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The Pop Reporter®

Volume 2, Number 38
23 September 2002


FAMILY PLANNING / REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH LAW AND POLICY

Sudan's Media Laws Frustrate Drives on AIDS and Genital Mutilation (news article)
A growing clampdown on the press is affecting public health campaigns in Sudan, just as a breakdown in peace talks dashed hopes of ending one of the world's most intractable civil wars.

Bayer Granted United States Approval for HIV Test (news article)
Bayer, Germany's largest drug maker, said Tuesday that it had received Fod and Drug Administration approval for a test that identifies HIV. The test, called Versant, can detect the amount of all major types of HIV in the blood and can help monitor the disease and measure the effectiveness of therapy, Bayer said.


FAMILY PLANNING / REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH RESEARCH

Efficacy, Cycle Control, and User Acceptability of a Novel Combined Contraceptive Vaginal Ring (PubMed abstract)
The vaginal ring was an effective contraceptive with excellent cycle control that was convenient, well tolerated, and highly acceptable to users, according to this one-year multicenter study.

Vaginal Wetness: An Underestimated Problem Experienced By Progestogen Injectable Contraceptive Users In South Africa (research abstract)
Eight hundred and forty-eight women aged 15-49 were interviewed in a rural district of KwaZulu-Natal in South Africa and 22.1 percent reported current use of an injectable contraceptive method. Vaginal wetness was reported by 18.4 percent of users and was one of the most common side effects, second only to amenorrhoea (62.5 percent). It was also what 17.5 percent of the women liked least about using this method. Since some South African men may prefer dry sex the perception that the injectable contraceptive increases vaginal wetness may be problematic for women who use it.

Induction to Delivery Time Interval in Patients With and Without Preeclampsia: A Retrospective Analysis (PubMed abstract)
It is suggested that patients with preeclampsia have a shorter induction to delivery interval than patients without preeclampsia, despite there being no good objective evidence. Results showed that the women with preeclampsia had a statistically significant longer induction to delivery interval than those without preeclampsia.

Is Multiple Sclerosis a Sexually Transmitted Infection? (research abstract)
Related news article: MS Might Be Sexually Transmitted
Building on a longstanding theory that multiple sclerosis (MS) is triggered by an as-yet-undiscovered virus, a British researcher has assembled evidence from dozens of different studies he claims support his hypothesis MS might be transmitted primarily by sexual contact. A number of experts question the validity of the data used to support the theory, however.


FAMILY PLANNING / REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH NEWS

Beyond the Pill: Four New Devices Aim to Make Contraception Easier (news article)
The old contraceptive drugs, in new delivery systems (the ring, a patch, an injection, and an intrauterine system) are liberating women from the daily routine of swallowing a pill. When taken perfectly, the new contraceptives work nearly perfectly, with a less than 1 percent chance of failure.

Uganda: Huge Families Shock Visiting Asians (news article)
A visiting delegation from Thailand and Cambodia has expressed worry about Uganda's "non-existent" family planning practice. The delegation visiting under the South to South Initiative on HIV/AIDS said they were staggered by the number of children in some homesteads, in a country where HIV is still a big problem.

Uganda: Fishermen Ask Government to Provide Larger Condoms (news article)
Fishermen have expressed dissatisfaction with the condoms available on the market and asked the Government to provide larger ones.


HIV / AIDS RESEARCH

Gender and HIV-Associated Pulmonary Tuberculosis: Presentation and Outcome at One Year after Beginning Antituberculosis Treatment in Uganda PDF Format (research article)
Tuberculosis is the leading infectious disease cause of death in women globally. Reports have suggested that responses to tuberculosis may differ between men and women. Researchers investigated gender related differences in the presentation and one year outcomes of HIV-infected adults with initial episodes of pulmonary tuberculosis in Uganda. While differences existed between males and females at presentation, the outcomes at one year after the initiation of tuberculosis treatment were similar in Uganda.

Explosive Spread and High Prevalence of HIV Infection Among Injecting Drug Users In Togliatti City, Russia (PubMed abstract)
The purpose of the study was to establish the prevalence of antibodies to HIV (anti-HIV) and associated risk factors among injecting drug users (IDU) in Togliatti City, Samara Oblast, Russian Federation. Researchers found anti-HIV prevalence was 56 percent (234/418). Three-quarters of anti-HIV-positive IDU (74 percent) were unaware of their positive status.


HIV / AIDS NEWS

Chinese AIDS Activist Freed after Confessing to 'Leaking Secrets' (news article)
Detained Chinese AIDS activist Wan Yanhai was released after confessing to "illegally leaking state secrets," his wife and China's official media said. Wan, one of China's most prominent AIDS campaigners, had been held in custody by Chinese authorities since August 25, sparking a wave of condemnation from international rights groups.

Eastern European HIV Epidemic 'Virtually Unchecked' (news article)
The HIV/AIDS epidemic has exploded in Eastern Europe and the Commonwealth of Independent States, posing the greatest health threat to youth in the region, according to the UN.

India: Giving AIDS the Red Light (news article)
In recent years, public health officials, social workers, and politicians swarmed Kolkata's red-light areas, advocating safe sex, offering medical services, and distributing condoms, resulting in tremendously successful initiatives like the Sonagachi AIDS Project. Now only 9 percent of about 6,000 sex workers are HIV positive. Drawing inspiration from the Sonagachi AIDS Project, a group of doctors, psychologists, and other concerned citizens opened the City Counseling Center in downtown Kolkata, providing medical and psychological consultation, as well as cheap antiretroviral drugs.

Top Researcher Says AIDS Vaccine Could Arrive in Five Years (news article)
After years of frustrating near-breakthroughs, a vaccine could be developed within five years that would provide complete protection against HIV, an AIDS researcher from the University of Maryland said.

South Africa: Children TV Series Introduces HIV Positive Puppet (news article)
An HIV positive muppet will soon join the cast of South Africa's Takalani Sesame, a local television production of children's educational program, Sesame Street. The muppet was unveiled at a press conference held in Cape Town, by the Sesame Workshop, the Department of Education, United States Agency for International Development, and the South African Broadcasting Corporation.

HIV Vaccine Trials May Be Opposed by AIDS Victims (news article)
The very groups who may most benefit from an AIDS vaccine may also be the ones who offer the most resistance to its final testing phase. Researchers said this week they expect opposition to widespread HIV vaccine tests from groups comprising gay men, blacks and IV drug users.

HIV Rate Down, AIDS Deaths Up in Cambodia (news article)
The percentage of 15- to 49-year-old Cambodians with HIV infection fell from 3.3 percent in 1998 to 2.6 percent this year. But AIDS deaths rose by about 18,000 in the past 2 years, to 78,600.


MATERNAL AND CHILD HEALTH RESEARCH

Syphilis in Pregnancy in Tanzania. I. Impact of Maternal Syphilis on Outcome of Pregnancy (research abstract)
Researchers measured the impact of maternal syphilis on pregnancy outcome in the Mwanza Region of Tanzania. Women with high-titer active syphilis were at the greatest risk of having low-birth-weight or preterm live births, compared with women with other serological stages of syphilis. Among unscreened women, 51 percent of stillbirths, 24 percent of preterm live births, and 17 percent of all adverse pregnancy outcomes were attributable to maternal syphilis.

Syphilis in Pregnancy in Tanzania. II. The Effectiveness of Antenatal Syphilis Screening and Single-Dose Benzathine Penicillin Treatment for the Prevention of Adverse Pregnancy Outcomes (research abstract)
Researchers examined the effectiveness of treating maternal syphilis with single-dose benzathine penicillin. There was no increased risk for adverse pregnancy outcome for women treated for high-titer active syphilis, compared with seronegative women. Single-dose treatment is effective in preventing adverse pregnancy outcomes attributable to maternal syphilis.

Progress Toward Poliomyelitis Eradication - India, Bangladesh, and Nepal, January 2001-June 2002 (research report)
This report summarizes progress towards polio eradication in India, Bangladesh, and Nepal during January 2001to June 2002 and highlights the remaining challenges to eradicating polio in these countries.

India: Polio Epidemic Hits Uttar Pradesh (research article)
A poliomyelitis epidemic has hit India's most populous state, Uttar Pradesh, seriously derailing efforts to control the disease. So far this year, 407 cases of polio have been recorded in India, 347 (85 percent) of which have been in Uttar Pradesh, which is situated in northern India.

Effectiveness of Nurses as Providers of Birth Labor Support in North American Hospitals (research abstract)
Based on a Cochrane Review that concluded that continuous caregiver support during labor had many benefits, including reduced likelihood of cesarean delivery, researchers conducted a randomized, controlled trial to evaluate the effectiveness of nurses as providers of labor support in North American hospitals. Patients were randomly assigned to receive usual care or continuous labor support by a specially trained nurse during labor. Continuous labor support by nurses did not affect the likelihood of cesarean delivery or other medical or psychosocial outcomes of labor and birth.


MATERNAL AND CHILD HEALTH NEWS

Breast-Feeding May Not Ward Off Allergies, Asthma (news article)
A new long-term study is challenging the notion that breast-feeding helps protect children from developing allergies and asthma, one of the widely promoted potential benefits of breast-feeding. In fact, researchers found that of the more than 1,000 children they followed to age 26, those who were breast-fed for at least 4 weeks were more likely to develop asthma or various types of allergies.

Mozambique: Focus on Poverty and Maternal Mortality (news article)
Mozambique's maternal mortality rate stands at an estimated 1,500 out of 100,000 live births, one of the highest rates in the world. In this southern African country, myths, lack of education and trained medical staff, poorly equipped health facilities with no maternity wards, unreliable or no communication and transport, make giving birth a high risk event. "If a woman has bad habits during her pregnancy, then she will have a complicated birth," said Elena Feta, an elderly traditional birth attendant working in Federico's district. Asked for examples of bad habits, she explained that, "the woman probably had sex with another man during the pregnancy."


MEN'S HEALTH RESEARCH

Levonorgestrel Implants (Norplant II) for Male Contraception Clinical Trials: Combination with Transdermal and Injectable Testosterone (research abstract)
Related research: Suppression of Spermatogenesis by Etonogestrel Implants with Depot Testosterone: Potential for Long-Acting Male Contraception (research abstract)
Related news article: Hormone Therapy Shows Promise as Male Contraceptive
In two recent studies on male contraceptives, hormone combinations effectively suppressed sperm. Whether the drop in sperm supply can actually prevent pregnancy remains to be seen, but researchers are encouraged by the results, saying that the next step is to refine the combinations to make them more convenient and long-lasting. In one study, the research team tested the sperm-suppressing abilities of several combinations of hormones that included testosterone and levonorgestrel, the hormone used in the female contraceptive implant Norplant II. 93 percent of men receiving hormone implants plus testosterone injections reached azoospermia, which is a complete lack of sperm in semen. In a second study, a team in the UK reports that another hormone combination also resulted in substantial suppression of sperm production--one or two long-acting implants of the hormone etonogestrel in addition to testosterone pellets placed under the skin in the abdomen.

Parasites May Sap Male Longevity (news article)
Males suffer more parasitic infections than females, which could help explain why they die earlier, say Scottish researchers.


MEN'S HEALTH NEWS

Wake Forest-Johns Hopkins Team Discovers Prostate Cancer Gene (news article)
Scientists in the Center for Human Genomics at Wake Forest University School of Medicine and Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions have discovered a gene that may play an important role in prostate cancer susceptibility in both African-American men and men of European descent.


POPULATION RESEARCH

Populations of the Industrial World: A Convergent Demographic Community? (research abstract)
Europe's populations have emerged from a long period of demographic transition. The end-point of demographic transition is often assumed to be convergence to a new stable post-transitional regime. This paper measures demographic convergence in industrial societies to see if they are acquiring a common pattern.

Population Growth and Intensification of Land Use in India (research abstract)
Linkages between population growth, socioeconomic development and agricultural intensification are examined using district-level data for India for 1951, 1961, 1971, 1981 and 1991.


POPULATION NEWS

Gender Gap Growing in Transition Countries of Europe-Central Asia (news article)
Gender disparities are growing in the 27 transition countries of Europe and Central Asia, according to a new report by the World Bank, but the economic transformation has affected male and female populations in the region in different ways.

United Arab Emirates: Population Growth Set to Slow (news article)
The UAE's population growth is expected to slow in the coming years as a possible exodus of foreigners will offset rapid growth in the native population and maintain the UAE's status as one of the wealthiest nations.

Uganda: Census Officials Call for Patience (news article)
The Uganda Bureau of Standards (UBOS) asked for patience as their national exercise continued. The deputy executive director of UBOS said, "The exercise is still on schedule. People should be patient and co-operate with the enumerators."

Zimbabwe: Ndebeles Wary of Census Outcome (news article)
Residents in Zimbabwe's second city of Bulawayo have challenged the Central Statistics Office (CSO) to supply accurate figures of the city's population when it announces its findings. The call comes in the wake of allegations that the CSO deliberately reduced the figures of the city's population supplied by enumerators in the last census which was conducted in 1992.

Russia: Census-Takers Will Pay Foreigners a Visit (news article)
Foreign nationals visiting or living in Russia will be covered by the nationwide census next month just like their Russian neighbors, in part to help the government design its migration and labor policy, officials from the State Statistics Committee said.


WOMEN'S HEALTH RESEARCH

Hormone Replacement Therapy and Associated Risk of Stroke in Postmenopausal Women (research abstract)
Related news article: Hormone Replacement Stroke Risk Debated
In a conclusion that counters other recent findings, researchers said postmenopausal women taking hormone replacement therapy, adjusting for overall cardiovascular risk, seem to show no increased risk of stroke vs. women not taking HRT.

Cancer Incidence in BRCA1 Mutation Carriers (research abstract)
Related research: Cancer Risk Estimates for BRCA1 Mutation Carriers Identified in a Risk Evaluation Program (research abstract)
Related news article: Breast Cancer Gene May Be Associated With Additional Cancers
Two new studies suggest that people who inherit BRCA1 mutations are at an increased risk of not only breast and ovarian cancer but a number of other cancers as well. However, the absolute magnitude of the increase in risk of these other cancers is small.

Heritability of Mammographic Density, a Risk Factor for Breast Cancer (research abstract)
Women with extensive dense breast tissue visible on a mammogram have a risk of breast cancer that is 1.8 to 6.0 times that of women of the same age with little or no density. Menopausal status, weight, and parity account for 20 to 30 percent of the age-adjusted variation in the percentage of dense tissue. Researchers undertook two studies of twins (one in Australia and one in the U.S. and Canada) to determine the proportion of the residual variation in the percentage of density measured by mammography that can be explained by unmeasured additive genetic factors. According to the classic twin model, the proportion of variants attributable to additive genetic factors accounted for 63 percent of the variation in density in all twins studied. Finding the genes responsible for this phenotype could be important for understanding the causes of the disease.

Screening for Postmenopausal Osteoporosis: A Review of the Evidence for the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (research article)
Related summary of recommendations: Screening for Osteoporosis in Postmenopausal Women: Recommendations and Rationale
Related news article: Early Osteoporosis Detection Can Prevent Fractures
The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force recommends that women aged 65 and older be routinely screened for osteoporosis to reduce the risk of fracture and spinal abnormalities often associated with the disease. The Task Force also recommends that routine screening begin at age 60 for those women identified as high risk because of their weight or estrogen use. The recommendations mark the first time the Task Force has called for routine osteoporosis screening.

A Cost-Effectiveness Evaluation of Testing and Treatment of Chlamydia Trachomatis Infection Among Asymptomatic Women Infected with Neisseria Gonorrhoeae (Pubmed Abstract)
The goal of this study was to examine the cost-effectiveness of routine dual treatment of women with infection, with or without separate testing for, compared with an alternative of testing for both infections and restricting treatment for to women testing positive for. Researchers found that testing for both infections is more cost-effective than routine presumptive treatment for. Providing both presumptive treatment and testing for can also be cost-effective in some settings.

Design and Methods of the Evaluation of an HPV-Based Cervical Cancer Screening Strategy in Mexico: The Morelos HPV Study (PubMed Abstract)
This paper describes the design and methodology of the Morelos HPV Study. The main objective of this study is to examine the use of two different methods for obtaining HPV DNA specimens, self-collected vaginal and clinician-collected cervical, to detect pre-invasive cervical lesions and cancer.


WOMEN'S HEALTH NEWS

Fears Over Long-term HRT Use (news article)
Women who take hormone replacement therapy long-term are more likely to develop a serious disease than be protected against one, researchers suggest. A review, published in The Lancet, of four major studies into the effects of HRT found that women who took the treatment for five years had a higher risk of breast cancer, stroke and blood clots in the lung but were less likely to suffer from bowel cancer or hip fractures.

Tamoxifen Reduces Breast Cancer by a Third in High Risk Women (news article)
Tamoxifen reduces the risk of breast cancer by a third over four years in healthy women at high risk of developing the disease, a major international study has shown. But the investigators consider that the increased risk of thromboembolism and endometrial cancers from the drug means that longer term follow up is needed before a clear recommendation can be made on its use in primary breast cancer prevention.


YOUTH RESEARCH

Association of Adolescents' History of Sexually Transmitted Disease (STD) and Their Current High-Risk Behavior and STD Status: A Case for Intensifying Clinic-Based Prevention Efforts (Pubmed abstract)
The goal was to examine the associations between adolescents' self-reported history of STD diagnosis and current sexual risk behaviors, prevention knowledge and attitudes, and STD infection status. Findings suggest that there is a need to intensify clinic-based prevention efforts directed toward adolescents with a history of STDs, as a strategy for reducing STD-associated risk behaviors and, consequently, the likelihood of new STD infections.

Sexual History and Epstein-Barr Virus Infection (research abstract)
Related news article: Mono Virus Sometimes Passed Through Sex: Study (news article)
Sexual intercourse may be an important route of transmission for the "kissing disease" mononucleosis among teenagers, a study of UK college students suggests.


YOUTH NEWS

HIV Hits Eastern Europe Youth (news article)
HIV and AIDS are spreading faster in eastern Europe than anywhere else in the world, posing a major threat to young people's health, experts warn.

Uganda: Schools Need Health Education (news article)
Adolescence Reproductive Health Organisations have asked the government to include Adolescence Sexual Reproductive Health (ASRH) programmes in the current schools curriculum to enable the HIV/AIDS message reach all students.


BOOKS / BOOK REVIEWS

Contraceptive Sterilization: Global Issues and Trends (book)
This book depicts the current state of contraceptive sterilization. It is the most comprehensive current source of information about the worldwide practice of contraceptive sterilization since the 1985 landmark publication Voluntary Sterilization: An International Fact Book. This new resource, Contraceptive Sterilization, provides the latest in-depth information about female and male sterilization, quality service delivery, sterilization incidence and prevalence, characteristics of sterilization users, laws and policies around the world, key factors influencing the use and outcomes of sterilization, research gaps, and future trends and needs.


PROFILES / SPECIAL REPORTS

Social Monitor 2002: The MONEE Project, CEE/CIS/Baltics PDF Format (report)
HIV/AIDS is spreading at a faster rate in parts of Central and Eastern Europe and the Commonwealth of Independent States (CEE/CIS) than anywhere else in the world, says UNICEF in this new report. The report, tracking the well being of children and young people in the region, warns that HIV/AIDS is the greatest threat to their health as it moves - virtually unchecked - into the mainstream population in a number of countries.

Transforming Health Systems: Gender and Rights in Reproductive Health PDF Format (training manual)
This WHO manual, designed for health managers, discusses health implications of sex differentials and gender. The manual addresses the issue of women being more subject to certain health risks and frequent lack of services to meet their health needs related to sexuality and reproduction.

Ignoranance Only: HIV/AIDS, Human Rights, and Federally Funded Abstinence-Only Programs in the United States PDF Format (research report)
U.S. federally funded abstinence-only programs interfere with fundamental rights guaranteed by international law. The failure to provide accurate information about prevention of HIV transmission needlessly puts children at risk of contracting this devastating and fatal disease, Human Rights Watch charged in a new report.

The European Health Report 2002 (report)
The report provides a broad but concise picture of the health status and health determinants in the European Region, and identifies areas for public health action for the Member States and the European public health community. While overall levels of health in the Region are among the highest in the world, the report describes widening gaps between and within countries.

Indonesia and HIV/AIDS: A Slow Progress (opinion/interview)
Some 300 participants of the recent ASEAN People's Assembly in Denpasar, Bali, demanded that the next summit of leaders of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, scheduled for November, address the "human security" agenda, urgent issues affecting the welfare of some 500 million people in the region. Among these issues is HIV/AIDS, with a more effective approach by ASEAN called for given the slow progress some member countries have made in addressing this pressing issue. An assembly participant who is also an HIV/AIDS councillor, Danny Irawan Yatim, shared his views with The Jakarta Post on Indonesia's progress in this area.


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