Showing posts with label AIDS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label AIDS. Show all posts

Monday, February 01, 2010

Heroes Of The Week: HIV Scientists

The scientists that are painstakingly working on solving the HIV/AIDS problem have made a major breakthrough:

Scientists say they have solved a crucial puzzle about the AIDS virus after 20 years of research and that their findings could lead to better treatments for HIV.

British and U.S. researchers said they had grown a crystal that enabled them to see the structure of an enzyme called integrase, which is found in retroviruses like HIV and is a target for some of the newest HIV medicines.

When the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infects someone, it uses the integrase enzyme to paste a copy of its genetic information into their DNA, Cherepanov explained in the study published in the Nature journal on Sunday.

Some new drugs for HIV work by blocking integrase, but scientists are not clear exactly how they work or how to improve them. It took more than 40,000 trials for them to come up with one a crystal of sufficiently high quality to allow them to see the three-dimensional structure, they said.
Read the full story on Yahoo! News.

Saturday, December 06, 2008

Nobel Medicine Laureate Predicts "Therapeutic" AIDS Vaccine

I missed doing a post on World AIDS Day. I try do something different when I post and I didn't have anything to add. I just spotted this article and it is too good of news not to pass on.

Luc Montagnier, 76, was a co-winner of the 2008 Nobel Prize for Medicine. Montagnier, with fellow French researcher Francoise Barre-Sinoussi, discovered that HIV causes AIDS by destroying immune cells.

He stood by his view that a "therapeutic vaccine" for the AIDS pandemic could be created within four to five years. He noted that work on a vaccine has been going on for 10 years and that it was easier to research a therapeutic rather than a preventative vaccine. Barre-Sinoussi said it is impossible to say when a preventative AIDS vaccine would be made available and that researchers must keep working on it.
Progress!

Saturday, December 08, 2007

Huckabee's Krazy Critical Thinking

Fuck you, Huckabee.

You and your ilk were sabotaging efforts to avert a worldwide health crisis when it was a "gay disease." Now you've changed your tune. But the truth is still there, and in writing.

What if the gay community is hit by a new unforeseen communicable health crisis? One even more deadly than the last. Will the response be the same? Would it be another welcome scourge to rid society of the undesirables?

From the AP via Yahoo! News:

Mike Huckabee once advocated isolating AIDS patients from the general public, opposed increased federal funding in the search for a cure and said homosexuality could "pose a dangerous public health risk."

As a candidate for a U.S. Senate seat in 1992, Huckabee answered 229 questions submitted to him by The Associated Press. Besides a quarantine, Huckabee suggested that Hollywood celebrities fund AIDS research from their own pockets, rather than federal health agencies.

"If the federal government is truly serious about doing something with the AIDS virus, we need to take steps that would isolate the carriers of this plague," Huckabee wrote.

"It is difficult to understand the public policy towards AIDS. It is the first time in the history of civilization in which the carriers of a genuine plague have not been isolated from the general population, and in which this deadly disease for which there is no cure is being treated as a civil rights issue instead of the true health crisis it represents."

The AP submitted the questionnaire to both candidates; only Huckabee responded. Incumbent Sen. Dale Bumpers won his fourth term; Huckabee was elected lieutenant governor the next year and became governor in 1996.

When asked about AIDS research in 1992, Huckabee complained that AIDS research received an unfair share of federal dollars when compared to cancer, diabetes and heart disease.

"In light of the extraordinary funds already being given for AIDS research, it does not seem that additional federal spending can be justified," Huckabee wrote. "An alternative would be to request that multimillionaire celebrities, such as Elizabeth Taylor (,) Madonna and others who are pushing for more AIDS funding be encouraged to give out of their own personal treasuries increased amounts for AIDS research."

Huckabee did not return messages left with his campaign.

When Huckabee wrote his answers in 1992, it was common knowledge that AIDS could not be spread by casual contact. In late 1991, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said there were 195,718 AIDS patients in the country and that 126,159 people had died from the syndrome.

The nation had an increased awareness of AIDS at the time because pro basketball star Magic Johnson had recently disclosed he carried the virus responsible for it. Johnson retired but returned to the NBA briefly during the 1994-95 season.

Since becoming a presidential candidate this year, Huckabee has supported increased federal funding for AIDS research through the National Institutes of Health.

"My administration will be the first to have an overarching strategy for dealing with HIV and AIDS here in the United States, with a partnership between the public and private sectors that will provide necessary financing and a realistic path toward our goals," Huckabee said in a statement posted on his campaign Web site last month.

Also in the wide-ranging AP questionnaire in 1992, Huckabee said, "I feel homosexuality is an aberrant, unnatural, and sinful lifestyle, and we now know it can pose a dangerous public health risk."

A Southern Baptist preacher, Huckabee has been a favorite among social conservatives for his vocal opposition to gay marriage. In 2003, Huckabee said that the U.S. Supreme Court was probably right to strike down anti-sodomy laws, but that states still should be able to restrict things such as gay marriage or domestic partner benefits.

"What people do in the privacy of their own lives as adults is their business," Huckabee said. "If they bring it into the public square and ask me as a taxpayer to support it or to endorse it, then it becomes a matter of public discussion and discourse."
Hollywood stars should fund public health crisis management? This is hIs common sense? His critical thinking skills? His ability to think past tomorrow?

This guy could be our next president.
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Saturday, December 01, 2007

Saturday Sh!ts And Giggles: World AIDS Day

I try to provide content different from what I see around the web, but I wasn't able to come up with anything better than this video I spotted over at This Boy Elroy.



Have fun. Play safe. I do.
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Friday, April 27, 2007

Another Great Night Out

I joined three other bloggers and a friend for dinner at DeJohn's on Lark Street (the Capital District's "alternative" area) in Albany. We went in support of the Dining Out For Life charity event where participating restaurants donate 25% of the evening's food bill proceeds to the AIDS Council of Northeastern New York.

Afterwards, we walked to a new bar named "Rocks" on Central Avenue right across the street from the Waterworks Pub I mentioned in yesterday's post.

Friend Russ took this pic of the bloggers: Idle Eyes and a Dormy, Allogenes, A Work In Progress, and me.

A great time was had by all!
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Tuesday, April 17, 2007

Gates Foundation Pushing AIDS Vaccine

The billions of dollars thrown at global health problems by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation are changing the game in drug discovery and posing big challenges to the world's top drugmaker's profit model. The power of the Gates Foundation was bolstered last year when Warren Buffett signed over much of his fortune to the organization, uniting the world's two richest people in a bid to fight disease, reduce poverty and improve education.

A $287 million grants program announced last July — creating an international network of 16 labs to try new approaches to making a vaccine against AIDS — exemplifies the ground-breaking approach pioneered by the foundation. It aims to transform the so-far unsuccessful AIDS vaccine effort by rewarding individual labs that come up with innovative ideas and helping them develop those ideas, while also ensuring they collaborate with rivals.

To get quick results, the new Collaboration for AIDS Vaccine Discovery may need to access and use patented compounds still under development at pharmaceutical and biotech firms. That will raises fresh debate over the ethics surrounding patents on life-saving AIDS drugs and vaccines — of which there are more than 200 in development.
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