The Pop Reporter®
Volume 2, Number 46
18 November 2002
FAMILY PLANNING / REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH LAW AND POLICY
Sydney
Summit a Step Back for Access to Medicines, But It Is Not the
End of the Story (press release)
Trade ministers meeting in Sydney proposed a reform to WTO patent
rules which supposedly allows poor countries to import cheap generic
medicines but which in practice could be unworkable. This is a
setback in the fight to put public health before corporate profit,
but the battle is not over," said a spokesperson for Oxfam
International. The major problem is that the country supplying
cheap generic copies of drugs needed to combat AIDS, TB and any
other disease, would have to agree to override the relevant patent.
AIDS
in India: Money Won't Solve Crisis (press release)
"Bill Gates is right that the AIDS epidemic is poised to
explode in India," said Joanne Csete, director of the HIV/AIDS
program at Human Rights Watch. "But his generosity will be
undermined if the Indian government doesn't do something about
the widespread violence against people who are affected by the
disease."
India:
Two-child Norm Needs to be Reconsidered: UNFPA (news article)
The 'two-child norm' adopted by some states in the country violates
the spirit of International Conference on Population and Development
(ICPD) and needs to be reconsidered, according to Dr. Thoraya
Ahmed Obaid, Executive Director United Nations Population Fund
(UNFPA). "The two-child norm adopted by some Indian states
needs to be reconsidered as it is a coercive way of controlling
population," Obaid said.
WHO
Strategic Approach to Improving Reproductive Health Care (policy
brief)
A "systems framework" borrowed from modern management
principles underpins WHO's strategic approach to improving family
planning services and services dealing with other areas of reproductive
health, such as reproductive tract infections (including sexually
transmitted infections), maternal health, unsafe abortion, cervical
cancer, and adolescent reproductive health.
Australia:
Man Jailed Over Infecting Partner with HIV (news article)
The District Court in Perth has sentenced a 35-year-old man to
seven years' jail for causing a woman grievous bodily harm by
infecting her with HIV.
Zambia:
HIV Positive People Should Be Isolated in Camps - Deputy Minister
(news article)
Related news article: Zambian
Minister Criticized for Suggesting Quarantining AIDS Patients
(news article)
AIDS activists criticized a Zambian official for his proposal
that everyone with HIV be forced into isolation camps. During
a parliamentary debate Wednesday over a bill to form a National
AIDS Council secretariat to coordinate Zambia's response to AIDS,
Alex Chama, deputy minister for Luapula province, said, "[Those
infected] are busy spreading the problem. It is not fair. They
should be isolated to a specific camp until such time that they
become negative."
South
Indian State Pushes for Mandatory HIV Screening (news article)
The southern Indian state of Andhra Pradesh is seeking tough new
laws to make it mandatory for couples wanting to marry to undergo
HIV screening.
FAMILY PLANNING / REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH RESEARCH
Evaluation
of an Emergency Contraception Introduction Project In Kenya
(PubMed abstract)
The Consortium for Emergency Contraception (EC) introduced Postinor-2,
a progestin-only EC product, into Kenya as part of its work to
expand access to EC in developing countries. Authors surveyed
family planning clients and providers to assess the impact of
these activities. Only one-fifth of women at the evaluation had
heard of EC and almost half of the women expressed concerns about
EC at baseline and evaluation. More research and experience using
novel ways of informing women about EC in Africa is needed, and
information needs to address women's concerns.
Comparative
Evaluation of the Effectiveness and Safety of Two Regimens of
Levonorgestrel for Emergency Contraception In Nigerians (PubMed
abstract)
Emergency contraception was introduced in Nigeria over two decades
ago, but few women have used this method even in emergency situations
because of the side effects. To find an acceptable levonorgestrel
regimen for emergency contraception in our community, the two-dose
regimen 0.75-mg levonorgestrel 12 hours apart (group A) and the
single dose 1.5-mg levonorgestrel (group B) were studied in 1118
volunteers. The pregnancy rates increased with delay in starting
treatment and if further acts of unprotected sexual intercourse
took place after treatment. It was concluded that both regimens
were effective and safe.
Changing
Fertility Rates in Developed Countries. The Impact of Labor Market
Institutions
(report)
During the last two decades fertility rates have sharply decreased
in most developed countries, childbearing has been delayed and
fertility rates and female participation rates across OECD countries
have become positively correlated. In this paper the author shows
that the flexibility of the market to accommodate women's exit
and entry in the labor force and the effect that time-off has
in lifetime expected income - in terms of forgone experience and/or
delayed wage growth - and in its variance - in terms of the ability
to find a stable job - explain those trends. The institutional
features of labor markets affect not only the size of the opportunity
cost of childbearing but also how it varies with age at childbirth
and labor market attachment.
Recommendations
for IUD Use (review article)
This review article focuses on five areas related to IUD use:
Insertion of a copper-bearing IUD; menstrual abnormalities; pelvic
inflammatory disease; pregnancy; and use of prophylactic antibiotics
for copper-bearing IUD insertion.
FAMILY PLANNING / REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH NEWS
Two-in-One
Gel: Microbicide and Contraceptive (news article)
A gel commonly used to thicken cosmetics may work as an antiretroviral
microbicide and as a contraceptive, report researchers from Johns
Hopkins University.
Sexologists
Call for More Sexual Awareness Across Asia (news article)
If people have more sex, they will be happier and more motivated
to work and, consequently, the economy will improve, Asian sexologists
said at a conference Thursday while calling for more sexual education
across the continent. "When the economy is down, sexual activity
is lower as people get depressed and have less sex," said
founder and president of the Asian Federation for Sexology. "Their
quality of life will decrease, with an increase in family violence
and divorce."
Doctors
Test Easily Reversible Vasectomy (news article)
Vasectomy specialist Dr. Ronald Weiss of the University of Ottawa
is conducting human trials in India of a painless reversible vasectomy.
"It will lower the pH or make the area around it slightly
acidic (to) help kill sperm," said Weiss. "The second
thing is that it has a mild electrical charge that will also kill
sperm." To reverse the process, the gel is simply flushed
away, no surgery required.
South
Africa: First Free Condoms Initiative (news article)
In an effort to prevent the spread of sexually transmitted diseases,
including HIV and AIDS, the Cape Town Unicity government and Intersite
Property Management Services, have launched what is believed to
be the city's first initiative for the installation of free condom
dispensers - in the ablution facilities in Cape Town Railway Station.
Tanzania:
Iringa Villagers Say Condoms 'Are Cold' (news article)
Mang'oto villagers in Makete District have refused to use condoms.
Reason? The contraption is cold, and that is not conducive to
satisfactory sex, they claim.
HIV / AIDS RESEARCH
Surveillance
of HIV/AIDS-Related Attitudes and Perceptions Among the General
Public in Hong Kong from 1994 to 2000 (research abstract)
This study monitored the trends of HIV/AIDS-related attitudes
and perceptions including awareness, knowledge, self-perceived
risk of HIV infection, and program evaluation among the general
public in Hong Kong over a 7 year period. Over the study period,
the level of HIV/AIDS-related knowledge has improved slightly
for most of the studied items. However, the public seemed to be
losing interest in HIV/AIDS-related issues and were not satisfied
with the efficacy and adequacy of HIV/AIDS programs in Hong Kong.
Diffusion
of HIV/AIDS Knowledge, Positive Attitudes, and Behaviors through
Training of Health Professionals in China (PubMed abstract)
This study evaluated a training-of-trainers strategy to update
HIV/AIDS knowledge and improve attitudes and behavior among health
professionals and the public; researchers found that the strategy
was cost effective for improving knowledge and attitudes and promoting
condom use.
HIV / AIDS NEWS
Panel
Posts HIV Rx Research Priorities in Poor Countries (news article)
An international panel convened by the Rockefeller Foundation
offers its advice on antiretroviral research priorities for poor
and developing countries.
New
HIV Vaccine Holds Promise of Global Effectiveness (news article)
Clinical tests began last week of a novel vaccine directed at
the three most globally important HIV subtypes. The vaccine incorporates
HIV genetic material from subtypes A, B and C, which cause about
90 percent of all HIV infections around the world.
Equitable
Access: Scaling Up HIV/AIDS Treatment in Developing Countries
(news article)
For many years, Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) has
been caring for people living with HIV/AIDS in developing countries.
Since 2001, MSF has been providing antiretroviral treatment to
patients with HIV/AIDS in Cambodia, Cameroon, Guatemala, Honduras,
Kenya, Malawi, South Africa, Thailand, Uganda and Ukraine. Experience
has demonstrated that providing effective treatment is not only
feasible in resource-poor settings, but has concrete clinical
benefits and dramatic effects on the lives of individuals and
their communities. However, while we know that treatment is possible,
scaling up to national level has only been successfully implemented
in a handful of countries. It is time to scale up HIV/AIDS treatment
in developing countries.
South
Africa: Test Kit to Determine HIV Status in Seconds (news
article)
Eastern Cape Premier Makhenkesi Stofile has endorsed a saliva-based
HIV test kit set to determine one's HIV status in approximately
five seconds, in the privacy of one's home. Developed over three
years by world-acclaimed scientist Edward Ayensu, the Gaifar Instant
Screen Rapid Test is said to have been approved in many countries
in Africa, including the US, China and Vietnam.
MATERNAL AND CHILD HEALTH RESEARCH
Effect
of Iron Supplementation on Incidence of Infectious Illness In
Children: Systematic Review (research article)
Concerns have been expressed that people who receive iron supplementation
acquire more infections. In view of the widespread prevalence
of iron deficiency in children and its adverse health consequences,
researchers carried out a systematic review of 28 international
randomized controlled trials to examine this question. On average,
iron supplementation did not significantly increase the incidence
of overall infectious illnesses, but the risk of acquiring diarrhea
was 11% higher.
Reported
Adverse Drug Events in Infants and Children Under 2 Years of Age
(research abstract)
Related news article: Serious
Adverse Events Associated With Perinatal Drugs
An average of 243 children under the age of 2 years die each year
in the United States as a result of drugs used during the perinatal
period. Seventeen drugs accounted for more than half of all cases
of serious and fatal adverse events in children treated directly
with them.
Pregnancy
in the Sixth Decade of Life: Obstetric Outcomes in Women of Advanced
Reproductive Age (research abstract)
Appropriately screened women aged 50 years or older can successfully
conceive via oocyte donation and experience similar pregnancy
rates, multiple gestation rates, and spontaneous abortion rates
as younger recipients. During pregnancy, they appear at increased
risk of preeclampsia and gestational diabetes. A majority can
expect to deliver via cesarean. However, there does not appear
to be any definitive medical reason for excluding these women
from attempting pregnancy on the basis of age alone.
Processing
Speed in the 1st Year of Life: A Longitudinal Study of Preterm
and Full-Term Infants
(research article)
Related news article: Pre-Term
Infants Slower Than Full-Terms at Processing Information
Although individuals vary widely, on average, pre-term infants
are markedly slower at processing information -- including understanding
what they see -- than full-term infants. New research shows this
deficit in processing speed is already present in the first year
of life and the gap in performance does not narrow with age.
Effect
of Nitazoxanide on Morbidity and Mortality In Zambian Children
With Cryptosporidiosis: A Randomised Controlled Trial (PubMed
abstract)
Cryptosporidiosis in children in developing countries causes persistent
diarrhea and malnutrition and is associated with increased mortality,
but there is no effective treatment. Authors aimed to assess the
effect of nitazoxanide--a new broad-spectrum antiparasitic drug--on
morbidity and mortality in Zambian children with diarrhea due
to Cryptosporidium parvum. The authors concluded that a 3-day
course of nitazoxanide significantly improved the resolution of
diarrhea, parasitological eradication, and mortality in HIV-seronegative,
but not HIV-seropositive, children.
Effect
of Interpregnancy Interval on Risk of Spontaneous Preterm Birth
in Emirati Women, United Arab Emirates
(research article)
This study found that a short interpregnancy interval is a risk
factor for spontaneous preterm birth in Emirati women. The findings
suggest that modification of this risk factor would reduce the
risk of preterm birth.
Risk
of Death Following Pregnancy in Rural Nepal
(research article)
This study investigated the length of time following pregnancy
during which the risk of mortality was elevated among women in
rural Nepal. Findings suggest that the risk of mortality associated
with pregnancy should be assessed over the first 12 weeks following
pregnancy instead of over the firs 6 weeks.
HIV
Testing Among Pregnant Women - United States and Canada, 1998-2001
(report)
Related news article: 'Opt-out'
HIV Tests Could Reach More Pregnant Women
Two different approaches can help ensure that most pregnant women
get an HIV test, a step that can reduce the risk of transmitting
the virus from mother to child during or after birth.
MATERNAL AND CHILD HEALTH NEWS
Female
Supporters Help Mother, Baby in Pregnancy (news article)
New evidence suggests that doulas, women who provide support to
expecting mothers during childbirth, can help both mother and
baby.
Uganda:
Maternal Deaths Worry Wabudeya (news article)
Uganda's maternal mortality rates are still high because of poor
services at health centres or total lack of the services. Beatrice
Wabudeya, the minister of state for primary health care, said
"We still have a big problem because our maternal mortality
rates are still embarrassingly high. They do not show any signs
of coming down; something which is peculiar to Uganda and not
other countries in Africa."
MEN'S HEALTH RESEARCH
Effect
of Flaxseed Supplementation on Prostatic Carcinoma In Transgenic
Mice (PubMed abstract)
Related news article: Flaxseed-Rich
Diet Blocks Prostate Cancer Growth and Development In Mice
A diet rich in flaxseed seems to reduce the size, aggressiveness
and severity of tumors in mice that have been genetically engineered
to develop prostate cancer, according to new research from Duke
University Medical Center. And in 3 percent of the mice the flaxseed
diet kept them from getting the disease at all.
MEN'S HEALTH NEWS
New
Prostate Surgery Met With Caution; Hype About Laparoscopic Procedure
Worries Some Doctors (news article)
Men can decide to have their prostates removed laparoscopically,
a new and much-debated surgical procedure that promises to dramatically
reduce pain, blood loss, and the month-long convalescence typically
associated with the standard operation. But the buzz about laparoscopic
prostate surgery at medical meetings and on the Internet has alarmed
some specialists, who say they fear that the procedure is being
hyped and oversold.
Sperm
Quality Low In Farming Region (news article)
A study has found the quality of semen significantly poorer in
men from rural mid-Missouri than in males from urban areas, and
its authors believe agricultural chemicals might explain the difference.
Men
Can Get Breast Cancer, Too (news article)
A lot of men don't know they have breasts," says Samuelson,
a 54-year-old health educator who lives in Ann Arbor, Mich. "They
think they have 'pecs.' They think breast cancer is a woman's
disease." But men can and do get breast cancer. About 1,500
cases of breast cancer in males will be diagnosed in the United
States this year, and 400 men will die of the disease, according
to the American Cancer Society.
Study
Finds Sex Among Straight Black Men (news article)
Confirming the existence of hidden "down low" homosexuality
in African-American communities, a new study found that 16 percent
of poor Los Angeles-area black men who consider themselves straight
have actually had anal sex with men.
Recognizing
Men Abused by Women (commentary)
Since the 1970s, most domestic violence studies have shown that
men and women are equally violent toward their spouses. It would
seem that broadening outreach to a more diverse group of victims
should be an unequivocally good thing for those concerned with
domestic violence. But that's not the way many advocates see it.
POPULATION RESEARCH
Mortality
Patterns in the Russian Federation: Indirect Technique Using Widowhood
Data
(research article)
The Russian mortality crisis of the early 1990s attracted considerable
attention, but information on possible covariates of mortality
is lacking, and concerns have been raised about the validity of
official mortality data. To help elucidate the determinants of
mortality, the authors examined whether indirect demographic techniques
could be used to study mortality in countries such as the Russian
Federation, where mortality data are inadequate, using input data
independent from official vital statistics. Although the indirect
estimates were imprecise (partly owing to the small population
size of the study), and mortality in women was probably underestimated
(owing to many factors, including poorer reporting by males and
high male mortality), the authors state that their results are
consistent with the mortality pattern observed in official mortality
data.
Preliminary
Results from the CSIS Aging Vulnerability Index
(report)
The 2003 edition of The Aging Vulnerability Index, assesses the
"vulnerability" of the developed countries to rising
old-age dependency costs. In this first edition, the Index covers
twelve countries: Australia, Belgium, Canada, France, Germany,
Italy, Japan, the Netherlands, Spain, Sweden, the United Kingdom,
and the United States.
POPULATION NEWS
UAE
Population Grows 19-Fold In Three Decades (news article)
The UAE's population has jumped nearly 19-fold since oil began
flowing out of the desert land more than three decades ago to
turn the small scattered oases into one of the most advanced cosmopolitan
cities in the Middle East.
Russian
Experts Overestimate Census (news article)
A top Russian official on Friday said preliminary results from
last month's census show that Russia's population has not declined
as drastically as experts predicted, Russian news agencies reported.
WOMEN'S HEALTH RESEARCH
Going
Along to Get Along: Female Sexual Submission in Urban China
(report)
With a new national sample from urban China, this paper examines
the conditions under which women submit to the sexual desires
of their husband or other primary sexual partner. The paper draws
on both on both essentialist (nature) and social constructionist
(nurture) accounts of sexual behavior. The analysis concludes
that both perspectives provide insights, with the following elements
all shaping women's perceived sexual submission: women's levels
of consciousness (indexed by education), bargaining (relative
income, hitting, native community), relationship quality (men's
intimacy and care in both daily life and during sex), and the
woman's own values about sex and her level of interest in sex
(feelings about whether sex is dirty, and frequent thoughts about
sex).
WOMEN'S HEALTH NEWS
Drama Changes Attitudes Towards Genital Mutilation (news article)
Female genital mutilation continues to be practised in approximately
28 countries in Africa. Whilst considered by some cultures as
an essential rite of passage to womanhood, opposition to the practice
has largely come from outside these communities, with the United
Nations pledging to eradicate it within three generations.
Female Circumcision Alive and Well in Singapore (news article)
In Singapore's small Muslim community, female circumcision involves
nicking the prepuce, the skin covering the clitoris. It is markedly
different from the practices of some Muslim communities in Africa
and the Middle East that are decried by human rights activists
as female genital mutilation.
New
Cervical Cancer Early Detection Guidelines Released, (press
release)
Related news article: Cancer
group: Fewer Pap tests needed
Most women over 30 can skip the annual Pap test for cervical cancer,
and instead safely have the check only every two to three years,
the American Cancer Society said this week. Cervical cancer grows
so slowly that women have plenty of time to be tested and have
any preventive treatment, the organization advised.
Married
Women Have the Best Sex (news article)
Two-thirds of married women say the best sex they've had is with
their husband, compared to 13% who say it was when they were single
and just 9% when having an affair, a survey by health magazine
Top Sante said.
YOUTH RESEARCH
Developing
an AIDS Prevention Intervention for Incarcerated Male Adolescents
in Brazil (PubMed abstract)
The researchers report in this paper that Initial efforts at prevention
based on commonly used approaches of providing information to
guide future rational decisions generated limited participation.
However, when they worked with the boys to develop interventions
based on their interests and needs, using modalities such as music,
hip-hop arts, graffiti, and helping them to create an AIDS prevention
compact disk, they responded with enthusiasm.
YOUTH NEWS
More
Teens Lose Virginity in June, December (news article)
Teens are much more likely to lose their virginity during the
months of June and December than at any other time of the year,
a new study has found.
Teaching
Teens About Sex (feature article)
While virginity isn't exactly igniting most high school and college
campuses with the same excitement as, say, a Saturday afternoon
football pep rally, a growing number of adolescents are making
the choice to postpone their first sexual experience until marriage,
believing that doing otherwise may be risky business.
BOOKS / BOOK REVIEWS
Promoting
Reproductive Security in Developing Countries (book)
This book provides a comprehensive approach to developing and
implementing reproductive health programs in the developing world.
It fills a major gap in the literature by responding to the global
need for a detailed guide to comprehensive reproductive health
services. Promoting Reproductive Security in Developing Countries
furnishes an innovative conceptual model - reproductive security
- and offers an in-depth analysis of major reproductive health
Internally
Displaced People: A Global Survey (book)
Today, at least 25 million people are displaced by conflicts,
but unlike refugees these people remain in their own countries.
Worldwide, they outnumber refugees by nearly two-to-one and they
nearly always receive less protection and less aid. This book
provides unique information and analysis on displacement in 48
different countries across the globe. It is essential reading
for anyone interested in refugees and humanitarian affairs, including
donors, advocates, aid workers, researchers and journalists.
PROFILES / SPECIAL REPORTS
Communication
for Development Roundtable Report: Focus on HIV/AIDS Communication
and Evaluation
(report)
This report represents a number of different communications models
and applications in the field. It highlights an emerging convergence
in approaches and increasing efforts to build bridges between
different types of activities, including Behaviour Change Communication,
Communication for Social Change and Advocacy. You will also find
examples of approaches to address young people's needs and gender
issues, including community mobilization against gender-based
violence and discrimination, and use of community media.
Asia
and the Pacific: A Region in Transition
(report)
This UNFPA publication gives an overview of the Asia and Pacific
Region; provides a detailed analysis of some of the crucial issues
facing the region - adolescent reproductive health, population
aging, rising spread of HIV/AIDS, gender discrimination, gender-based
violence, situations of crisis; and highlights UNFPA's core interventions
and major initiatives in each of these areas.
A
Plethora of IUDs: But How Safe, How Effective? (review article)
The fewer insertions a women undergoes, the lower her lifetime
risk of pelvic inflammatory disease.
A
Brief History of Modern IUDs (review article)
IUD technology has come a long way since the first plastic IUDs
(the Lippes Loop, Margulies Spiral, Saf-T-Coil, and others) appeared
on the scene in the 1960s.
Using
ICTs for Health Care in Bangladesh (interview)
Health care is among the priority sectors in developing countries,
including Bangladesh. Many people perish daily from infectious
and other diseases due to poor health care conditions. There seems
to be a great potential in using Information and Communications
Technologies (ICTs) to save human lives by improving health delivery
and access to much needed medical knowledge. Can ICTs really make
a difference in improving health in a country like Bangladesh?
When you click on any link, your Internet browser will access a Web site not connected to "The Pop Reporter.®" Information accessed through these links and contained in this issue of "The Pop Reporter®" does not necessarily state or reflect the views of the Population Information Program, Johns Hopkins University, or the United States Agency for International Development (USAID).
All links were verified at the date of posting. Your computer and/or network configuration regarding Java script, cookies, and other security issues may not allow you to view certain Web sites. Consult your computer technician if you are having problems.

