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The Best Science Writing Online 2012
Showcasing more than fifty of the most provocative, original, and significant online essays from 2011, The Best Science Writing Online 2012 will change the way...
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Every day more than 1,000 infants worldwide are infected with HIV during gestation, delivery or breast-feeding, according to U.N. estimates. But the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) says it will eliminate the transmission of HIV from mothers to their babies in just four years. It's an ambitious goal that the fund is unlikely to meet without major changes, but it's not impossible.
"What it doesn't require is a new scientific breakthrough," says Jimmy Kolker, chief of UNICEF's HIV/AIDS Programme. Mother-to-child HIV transmission virtually never happens in developed nations, where babies and moms have easier access to a prophylactic regimen of antiretroviral drugs. Medically, protecting infants from HIV infection means "just doing what we're already doing" in developed nations, such as giving moms a combination antiretroviral drug treatment during pregnancy and babies a dose of the drug nevirapine immediately after birth. For women who do not have access to clean, safe water to mix infant formula, it also means continuing antiretroviral treatments for moms and babies during breast-feeding.
The challenge now is to bring these drugs, which have been available since the late 1990s and have since undergone several revisions and improvements, to middle- and low-income countries. "The problems are logistical," says Laurie Garrett, a global health researcher at the Council on Foreign Relations.
This slide show explores what is needed to stop mother-to-child HIV transmission by 2015, following Inonge Siamalambo and her baby Elson of Lusaka, Zambia, through their 18-month commitment to a transmission prevention program.
View a slide show of Siamalambo and Elson





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2 Comments
Add CommentWhen the big one hits, we will forget AIDS.
Reply | Report Abuse | Link to thisWhat the government should do is STOP adding stuff to our food which FEEDS infection and STOP removing stuff from our food which inhibits HIV.
Reply | Report Abuse | Link to thisThe government adds iron to our food which feeds infection.
"The body has defense mechanisms to make it harder for germs to suck iron out of someone’s blood or other tissues. But deadly germs can get around that so-
called iron blockade, and understanding how might lead to better treatments."
The government removes phytic acid / chaff from our grains during refining which has been shown to inhibit HIV.
"Inhibitory effect of inositol hexasulfate and inositol hexaphosphoric acid (phytic acid) on the proliferation of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) in vitro"