real time, maintaining global commitments "to help women and men move from vulnerability to opportunity," and a reformation of international institutions. Ban writes that "without adequate regulation, a breakdown in one part of the system has profound repercussions elsewhere," concluding, "[c]hallenges are linked. Our solutions must be, too" (Ban, 7/2). This information was reprinted from globalhealth.kff.org with kind permission from the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. You can view the entire Kaiser Daily Global Health Policy Report, search the archives and sign up for email delivery at globalhealth.kff.org. © Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. All rights reserved.


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