Guatemala to Investigate Human Experimentation by U.S. Doctors

Danilo Valladares

GUATEMALA CITY, Oct 11 2010 (IPS) – A high-level commission has been set up to look into appalling medical experiments carried out by U.S. researchers on hundreds of Guatemalans in the 1940s, and the government of this Central American country is debating alternative ways for the United States to make reparations.
These acts should be condemned and the case brought to trial, Amílcar Pop, an indigenous Guatemalan lawyer, told IPS. We need to repudiate what happened and condemn the attitudes that made it possible. Humanity has evolved and these actions cannot be tolerated under any circumstances. What the United States did was a crime against humanity.

In an Oct. 1 statement, the U.S. government acknowledged that between 1946 and 1948, U.S. medical …

CONGO: Polio Kills 100

Arsène Séverin

BRAZZAVILLE, Nov 12 2010 (IPS) – An emergency vaccination campaign against polio begins Nov. 12 in the Republic of Congo, where an epidemic centred on the southern city of Pointe-Noire has killed at least 100 people since the beginning of October.
Administering oral vaccine: a risk of polio epidemics remains as long as the disease exists anywhere in the world. Credit: IRIN

Administering oral vaccine: a risk of polio epidemics remains as long as the disease exists anywhere in the world. Credit: IRIN

According to Congolese heal…

JAMAICA: Priceless Native Plants Vanishing in the Wind

Zadie Neufville* – IPS/IFEJ

KINGSTON, Dec 20 2010 (IPS) – The recent successes of local medicinal researchers have turned the spotlight on local laws that fail to protect Jamaica s rich biological diversity.
The breadfruit (Artocarpus altilis) from which Dr. Lawrence Williams and his research partner isolated a compound for treatment of hypertension. Credit: Zadie Neufville/IPS

The breadfruit (Artocarpus altilis) from which Dr. Lawrence Williams and his research partner isolated a compound for treatmen…

Q&A: Meeting a World of Seven Billion with Optimism

Kanya D’Almeida interviews DR. BABATUNDE OSOTIMEHIN, executive director of UNFPA

UNITED NATIONS, Feb 3 2011 (IPS) – Before the end of 2011 there will be more humans on earth than in all of the planet s 4.5-billion-year history. As the world steels itself to support its seven billion-strong population, Dr. Babatunde Osotimehin, the new executive director of the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), greets the impending challenges with gusto.
Dr. Babatunde Osotimehin Credit: UN Photo/Eskinder Debebe

Dr. Babatunde Osotimehin Credit: UN Photo/Eskinder Debebe

Armed with a total budget of close to 900 million dolla…

AFRICA: Pneumonia Vaccine Rollout Will Protect Millions

Miriam Gathigah

NAIROBI, Mar 14 2011 (IPS) – The Kenyatta International Conference Centre resembled one big nursery with parents and their crying babies. Hundreds of parents with their infants thronged the Centre where they received their first shot against pneumonia, and not even their tears as the shot broke through their skin could dampen the smiling faces of their mothers.
The mothers waited patiently for their infants turn to be vaccinated as the painful shot represents a chance to survive a disease that many children have not been lucky to withstand.

We ve started the global rollout of these (pneumonia) vaccines that will save thousands of children s lives. It is a very exciting day, said Helen Evans, interim CEO of the Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunisa…

SRI LANKA: Finally Dengue Takes a Beating

Amantha Perera

COLOMBO, Apr 5 2011 (IPS) – Dengue infections and deaths here have declined significantly this year.
A health worker fumigates suspected mosquito breeding grounds in Colombo. Credit: Sanka Gayashan/IPS

A health worker fumigates suspected mosquito breeding grounds in Colombo. Credit: Sanka Gayashan/IPS

We are seeing the results of a new campaign against dengue now, Pabha Palihawadena, director of the health ministry s epidemiology unit, told IPS.

During the first 12 weeks of the year, only 2,947 infections and 29 deaths were reported island-wide. …

AFRICA: More Skilled Attendants Needed to Reduce Maternal Mortality

Miriam Gathigah

NAIROBI, May 9 2011 (IPS) – Sub-Saharan African countries have claimed nine of the ten bottom places in a ranking of maternal health around the world. The Mothers Index , a new survey of motherhood by Save the Children, analyses health, education and economic conditions for women and children in 164 countries.
Motorcycle ambulance in South Sudan - distance to a healthcare facility and a shortage of trained personnel are key factors in maternal deaths. Credit: Peter Martell/IRIN

Motorcycle…

Thirty Years On, AIDS Epidemic a Women’s Battle

Portia Crowe

UNITED NATIONS, Jun 9 2011 (IPS) – As world leaders gather in New York for a high-level conference on HIV/AIDS, United Nations agency heads, goodwill ambassadors and activists alike hope they will remember the virus s most vulnerable victims: women and girls.
Michelle Bachelet, head of UN Women, speaks at the special event HIV Priorities for Positive Change: In Women s Words . Credit: UN Photo/JC McIlwaine

Michelle Bachelet, head of UN Women, speaks at the special event HIV Priorities for Positive Change: In Wom…

UGANDA: Distribution Policy Means Not Enough Drugs for Clinics

Joshua Kyalimpa

KAMPALA , Jun 21 2011 (IPS) – The nurse at Najembe Health Centre in Buikwe district says the centre s supply of malaria drugs will be finished in two days. A malaria epidemic has hit the area and the demand for the drugs is high. But the centre, which serves the entire sub-county, will have to wait up to six weeks before their supply will be replenished.
The health centre gets supplies from the Kawolo district referral hospital every two months and last received supplies at the end of May. The next supply will only be delivered at the end of July. Meanwhile, staff from the centre cannot make a special request to either the district hospital or the National Medical Stores for drugs that are in short supply. So those patients in need of anti-malarial drugs will …

BRAZIL: Lax Limits on Agrotoxics in Drinking Water

Mario Osava

CUIABÁ, Brazil, Jul 25 2011 (IPS) – Brazil sets acceptable drinking water limits for 22 different types of pesticides and fertilisers, 13 heavy metals, 13 solvents and six disinfectants. However, these are sometimes exceeded for economic reasons or due to inadequate monitoring.
Up to 1977, health authorities decreed that water for human consumption could not contain residues of more than 12 toxic agricultural chemicals or 10 metals, with no further details.

Since then the regulations have been updated twice, in 1990 and 2004, with amendments that have legalised residues of new chemical inputs used in agriculture and industry, complained Dr. Wanderlei Pignati, a professor at the Federal University of Mato Grosso (UFMT).

The European Union, in contr…