Cancer treatment by linear accelerator is a reality now

Cancer treatment by linear accelerator is a reality now

The fir
st patient was successfully treated by the state-of-the-art technology in radiotherapy – linear accelerator, which began functioning last week at RR Cancer Institute and Research Centre, Sri Ram Murti Smarak Institute of Medical Sciences (SRMSIMS), Bareilly in India.

A linear accelerator (LINAC) is the device most commonly used for external beam radiation treatments for patients with cancer. The linear accelerator can also be used in stereotactic radiosurgery similar to that achieved using the gamma knife on targets within the brain. The linear accelerator can also be used to treat areas outside of the brain. It delivers a uniform dose of high-energy x-ray to the region of the patient's tumor. These x-rays can destroy the cancer cells while sparing the surrounding normal tissue.

A linear accelerator is also used for Intensity-Modulated Radiation Therapy (IMRT).

“LINAC will benefit people in need of such cancer treatment in at least 150 kilometer radius, and even beyond” informed Dr Piyush Kumar Agarwal, Assistant Professor at SRMSIMS.

It is noteworthy to mention that from a non-descript city of Barreilly, SRMSIMS provides not only general healthcare services but also super-speciality medical services to one of the most populated states of India in an era where corporate healthcare is only concentrated in metropolitan cities.

The need of the hour is to strengthen diagnostics and treatment facilities in all health centres, not just big cities.


The national incidence of cancer in India is approximately 100 to 130 individuals per 100,000, according to the population-based cancer registry of Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR).

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Drug use and its impact on women

A number of speakers noted the particular problems associated with injecting drug use among women and the increased vulnerability to HIV/AIDS that comes with it

"This is the time to seize the opportunity, this is the time to scale up services", emphasised Pakistan's federal minister for health, Muhammad Nasir Khan, demonstrating strong political commitment during the First Asia-Pacific Women, Girls and HIV/AIDS Best Practices conference.

He was referring to the issue of drug use and its impact on women, which were discussed by delegates from India, Pakistan and Bangladesh during a conference working group session specifically on the subject. The session examined how the behaviour of drug users (IDU) increases women's vulnerability to HIV/AIDS and other health issues, and looked at best practices in harm reduction and prevention.

IDUs are one of the highest risk groups for HIV/AIDS transmission due to needle sharing and unprotected sex. The opportunity to confront the drug epidemic in Asia-Pacific is gone according to Tariq Zafar of Nai Zindagi, Pakistan. In Asia, 65% of injection drug users share needles. Unfortunately, drug-related harm reduction and health services only reach a small percentage of those who need them.

Women are often forced into the sex trade to finance their own (or their spouse's) drug addiction, which further increases their chance of HIV infection. The psycho-social effects of this on women drug users and their families can be devastating, undermining the fabric of the family. The healthcare difficulties posed by a lack of HIV prevention information and education, and the stark social inequalities and prejudices related to gender, sexuality and criminality, are further compounded when women are taking drugs.

The complex problems associated with drug use by women need to be highlighted and understood, and special measures adopted to counter them and reduce related harm. Many women who use drugs are forced to sell sex to sustain their habit. Where opiate drugs, such as heroin, are involved there is a further complication of the desperation of withdrawal that affects both brothel-based and 'informal' sex workers.

Such circumstances make condom negotiation difficult, and greatly increase HIV/AIDS vulnerability. Women in sex work who also have HIV are doubly stigmatised, made even worse if they are also drug users. Such women are by and large not in control of their own circumstances. To help them requires cross-cutting services that address these multiple issues holistically.

Key are harm reduction strategies, which are policies and programmes that attempt primarily to reduce the adverse health, social and economic consequences of mood altering substances to individuals, drug users, their families and their communities.
Appropriate drug treatment and rehabilitation not only help to reduce drug use, but also diminishes associated HIV risk. Harm reduction, care and prevention programmes are more successful when laws and government agencies facilitate outreach and service provision aimed at drug users and which actively involve the community.

A basic ethical principle of effective intervention should be that drug control policies must reduce and not augment the HIV risk faced by drug users. A special strategy aimed at reducing drug-related harm among women should be incorporated into all existing or new harm reduction programmes.

Ishdeep Kohli-CNS

Gender and HIV/AIDS

Women's rights have never been at the top of the political gender in Asia-Pacific; one conference session discussed what this has meant for the spread of HIV.

What contributes to women and girls' increased vulnerability to HIV/AIDS, and what solutions exist? These were the questions examined by speakers from Pakistan, India, Cambodia, Iran and the UK during one working group session at the first Asia/Pacific Women, Girls and HIV/AIDS Best Practices Conference.

Gender discrimination is often entrenched in law and government policy in the developing countries of Asia and the Pacific, the session heard. This contributes to poverty and undermines women's position in society, ultimately exposing them to greater risk of HIV/AIDS.

Women in Asia and the Pacific are often unable to decide the nature and circumstances of their own sexual behaviour, and while sex outside marriage is widely practiced by men, women often do not have the latitude even to refuse or discuss sex, or insist on condom use by their partners.

During the session, Dr Suman Mehta from UNAIDS said women rarely have the right to decide who, or at what age, they will marry and have children. Women should be given "the chance to develop physically, [and] the chance to educate themselves and to empower themselves," said Dr Mehta.

Moreover, women in the region have few property rights and poor education levels, making them highly dependent on the male population. High incidences of poverty and minimal financial independence prevent women from seeking the sexual healthcare and support they need, while illiteracy makes educating them about HIV/AIDS highly problematic.

Some of the most effective approaches to assisting women were brought out in the discussion. One of the most effective in terms of independence was to provide women with skills in income generation, helping improve their decision making power in the household.

Working with significant "gatekeepers" to women's empowerment such as brothel owners, parents and so on, is another proven means of reducing women's vulnerability to HIV/AIDS. And, involving HIV positive women in advocacy ensures female voices and needs are heard at all levels.

Other suggestions included addressing poverty as an important cause of HIV vulnerability, provision of sexual health education in schools, co-operation with religious leaders and groups, reduction of discrimination and raising awareness of HIV-related health issues among sex workers.

Ken Bluestone, senior policy advisor for Voluntary Services Overseas - part of the UK government's development assistance programme - emphasised the role of men in creating and responding to the vulnerabilities of women and girls. Greater attention must be paid to men's motivations and attitudes when designing policies, he said. One means is to identify and publicise positive male role models, and to promote traditional male values to enhance men's understanding of the impact of their behaviour on others as well their sense of self-worth. He added that pre-emptive and supportive work with violent men can also be effective.

Despite institutionalised disempowerment of women in the region, examples of positive efforts to decrease their vulnerability to HIV/AIDS exist. Men are clearly as much a part of the solution as the problem. And provided HIV/AIDS programmes do not increase the burden on women in Asia-Pacific, continued efforts can help ensure they have a healthier future.

Ishdeep Kohli-CNS

Need to refrain from communal politics in India

Need to refrain from communal politics in India

India is reeking under increasing communal polarisation and urgent steps to check it are warranted. Between 24 August and 2 October 2008, more than 300 villages in 14 districts of Orissa state were affected by communal violence. 4,300 houses were burnt and 57 people were killed. 2 women were gang-raped. 149 churches and 13 educational institutions were attacked. In Kartnataka state, 19 churches in 4 districts were attacked and 20 women sustained serious injuries. In other states of India, like in Kerala 3 churches were attacked, in Madhya Pradesh 4 churches were attacked, and one church was attacked in Delhi and Tamil Nadu each. In the state of Uttarakhand, 2 people were killed. In all the above incidents, Christian community was targeted by the Hindu right-wing fundamentalist groups. On other hand, the horrendous incidents of bomb blasts have rocked the country and muslim community is seemingly perceived to be in the dock.

"The politics of communal polarisation has upped since a senior Bhartiya Janta Party (BJP) leader - Lal Krishna Advani, who had declared himself as a prime minister in-waiting, - bore a crushing defeat in the parliament on Indo-US Nuclear Deal, and was also threatened by the rising iconic Mayawati as a potential prime-ministerial candidate" said Dr Sandeep Pandey, Ramon Magsaysay Awardee (2002) and the national convener of National Alliance of People's Movements (NAPM).

In Lucknow, the state capital of Uttar Pradesh state in India, a demonstration was staged today where retired Inspector-General of Police SR Darapuri (Dalit Mukti Morcha), Muhammad Ahmad (Jamaat-i-islami), Professor Roop Rekha Verma (former Vice Chancellor of Lucknow University and represents Saajhi Duniya), Advocate Salahuddin Khan (National Democratic Forum), Rakesh (IPTA), Irfan Ahmad (People's Union for Civil Liberties - PUCL), MM Naseem (Forum for Peace and Unity), Arvind Murti (Editor, Sachchi Muchchi and represents National Alliance of People's Movements - NAPM), Fareed Abbasi (Editor, Lucknow Lead) and Dr Sandeep Pandey (Asha Parivar) took active part.

They condemned the attempts to divide the nation by creating communal polarization and demanded that the communal organizations should be stopped form doing so. They also appealed to the people of India to protect themselves from communal politics and fail their evil designs.

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Need to refrain from the communal politics

Need to refrain from the communal politics


[To read this posting in Hindi language , click here ]

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LUCKNOW: Between 24 August - 2 October 2008, more than 300 villages in 14 districts of Orissa state were affected by communal violence. 4,300 houses were burnt and 57 people were killed. 2 women were gang-raped. 149 churches and 13 educational institutions were attacked. In Kartnataka state, 19 churches in 4 districts were attacked and 20 women sustained serious injuries. In other states of India, like in Kerala 3 churches were attacked, in Madhya Pradesh 4 churches were attacked, and one church was attacked in Delhi and Tamil Nadu each. In the state of Uttarakhand, 2 people were killed.


In all the above incidents, Christian community was targeted by the Hindu right-wing fundamentalist groups.


On other hand, the horrendous incidents of bomb blasts have rocked the country and muslim community is seemingly perceived to be in the dock.


The politics of communal polarisation has upped since a senior Bhartiya Janta Party (BJP) leader - Lal Krishna Advani, who had declared himself as a prime minister in-waiting, - bore a crushing defeat in the parliament on Indo-US Nuclear Deal, and was also threatened by the rising iconic Mayawati as a potential prime-ministerial candidate.


We condemn the attempts to divide the nation by creating communal polarization and demand that the communal organizations should be stopped form doing so. We also appeal to the people of India to protect themselves from communal politics and fail their evil designs.


SR Darapuri (Dalit Mukti Morcha), Muhammad Ahmad (Jamaat-i-islami), Professor Roop Rekha Verma (former Vice Chancellor of Lucknow University and represents Saajhi Duniya), Advocate Salahuddin Khan (National Democratic Forum), Rakesh (IPTA), Irfan Ahmad (People's Union for Civil Liberties - PUCL), MM Naseem (Forum for Peace and Unity), Arvind Murti (Editor, Sachchi Muchchi and represents National Alliance of People's Movements - NAPM), Fareed Abbasi (Editor, Lucknow Lead) and Sandeep Pandey (Asha Parivar)

Interview with Nafis Sadiq

Dr Nafis Sadiq was appointed by the UN Secretary General in May 2002 to serve as his special envoy for HIV/AIDS in Asia and the Pacific. Dr Sadiq, a national of Pakistan, has raised awareness about the vulnerability of women to AIDS, the plight of children orphaned by AIDS and other key issues. Dr Sadiq joined the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) in 1971, and was appointed Assistant Executive Director and then Executive Director from April 1987 until her retirement in 2000. Immediately following her retirement from UNFPA, Dr Sadiq was appointed as Special Envoy to the UN Secretary General. For her efforts to raise awareness of these issues and developing or effecting policies, Dr Nafis Sadiq has received awards from governments and organizations in many countries including Pakistan, China, Indonesia, Egypt and the United States.

HDN: It is almost two-and-a-half years since you were appointed by the UN Secretary-General [In May 2002] to serve as his Special Envoy for HIV/AIDS in Asia and the Pacific - what has been your greatest single challenge and achievement in that time?

Dr Sadiq: The greatest challenge in this region was that at the first instance all the countries were in denial, the message you got from the ministers and leaders was that there are so many other priorities, and having just a few cases of HIV did not put it on the priority list. It took a while to convince the heads of states and the ministers that HIV is not like any other disease, prevalence levels today are not an indication of what could happen in the near future.

At least since last year, HIV/AIDS has been gaining lot more attention. Most of the governments have been responding, some more rapidly than others but I think all are getting the message. That has been a good achievement, getting them from denial to awareness. Now we have to get them to be more active; the main problem is to articulate, how to talk about some very sensitive issues. The leadership in this region finds it difficult to articulate about this subject, since it deals with issues that are not talked about in Asia in general; these are very taboo subjects in the sub-continent. So what goes on in their minds is that this deals with deviant behaviour - and the dilemma is how to reconcile condemnation of behaviour and yet be pragmatic and accepting.

HDN: Last year (also in Pakistan), you said "my job is to pursue Pakistan's leadership and its people not to hesitate from discussing and taking preventive measures against HIV." That presumably also applies to the entire Asia Pacific region, so how well have leaders and the people of this region responded to your appeals?

Dr Sadiq: It was then that I met with Mr Jamali the Prime minister of Pakistan at that time. It was agreed to have a press release [about HIV/AIDS] and the government was open about drafting and endorsing it, but he did not come out and be open about it, the President has also mentioned it. But the leaders here mention about HIV/AIDS issues only during HIV/AIDS meetings. Mr Shaukat Aziz, the present Prime Minister was the finance minister then and he had launched the National AIDS Control Program where he spoke well about HIV/AIDS issues. But now the leaders are getting the connection between poverty reduction, gender equality and HIV/AIDS. In the beginning it was difficult to understand what the connections were, now the ministers have begun to understand many of these are so interlinked and feel the need to do more on gender equality and empowerment. If you want to address the HIV/AIDS problem, you have to face the facts that even in your own society there are sex workers and IDU [injection drug users]. It is a big thing that now NGOs are allowed to work with sex workers and IDUs with the agreement of the governments.

We have moved to a more pragmatic stage in this region, but what we need now is more action, more leadership more articulation. It is vital that leaders speak and it is important to speak on different occasions - not only during an HIV conference. For example whenever they make a speech about the future of the country, economy etc? they should say that there are some threats in our society like HIV, they don't have to go into sexual and reproductive behaviour and discussions, that is going to take a while. Just use every occasion to talk about HIV and raise awareness.

For the region, China has made huge decisions, when they were reviewing the MDG [Millennium Development Goals] earlier in the year, all the experts that came including myself said you may achieve all your goals but you will not achieve the HIV/AIDS goals unless you really step up. Even the goal of gender equality which they are very proud about will be very much affected. Because you see many of the connections on gender - equality and inequality and lack of power of women translates itself in increased vulnerability of women to HIV/AIDS, so they have taken that advice very seriously, so I was quite pleased with the China programme. India is also making progress; their parliamentarians are a very strong group. The new government has come out with the social minimum programme, which has HIV/AIDS as a component but it is not very strong. Recently, Mr Manmohan Singh, the Prime Minister of India, did make a statement about strengthening the HIV/AIDS programme, but we need to get all this moving and in all the Indian states.

HDN: How would you describe leadership by civil society and the role of people living with HIV/AIDS in this region?

Dr Sadiq: Leadership of the civil society is there but they are not getting a voice in the planning and policy-making. That is common to many of the countries in the region. The civil society voices are there; they are also listed in the coordinating groups but the voices are not heard as much as they should be. Also there is the whole issue of people living with HIV/AIDS and how they should be involved. Every one of the countries has a token representation; we need to get their voices to the policy-makers. Here the media can play a significant role - if they talk to women who got infected as many of them have not got it [HIV] because of their behaviour. There are stories that can be told in a nice way without accusing anyone. Even the man needs to know without any accusations; as that is not productive. I think just to hear what happens to the women - what happens to them when they disclose that they are infected and they come forward. What problems do they face; the stigma they deal with - from their families and the husband's family. I think those stories can have a very powerful effect in the removal of stigma and discrimination.

In India many people are now saying that marriage is hazardous to a women's health because according to a study in the state of Karnataka - the infection rate among young married women is twice as high compared to other women. Marriage is a risk factor - some of the states wanted to have compulsory [HIV] testing, which was discouraged. Many parents are now asking for voluntary testing and if the prospective suitor refuses then they can refuse the marriage. But of course many parents still think that he is a good catch. The fact is that all these factors highlight the basics, which show that women's security and safety is seen in marriage, rather than in themselves. We need to get that changed. I tell the women groups - this brings home that how dependent the women are. We need to get going that everyone needs to be empowered to look after themselves.

HDN: Just over a year ago, you said of regional leaders that (paraphrased): They can't have harm reduction programmes for drug users because that might appear to be recognizing drug use and "These kinds of ways of thinking or attitudes, they just have to change" (quote). From what we are seeing of the 'war on drugs' in countries like Thailand, and speeches 'blaming gays' for AIDS from a senior minister of state in Singapore (last week) and the attitude of leaders towards sex workers, your message does not seem to be getting through. What can be done if leaders simply refuse to adopt evidence-based HIV/AIDS strategies that organisations like the UN propose?

Dr Sadiq: This is one of the problems, attitudes need to change. We hear about religion, about Asian values, we hear about our culture. I mean they make out that - all of them somehow are so pure, none of these issues exist. And if it exists it is deviant and only in some small groups. But even then though, I am not sure that it is that small, if it exists we have to do something about. This is coming out more. In India there has been a dialogue in the media now about sex workers, MSMs [men who have sex with men] and IDUs. Even in the parliament there has been a discussion about sex workers. For other countries in the region - in Bangladesh there was a discussion about sex workers. The government before this one by Ms Khaleeda Zia had closed down the brothels. So now the sex workers are dispersed in the whole population and we don't know how to have programmes for them. This is a huge problem, but as she was saying to me, we can't say that now the brothels should be re-opened, the public won't accept it. There is a real dilemma, the NGOs that were working with the sex workers are complaining that it is very difficult now for the sex workers to come to their centres, they are harassed on the way and are singled out. These are problems in the society that have to be faced.

What is interesting to note is - these were not things that we could talk about just a year ago. So there is a huge change, we can make public speeches; even discuss it with ministers and leaders. Many NGOs are working here quite courageously and fearlessly. There are needle exchange programmes in the region. There are others like the Sonagachi sex workers programme in Kolkata, India. These practices should be looked at by other countries. In Cambodia, they have done a good job of educating the sex workers and the hundred percent condom use programme in Thailand are all practices that have to be shared in the region. In China I saw an excellent injection drug users' needle exchange programme, done by former reformed drug users who find it easier to identify the drug users.

Though a year ago when I went to Nepal - the workers in the needle exchange programme spoke out that as soon as you gave the needle to the drug user, the drug user and sometimes the NGO person was hauled off to jail and locked up. I talked to the human rights groups there. You don't have to consider the drug users as criminals; of course it is against the law but then so many things are against the law. But in this case you are protecting the rest of the population also. In the parliamentary group meeting I said, that we need to protect the rights of everyone, including sex workers and IDUs. They were surprised and commented - how can they have human rights; but when they started to think about it, they came to a different conclusion. In India I am very pleased in the human rights commission. The group - Lawyers Collective have drafted a whole book of suggested legislations, these include all kinds of changes in legislation that could be considered. Human rights groups should also consider it. I am hopeful; I am suggesting to India that they convene a meeting of all the human rights commissions all over the Asia Pacific and think together what they can do collectively. It could be the SAARC [South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation] region where most of the laws are similar. They can do a lot with the support of each other

HDN: On the issue of care services - do you think '3 by 5' and similar ARV [anti-retroviral drugs] initiatives will deliver on their promise in the Asia Pacific region?

Dr Sadiq: The '3 by 5' is an important initiative, what we need is to have a complete programme which should include treatment and care. We have to introduce treatment very responsibly. First of all you need to prepare the health system and the health workers. The health system must have ways to protect the health workers - they don't have disposable gloves or disposable needles; this is true in all our hospitals. The countries must first designate which health centres or hospitals are the treatment centres. Then they must carefully prepare all the health care workers. There are ways to select who should be eligible for ARVs, not everyone needs ARVs. Once you start them on ARVs they have to be maintained, there are all kinds of problems, some have side effects and give it up, some feel better and give it up because they feel now we are getting better. But I was saying that one observes all kinds of issues including a continued supply of medicines, which have not been addressed.

HDN: '3 by 5' and other initiatives are only trying to reach 50% of the people who need ARVs today. If the majority of people living with HIV in the AP region will not receive ARVs in the foreseeable future (especially in the large population countries such as India and China): How can we avoid the imminent situation where large numbers of people die while they wait for ARV programmes such as '3 by 5' to deliver on their promises? Are there other ways that people currently living with HIV can be kept alive without ARVs?

Dr Sadiq: It is not going to reach even the 50% of the people who need ARVs. You can give them treatment and care for other infections. For the treatment of opportunistic infections also, the health systems need to be prepared. The health system is also a big obstacle, when someone who is HIV positive comes for treatment they don't treat them very well. They put labels, red crosses on the patients chart in countries like Pakistan and in India. You cannot single them out; when you do they don't want to come to the hospitals for treatment.

We need to treat them quickly and aggressively for other infections. That also needs public education and education within the health systems. How we must treat and how to manage, how to prevent the infections and how not to discriminate against them. You don't have to have separate hospitals for people living with HIV/AIDS. Nutrition support is also needed; you have to have supplemental feeding and vitamin programmes. All these especially for the poor are very important. There are some lessons to be learnt from Thailand - where they have introduced micro-credit schemes. The credit is given to two people, one who is positive and one partner who is not positive. This also shows that partnership in a business association removes stigma. All of us have some micro-credit schemes of some kind which could be based on the sharing of cost of care and some effort to reduce stigma.

HDN: You are well known for your work promoting contraception and population control (even the Pope has publicly spoken out against your attitudes to birth control) - ten years on from ICPD and over twenty years into the HIV epidemic, currently there seems to be another struggle - between those who wish to preach to young people about their sexual behaviour (i.e., the US government and its abstinence-only HIV prevention strategy) and institutions such as the UN and what it sees as the evidence base for inclusion of condoms in HIV prevention programmes for youth. What is your personal opinion about this?

Dr Sadiq: I think the US is changing; President Bush made some statement recently that condoms are okay. They know that 'abstinence only' programmes leads to a lot of babies. They also need to change their attitude towards sex workers - [they seem to believe] that if you make sex work safe it will increase sex work and increase trafficking, they have this logic of some kind. Mr Tobias, the US government's global AIDS coordinator, made a statement in Bangkok [at the 2004 International AIDS Conference], where there was a lot of agitation against the 'abstinence only' approach and the restriction of condom supply. He said, "we do not mean abstinence only we mean A (abstinence), B (be faithful), and C (use condoms)." How much of this is going to happen or not I don't know. World Health Organization, Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS and all other organizations are promoting access to condoms. We have to not only promote male condoms but also female condoms. In many places they don't even know that there is such a thing [as the female condom].

We have to test how it can be used effectively and ways to bring down the costs. I was talking to a supplier of the female condom in the United States and they said we are the only ones producing it, if the demand increases than the costs of supply will go down. They are supplying them in some countries at a very low cost. Some of the African countries are really using the female condom. I went to a Pacific island conference, where the people were very interested in the female condom and what did it look like. Some of the women there were very irate that how come we were never told about it. Besides the male condom we need to talk about the female condom and promote it

HDN: The theme of this year's World AIDS Day is Women, Girls, HIV and AIDS - given your former position as Executive Director of the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), your personal track record of advocacy on the importance of addressing the needs of women, and now your role as Special Envoy for HIV/AIDS in Asia and the Pacific, you would be well-placed to write several volumes on the WAD theme. If pressed, what is the single most important and significant issue facing women in relation to HIV in this region?

Dr Sadiq: It is really empowerment of women and balance in gender relationships. Violence etc? all comes as part of it. I will not single out violence; it is not just violence, there exist many non-violent relationships where the woman thinks she has to act whatever is asked of her. The fact that she has no knowledge, she really doesn't know and is totally ignorant, that adds to her problems. The stigma in Asia, particularly in South Asia, is associated with women being HIV positive; this is many times higher than men who are HIV positive. It is double discrimination against women considering most of them - over 90% get it from the one partner they have. I hope that the theme of this year's World AIDS Day - Women, Girls, HIV and AIDS, will help empowerment of women, and push for gender equality and a need for women to have more power over their own decisions.

HDN: The 'slogan' of World AIDS Day is: Have you heard me today? How do you interpret that slogan, and who would you personally most like to hear from in relation to women and HIV/AIDS.

Dr Sadiq: I would like to hear all the young women who are HIV positive, I would like to hear their voices; their stories are really poignant. I want to understand how their marriages were arranged and what was told to them, what did they think their future was going to be and what do they find is left with the present and future. I think those voices need to be heard. And I hope other women will start to listen, and hopefully policy-makers and partners also become part of this listening - hope to find something that really touches them and can make a difference in the lives of these young women who are HIV positive.

Ishdeep Kohli-CNS

Orphans and vulnerable children: Communities in need of support

The Regional Psychosocial Support Initiative for Children Affected by HIV/AIDS (REPSSI) provided the regional perspective for East and Southern Africa during the Technical Consultation on Children and HIV/AIDS in London, 7-8 February, 2006. The initiative is a psychosocial support (PSS) network for children affected by HIV and AIDS. REPSSI operates in 13 countries and has a partner base of nearly 60 organisations in the region working to mainstream PSS into their activities and policies. Ms Noreen M Huni, speaking for the region told participants that the family system has not collapsed, but is very overstretched. Communities are committed to caring for and supporting the children themselves; extended families, communities, faith-based and non-governmental organisations provide the majority of care and support for orphans and vulnerable children (OVC) in the HIV/AIDS context.

In this region OVC programming has recognised that cultural systems, practices and beliefs are a valuable entry point for successful and sustainable interventions. For example, Malawian initiation ceremonies have included HIV/AIDS prevention messages in their curriculum. The elderly are increasingly taking up this responsibility, yet their own material, physical, social, spiritual and emotional needs remain unmet. The overall capacity to responding is extremely inadequate. Knowledge, skills and resources are far from sufficient. Communities need resources and technical capacity enhancement to manage these resources.

The comprehensive care and support packages provided so far are physical, spiritual and material in nature, ignoring the psychosocial wellbeing of the children. Thus, there is a huge gap requiring unique interventions to strengthen the existing responses. Access to essential services has been agreed upon but tremendous barriers hinder access to these basics. Access to ARVs remains limited based on affordability, accessibility and treatment literacy. Children are still not accessing ARVs, as priority is given to adults and appropriate dosages and formulations for children are unavailable.

National Plans of Action are in place and most governments are attempting to address OVC needs with the necessary policies, for example 'Free Education for All', although other barriers continue to hinder children from attending school. But there is no legislative review to support the Convention on the Rights of the Child; these rights remain inaccessible to most OVCs. Many OVC have no legal existence at national level due to lack of birth registration - therefore no resources are allocated for OVC. Most countries have no National Social Policy on OVC - leaving the non-governmental and faith based organisations to take the lead in responding.

Government officials have begun to include the plight of orphans in their campaign and advocacy strategies. Schools are becoming centres of care and support. Hospitals are also being used as meeting places for support groups, counselling centres and provide information on the well-being of orphans. Certain print and broadcast media are taking a positive responsibility to educate and create awareness of issues pertaining to children within an HIV/AIDS context. There has also been a major increase in the number of NGOs focusing on OVC issues. But challenges remain - there are too many soldiers and no generals in this fight. It is not clear which ministries are mandated for OVC and what status these ministries have. The OVC challenge has a very low profile among the national governments. Noting that children constitute 50% of the population in most countries, isn't it time to create a special ministry for them?

International funding partners, UN agencies, regional and national political structures have all emphasised the seriousness of the problem. But the funding duration is usually less than 5 years, which ignores the fundamentals of child rights programming. Donors often arrive with pre-planned interventions, rather than supporting existing multi-sectoral responses - searching for 'quick results'. Some interventions are unrealistic, and do not take into account succession plans, such as exit strategies. A lack of coordinated donor activities is reported in most African countries and information-sharing is limited between funding partners and recipients. FBOs and CBOs often do not have the technical capacity to access available funds. An additional problem is that regional political structures (Pan African Parliamentarians, AU, SADC and NEPAD) have failed to mainstream OVC in regional HIV/AIDS, poverty reduction and budgeting and planning frameworks.

UNICEF in collaboration with REPSSI and some African universities have started working on a 'Children at Risk' certificate level programme for child care and support service providers in response to the knowledge and skills gap. Children, families, communities, non-governmental and faith-based organisations are providing the majority of OVC with care and support. But there is an urgent need to make these interventions more visible and respected by the communities themselves, before trying out 'new' interventions. The programme for orphans and vulnerable children should be high on the international, regional and national agendas. The nature and duration of intervention should ensure there is no additional trauma by placing the child and family at the centre of the interventions.

Ishdeep Kohli-CNS

India embraces smoke-free policies on Gandhi’s birth anniversary

India embraces smoke-free policies on Gandhi’s birth anniversary

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India has boldly enforced the smoke-free policies banning smoking in public places and private areas with public access from 2 October 2008 – the birth anniversary of the father of nation Mahatma Gandhi.

The government of India and countless people who have been advocating the enforcement of public health policies need due credit. It was certainly not so easy, more so because of the financially robust, strategically shrewd tobacco industry that has mastered the art of circumventing public interest policies and promoting a product (tobacco) that kills even when used as intended by the manufacturer.

The tobacco industry, and other corporations or associations like ITC ltd, Indian Hotel Association and others, filed more than 70 court cases against the ban on smoking in public places from October 2. But the honorable Supreme Court declined to delay the enforcement of these public interest policies and upheld public health over corporate profits.

India with more than a billion people had a large number of people who smoke cigarettes or beedis (tobacco rolled in ‘tendu’ leaf). The benefit of smoke-free policies will certainly protect non-smokers from the dangerous exposure to tobacco smoke, which is called secondhand smoke.

Secondhand smoke, also know as environmental tobacco smoke (ETS), is a mixture of the smoke given off by the burning end of a cigarette, pipe or cigar and the smoke exhaled from the lungs of smokers. It is involuntarily inhaled by nonsmokers, lingers in the air hours after cigarettes have been extinguished and can cause or exacerbate a wide range of adverse health effects, including cancer, respiratory infections, and asthma. Secondhand smoke has been classified by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) as a known cause of cancer in humans (Group A carcinogen).

Secondhand smoke exposure causes disease and premature death in children and adults who do not smoke. Nonsmokers exposed to secondhand smoke at work are at increased risk for adverse health effects.

Not only non-smokers get the benefit of smoke-free policies, but also those who smoke are either smoking lesser cigarettes or they quit smoking, according to the studies. At least 4% of smokers are likely to quit smoking.

However enforcing the public health policies will largely bank on the meaningful participation of civil society – at every step. People need to be at the centre-stage if India is to realize enforcement of these policies. And this certainly will happen over a period of time, as awareness increases, perceptions change as people are informed and the benefits of enforcing public health policies in our own homes, offices and other places we spend our lives in, become pronounced.

October 2 is indeed a beginning for India. Let us hope that India is able to set a good precedent where civil society does join hands with governments to enforce public interest policies effectively.

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Social Welfare: A Core Response to Child Poverty

The Technical Consultation preceding the Global Partners Forum on Children Affected by HIV and AIDS, February, 2006, highlighted the importance of improving outcomes for children through integrated national systems of social welfare which guarantee basic living standards to the most vulnerable.

All children in highly impacted communities are negatively affected by the social and economic impact of HIV and AIDS. Recent evidence suggests that the impact on children is worsening as households and communities become less able to cope with the burdens of care associated with the disease. Current responses to children affected by HIV and AIDS are inadequate. Tackling child poverty and enabling households to meet the needs of children in their care necessitates a coherent policy mix of direct and indirect instruments.

Mexico, Brazil and India are examples of nations that are developing their social welfare systems and enhancing state capacity to deliver social outcomes. Certain countries in Africa are also adapting social policy frameworks and institutions to meet the challenges of poverty and HIV and AIDS.

Successful direct instruments which have demonstrated positive impacts on child poverty and on children affected by HIV and AIDS include the cash grant system of social transfers in South Africa, Namibia, Botswana and Lesotho, including child support grants and non-contributory old age pensions.

Those countries which have moved towards strengthened national capacity in social welfare have adopted strong coherent social policy frameworks and have invested in state capacity to deliver policy and benefits. Direct instruments will assist families affected by HIV and AIDS to support children in their care. Such instruments need to be part of a national response situated within a national social policy framework ensuring best policy coherence for social outcomes for the most vulnerable children.

Mr Stephen Kidd, of DFID's Social Protection Division, called attention to social welfare as being a core human right, specifically quoting from the Convention on the Rights of the Child, Article 26: "for every child the right to benefit from social security" and Article 27: "the right of every child to a standard of living adequate for the child's physical, mental, spiritual, moral and social development". These rights have attracted little attention in poor countries, yet they should be a core response to tackling child poverty, especially in the context of AIDS.

Social transfers can improve household food security, increase rates of participation in education and the uptake of health services. A study commissioned by UNICEF in Southern and Eastern Africa found that cash transfers in the form of child care grants and social pensions were effective in helping families support children in their care. The study concluded that transfers had the potential to strengthen the capacities of families and individuals to support children affected by HIV and AIDS; that predictable ongoing support was most effective and that cash payments afforded flexibility in utilisation which allowed recipients to maximise multiplier effects.

Social protection can promote growth by allowing people to take up higher return - but also more risky - economic activities. It is also an investment in people, generating a healthier workforce and gives children the opportunity to break the poverty cycle; especially important in the context of HIV and AIDS. This increases the number of people contributing to the economy, as those receiving transfers are more likely to be in work than non-beneficiaries.

Social welfare should complement other interventions though and should not replace interventions in health, education and tackling HIV and AIDS. Social welfare is essential to improving impact on child poverty outcomes, including in health and education.

Fee waivers, for example, are not sufficient for many of the poorest to access school and health as they face other barriers. Even ARVs are less effective when recipients have poor nutrition. Other interventions can build on the platform provided by social welfare.

National governments should develop a strategic framework for social welfare provision, integrate social welfare and child poverty outcomes into national Poverty Reduction Strategies, revise National OVC Action Plans to incorporate social protection and embed them within national social policy frameworks.

It is essential that governments take forward national planning on social welfare and increase budget allocations. The international community also needs to invest in building coherent institutions to deliver social welfare for the most vulnerable.

Ishdeep Kohli-CNS

3rd Global Tobacco Treaty Action Guide 2008 released

3rd Global Tobacco Treaty Action Guide 2008 released

The 3rd edition of the "Global Tobacco Treaty Action Guide 2008: Protecting Against Tobacco Industry Interference" was released earlier this week in many countries including India, during International Week of Resistance (IWR) to tobacco transnationals (22-28 September 2008). The Global Tobacco Treaty Action Guide 2008 is produced by Corporate Accountability International [which is in official relations with the World Health Organization (WHO)], along with the Network for Accountability of Tobacco Transnationals (NATT).

The need for IWR was never so acute - when on one hand government of India is resolved to enforce the nation-wide ban on smoking from 2 October 2008, the tobacco industry and others including ITC ltd and Indian Hotel Association, have challenged these smoke-free policies in the court of law.

Secondhand smoke, also know as environmental tobacco smoke (ETS), is a mixture of the smoke given off by the burning end of a cigarette, pipe or cigar and the smoke exhaled from the lungs of smokers. It is involuntarily inhaled by nonsmokers, lingers in the air hours after cigarettes have been extinguished and can cause or exacerbate a wide range of adverse health effects, including cancer, respiratory infections, and asthma. Secondhand smoke has been classified by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) as a known cause of cancer in humans (Group A carcinogen).

Despite of such overwhelming evidence, the industry is hell-bent to choose profits over people.

"The repeated delay, at times weakening, and postponing the implementation of public health policies, mustn't occur again" said Dr Sandeep Pandey, national convener of National Alliance of People's Movements (NAPM) and Magsaysay Awardee (2002).

"For years the tobacco industry has operated with the express intention of subverting public health policies. If the tobacco giants were truly serious about saving lives, they would back off and let governments swiftly, fully implement the public health policies, including the national health policies and also the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC) -- the first global corporate accountability and public health treaty" added Dr Pandey.

In July 2007, at the second implementation and enforcement meeting on the FCTC, parties took the courageous step of initiating the development of guidelines on the implementation of Article 5.3 of the FCTC. These guidelines will help governments anticipate and thwart attempts by the vested commercial interests of the tobacco industry to undermine the implementation of the tobacco control policies.

Tobacco kills 5.4 million people around the world each year. Tobacco is a risk factor in six of the eight leading causes of death worldwide. The death toll is projected to rise to eight million a year by 2030, with 80 percent of those deaths occurring in developing countries. If current trends are not reversed, tobacco will claim one billion lives this century.

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Uphold public health over corporate interests

Uphold public health over corporate interests

It is a pity that India's robust smoke-free policies have been challenged by those with vested interests neglecting the immense and undisputed proven public health benefits of implementing such policies for people at-large.

India is to ban smoking in public places nation-wide from October 2. However the ITC Limited and the Indian Hotel Association are among those who have challenged these public health policies in the court of law.

"Secondhand smoke, also know as environmental tobacco smoke (ETS), is a mixture of the smoke given off by the burning end of a cigarette, pipe or cigar and the smoke exhaled from the lungs of smokers. It is involuntarily inhaled by nonsmokers, lingers in the air hours after cigarettes have been extinguished and can cause or exacerbate a wide range of adverse health effects, including cancer, respiratory infections, and asthma" informs Professor (Dr) Rama Kant, who heads the Tobacco Cessation Clinics at CSM Medical University and Gandhi Memorial & Associated Hospitals.

"Secondhand smoke has been classified by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) as a known cause of cancer in humans (Group A carcinogen)" informs Dr Rishi Sethi, Department of Cardiology, CSM Medical University.

Secondhand smoke exposure causes disease and premature death in children and adults who do not smoke. Secondhand smoke contains hundreds of chemicals known to be toxic or carcinogenic, including formaldehyde, benzene, vinyl chloride, arsenic ammonia and hydrogen cyanide. Secondhand smoke causes approximately 3,400 lung cancer deaths and 22,700-69,600 heart disease deaths in adult nonsmokers in the United States each year, further adds Dr Sethi.

Nonsmokers exposed to secondhand smoke at work are at increased risk for adverse health effects.

There is enough data to de-bunk the apprehensions of ban on smoking at the workplace. Since 1999, 70 percent of the U.S. workforce worked under a smoke-free policy, ranging from 83.9 percent in Utah to 48.7 percent in Nevada. Workplace productivity was increased and absenteeism was decreased among former smokers compared with current smokers.

Secondhand smoke is especially harmful to young children. Secondhand smoke is responsible for between 150,000 and 300,000 lower respiratory tract infections in infants and children under 18 months of age, resulting in between 7,500 and 15,000 hospitalizations each year, and causes 430 sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) deaths in the United States annually, says Dr Sethi.

Secondhand smoke exposure may cause buildup of fluid in the middle ear, resulting in 790,000 physician office visits per year.10 Secondhand smoke can also aggravate symptoms in 400,000 to 1,000,000 children with asthma.11

The Surgeon General's Report concluded that scientific evidence indicates that there is no risk-free level of exposure to secondhand smoke.

The 3rd edition of the "Global Tobacco Treaty Action Guide 2008: Protecting Against Tobacco Industry Interference" was released earlier this week in many countries including India. The Global Tobacco Treaty Action Guide 2008 is produced by Corporate Accountability International [which is in official relations with the World Health Organization (WHO)], along with the Network for Accountability of Tobacco Transnationals (NATT).

"The repeated delay, at times weakening, and postponing the implementation of public health policies in India, particularly the provisions of the Cigarettes and Other Tobacco Products Act, 2003, mustn't occur again. With few days to go before India enforces ban on smoking in public places from 2 October 2008, and few more weeks to go before mandatory pictorial warnings on tobacco products from 30 November 2008 get enforced, it is high time to prepare ourselves to contribute effectively in the implementation of these health policies" said Dr Sandeep Pandey, national convener of National Alliance of People's Movements (NAPM) and Magsaysay Awardee (2002).

"For years the tobacco industry has operated with the express intention of subverting public health policies. If the tobacco giants were truly serious about saving lives, they would back off and let governments swiftly, fully implement the public health policies, including the national health policies and also the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC) -- the first global corporate accountability and public health treaty" added Dr Pandey.

Let us hope that good sense prevails and public health and welfare is upheld above corporate interests.

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Bringing diabetes to light

Bringing diabetes to light

There is a growing consensus to raise awareness about diabetes in the 50 days leading up to World Diabetes Day on 14 November 2008. The International Diabetes Federation announced that the theme for this year's campaign is "Diabetes in Children and Adolescents."

Diabetes is one of the most common chronic diseases to affect children. It can strike children of any age, even toddlers and babies. Every day more than 200 children are diagnosed with type 1 diabetes, requiring them to take multiple daily insulin shots and monitor the glucose levels in their blood. It is increasing at a rate of 3% each year among children and rising even faster in pre-school children at a rate of 5% per year. Over 70,000 children a year under the age of 15 get diabetes.

"If not detected early enough in a child, diabetes can be fatal or result in serious brain damage. The obvious warning signs of increased urination, increased thirst, weight loss and tiredness are at times completely overlooked and the disease is misdiagnosed as the flu or not diagnosed at all" said Professor (Dr) Rama Kant, who heads the Diabetic Foot clinic at Chhatrapati Shahuji Maharaj Medical University and is a senior consultant at Gandhi Memorial & Associated Hospitals in Lucknow, India.

"Every parent, school teacher, school nurse, doctor and anyone involved in the care of children should be familiar with the warning signs and alert to the diabetes threat," said Dr Martin Silink, President of the International Diabetes Federation. "Children who are not diagnosed or misdiagnosed can die from DKA (diabetic coma). In the developing world insulin is not reaching many children who need it and the children are dying. The International Diabetes Federation is advocating that access to appropriate medication and care should be a right for a child with diabetes and not a privilege."

World Diabetes Day made a global splash last year, organizing the lighting of several of the world's most recognizable monuments in blue. For 2008 the Federation is reaching out to the global community for their ideas on how to raise awareness.

"There are activities planned worldwide. We hope to have them all listed on the World Diabetes Day website," said Campaign Director Phil Riley. "We're encouraging people to join in with activities in their community and contact us with their ideas."

Countries like India have an estimated 34 to 35 million of people suffering from diabetes, which is the highest in the world. The prevalence of Diabetes in urban population is 17% and in rural it is 2.5%. This indicates impact of life style and nutritional habits. Among the chronic complications of diabetes, diabetic foot is the most devastating complication and is the leading cause of leg amputation among diabetics. It is estimated that in India alone about 50,000 legs are amputated every year, of which almost 75 percent are potentially preventable, said Professor (Dr) Rama Kant.

This problem is further compounded by the lack of awareness, practice of barefoot walking, home surgery, faulty footwear (slippers) and delay in reporting. The cost, both in terms of human health as well as economic burden of the foot ulcer treatment and complication is very high. In countries like Thailand or India, foot care is very critical as a significant majority of the population stays in rural areas. Therefore prevention of ulcer and its subsequent complications is of utmost importance, stressed Professor Kant.

Recent trends are focusing on prevention by life style modifications, adequate control, multi-speciality treatments and aggressive debridements, open traditional and endovascular surgery, use of stents for improving circulation followed by free use of latest dressing techniques, use of different growth factors, off-loading of pressure points, use of modified shoes and also occasional use of boot therapy or modified boot therapy with a special equipments, said Professor Kant.

Let us hope that the 50 days awareness raising campaign in lead up to the World Diabetes Day this year will be effective in bringing down the incidence in times to come.

Published in
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Bihar and Jharkhand News Service (BJNS)
The Seoul Times, Seoul, South Korea
The New Times, Rwanda

India to treat multi-drug resistant tuberculosis country-wide by 2010

India to treat multi-drug resistant tuberculosis nation-wide by 2010
Amit Dwivedi

India is gearing up to strengthen tuberculosis (TB) control so as to provide TB prevention, diagnostics and treatment, particularly for multi-drug resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB), nation-wide by 2010.

MDR-TB is TB that is resistant to at least two of the best anti-TB drugs, isoniazid and rifampicin. These drugs are considered first-line drugs and are used to treat all persons with TB disease.

"The 4th Global Survey on anti-TB drug resistance does not indicate that the rates of MDR-TB are increasing sharply in India or in Indonesia, or in the South-East Asian Region as a whole. The overall rates for MDR-TB among new smear-positive cases in the Region is 2.8% among new cases and 18.8% among people receiving prior treatment for TB for one month or more. However given population sizes in our larger countries, the numbers of cases are indeed large" said Dr Jai P Narain, Director, Communicable Diseases Department, South East Asian Regional Office (SEARO) of the World Health Organization (WHO).

MDR-TB is a result of inadequate programme performance of Directly Observed Treatment Short-Course (DOTS). DOTS is the WHO-recommended treatment strategy for detection and cure of TB which combines five elements: political commitment, microscopy services, drug supplies, surveillance and monitoring systems and use of highly efficacious regimes with direct observation of treatment.

"National TB control programmes in our Region have moved steadily to achieving the case detection and treatment success targets under DOTS. Treatment success rates in excess of 85% have been consistently achieved since 2002" further explains Dr Narain.

However due to a broad range of reasons, some people with drug-susceptible TB (which is not resistant to any anti-TB drug) develop resistance to anti-TB drugs, or may contract the drug-resistant strain of TB, which is also a possibility. People living with HIV (PLHIV) or those with compromised immunity are at particularly alarming TB risk (both drug susceptible and drug-resistant TB strains).

"MDR-TB cases arise among patients failing Category 1 and 2 regimens, contacts of MDR-TB cases, congregate settings and in other at risk populations such as PLHIV" adds Dr Narain.

Testing or diagnosing these drug-resistant strains of TB and providing effective medication (which is many times more expensive, and treatment duration is much longer) and improving DOTS programme performance for successfully diagnosing and curing drug-susceptible TB (and preventing development of any further anti-TB drug-resistance) can certainly make TB control more effective.

"We see this as an opportunity to strengthen our efforts to focus on prevention of MDR-TB so that we do not have to make the larger investments in treating additional cases of MDR-TB" says Dr Narain.

"India has adopted policy and is now rapidly building laboratory capacity through a network of 24 reference laboratories qualified to undertake culture and drug susceptibility testing (DST) to offer testing to all those who may have drug-resistant forms of TB. There is also an expansion plan to treat MDR-TB cases country-wide by the end of 2010" informs Dr Narain.

Dr Narain points out two specific areas that require attention: To determine how/ where MDR-TB is being generated, and to prevent further emergence of MDR-TB.

While achieving good cure rates under DOTS, we need to focus also on reasons for default and other unfavourable outcomes" says Dr Narain. "Given good cure rates under DOTS, are most MDR-TB cases arising from unsupervised treatment, through unsustainable out-of-pocket expenditure, outside of DOTS programmes?" asks he.

Dr Narain suggests some ways to prevent further emergence of MDR-TB. "By addressing all causes of adverse TB treatment outcomes, enhancing involvement of private sector and unlinked public health facilities, and promoting wider acceptance and application of the International Standards of TB Care" can possibly improve TB programmes in the region.

Amit Dwivedi

(The author is a Special Correspondent to Citizen News Service (CNS). He can be contacted at: amit@citizen-news.org)

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Andhra Pradesh should gear up to enforce tobacco control policies

Andhra Pradesh should gear up to enforce tobacco control policies

Thankfully, the commitment of Andhra Pradesh state-capital's Medical and Health Officer Ms Jaya Kumari to enforce smoke-free policies and that of Union Health and Family Welfare Minister Dr Anbumani Ramadoss is indeed unprecedented.

Smoking in public places will be banned from 2 October 2008 in compliance with the rulings of The Cigarettes and Other Tobacco Products (Prohibition of Advertisement and Regulation of Trade and Commerce, Production Supply and Distribution) Act, 2003.

However a recent walk around in city of nawabs - Hyderabad - makes me wonder if the city is geared to enforce this public health policy. Walking around Abids - one of the most happening streets in Hyderabad, one can clearly see tobacco retail shops within 100 meters of educational institutions, people were smoking on the banks of the Hussain Sagar Lake in Hyderabad when I went for morning walk, the auto-richshaw driver was smoking, and to top it all, while having dinner at a restaurant, the waiter approached me if I will like to have a hookah!

The Bombay Municipal Corporation (BMC) in compliance with court orders, is coming down heavily on hookah parlours to enforce smoke-free air policies. Hyderabad Metropolitan Development Authority (HMDA) has something to learn here!

Also while walking around in Golconda fort, I found quite a few instances where people were having a puff - however the city's Medical and Health officer Ms Jaya Kumari says smoking will be banned from 2 October in monuments as well. With less than two weeks left to enforce the ban, I am wondering how this rapid transformation will be implemented?

The repeated delay, at times weakening, and postponing the implementation of public health policies in India, particularly the provisions of the Cigarettes and Other Tobacco Products Act, 2003, mustn't occur again. With two weeks to go before India enforces ban on smoking in public places from 2 October 2008, and few more weeks to go before mandatory pictorial warnings on tobacco products from 30 November 2008 get enforced, it is high time to prepare ourselves to contribute effectively in the implementation of these health policies

At the launch of the 3rd edition of the "Global Tobacco Treaty Action Guide 2008: Protecting Against Tobacco Industry Interference" in Hyderabad on Saturday, 20 September 2008, it is clear that the tobacco giants have disqualified themselves from participating in the development of public health policy. Worldwide release of the Global Tobacco Treaty Action Guide is a centerpiece of this year's 9th International Week of Resistance (IWR) to Tobacco Transnationals (22-28 September 2008).

The Global Tobacco Treaty Action Guide 2008 is produced by Corporate Accountability International [which is in official relations with the World Health Organization (WHO)], along with the Network for Accountability of Tobacco Transnationals (NATT).

For years the tobacco industry has operated with the express intention of subverting public health policies. If the tobacco giants were truly serious about saving lives, they would back off and let governments swiftly, fully implement the public health policies, including the national health policies and also the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC) – the first global corporate accountability and public health treaty. India, along with more than 150 countries, has ratified the global tobacco treaty (FCTC). The WHO estimates that broad implementation of the treaty could save 200 million lives by 2050.

In July 2007, at the second implementation and enforcement meeting on the FCTC, parties took the courageous step of initiating the development of guidelines on the implementation of Article 5.3 of the FCTC. These guidelines will help governments anticipate and thwart attempts by the vested commercial interests of the tobacco industry to undermine the implementation of the tobacco control policies.

Tobacco kills 5.4 million people around the world each year. Tobacco is a risk factor in six of the eight leading causes of death worldwide. The death toll is projected to rise to eight million a year by 2030, with 80 percent of those deaths occurring in developing countries. If current trends are not reversed, tobacco will claim one billion lives this century.

Proven tobacco control measures required in Andhra Pradesh, as well as in rest of India, by the global tobacco treaty (FCTC), and also by the Cigarettes and other Tobacco Products Act, 2003, such as the ban on tobacco advertising, promotion and sponsorship, graphic and effective warning labels, strong tax policies and protection from exposure to tobacco smoke, will bring in the desired change. However, the enforcement of some of these policies in India got delayed repeatedly, owing to pressure from the tobacco-growers' associations and other such agencies. The various governmental and non-governmental stakeholders need to be vigilant so as to facilitate the enforcement of these policies and guard them against undue interference, said activists.

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Peter McDermott, Opening Session: Global Situation and Response for Children Affected by HIV/AIDS

Unite for Children, Unite Against AIDS.

The Technical Consultation on Children Affected by HIV AIDS bought together around 100 representatives of civil society, governments, bilateral and multilateral donors, UN agencies and academics. This was the first time that the Global Partners Forum on Children Affected by HIV and AIDS was preceded by a 'Technical Consultation' that provided an opportunity for discussions on the key actions required to eliminate barriers to scaling up effective services for children affected by HIV and AIDS.

Recommendations from the Technical Consultation were to be presented at the Global Partners Forum, 9-10 February, 2006.

Peter McDermott, chief, HIV/AIDS section, UNICEF speaking on the global situation and the response to children affected by HIV and AIDS, said that though children and AIDS have become the subject of growing local, national and international attention over recent years, significant momentum is needed to make a real difference. While there has been a paradigm shift, children are still missing from the global response.

There were 700,000 new HIV infections among children in 2005 and 2.3 million children are estimated to be living with HIV as of the end of the year. 15 million children have so far been orphaned by AIDS, but the worst is yet to come - the number of orphans will rise even after the number of adults infected stagnates or declines.

Children are affected by HIV/AIDS for many reasons, but the majority of children affected by AIDS are made vulnerable because the adults around them are sick, dying or have recently died. Orphans are not always the most vulnerable, though they are often at higher risk of becoming infected themselves and are less likely to receive a proper education.

Peter Mc Dermott explained the global campaign 'Unite for Children, Unite Against AIDS', which aims to unite the efforts of all those fighting AIDS to meet children's needs in four key areas. This provides a child-focused framework for nationally owned programmes around the 'Four Ps' - urgent imperatives that will make a real difference in the lives and life chances of children affected by AIDS. These are:

    * Prevent mother-to-child transmission of HIV
    * Provide paediatric treatment
    * Prevent infection among adolescents and young people
    * Protect and support children affected by HIV/AIDS

To prevent mother-to-child transmission of HIV, the campaign seeks to expand services to 80 percent of women in need by 2010, up from the current 10 percent.

By providing pediatric drug treatment, the campaign seeks to cut in half the number of children who are infected at birth and die each year before reaching the age of one year -currently about 500,000. The target is to provide either antiretroviral treatment or cotrimoxazole, or both to 80 percent of the children in need by 2010.

By preventing new infections among adolescents and young people, the campaign hopes to reduce by 25 percent the number of children between the ages of 4 and 15 infected annually by 2010.

The 'Unite for Children, Unite against AIDS' campaign advocates for improved birth and death registration systems - at present it is often difficult for children and extended family members to obtain official records proving that they are orphans, which can make them ineligible for such benefits as food aid or free medical care.

The campaign also advocates for education and health services to be strengthened, and for governments and agencies to work towards the elimination of user fees for primary education and, where appropriate health-care services. Thus, the campaign provides a platform for continued action and advocacy to promote the implementation of the Convention on the Rights of the Child and other international conventions.

The global momentum to fight HIV/AIDS now includes the US President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR), the Global Fund to Fight HIV/AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, and the World Bank Multi-Country HIV/AIDS Program for Africa, as well as a significant increase in responses from civil society and faith-based organisations. Coordinating the contributions of all these actors is a daunting but essential task. But unless it is successful, there is a danger that isolated interventions will lead to the proliferation of small projects that are not linked to wider and longer-term programmatic, sectoral or national interventions.

The number of international contributions to the fight against HIV/AIDS often strains the capacity of national coordinating bodies, leaves gaps in national responses and increases the risk of duplication. The Unite for Children, Unite against AIDS Campaign provides a platform for all agencies involved in halting and reversing the spread of HIV/AIDS among children, adolescents and young people. It helps ensure that the children's face of HIV/AIDS is represented at every level of the 'Three Ones'.

Ishdeep Kohli-CNS

Stephen Kidd - Social Welfare: A Core Response to Child Poverty

Promoting Social Welfare to Reduce Child Poverty.

The Technical Consultation preceding the Global Partners Forum on Children Affected by HIV and AIDS, February, 2006, highlighted the importance of improving outcomes for children through integrated national systems of social welfare that guarantee basic living standards to the most vulnerable.

All children in highly impacted communities are negatively affected by the social and economic impact of HIV and AIDS. Recent evidence suggests that the impact on children is worsening as households and communities become less able to cope with the burdens of care associated with the disease. Current responses to children affected by HIV and AIDS are inadequate. Tackling child poverty and enabling households to meet the needs of children in their care necessitates a coherent policy mix of direct and indirect instruments.

Mexico, Brazil and India are examples of nations that are developing their social welfare systems and enhancing state capacity to deliver social outcomes. Certain countries in Africa are also adapting social policy frameworks and institutions to meet the challenges of poverty and HIV and AIDS.

Successful direct instruments that have demonstrated positive impacts on child poverty and on children affected by HIV and AIDS include the cash grant system of social transfers in South Africa, Namibia, Botswana and Lesotho, including child support grants and non-contributory old age pensions.

Those countries which have moved towards strengthened national capacity in social welfare have adopted strong coherent social policy frameworks and have invested in state capacity to deliver policy and benefits. Direct instruments will assist families affected by HIV and AIDS to support children in their care. Such instruments need to be part of a national response situated within a national social policy framework ensuring best policy coherence for social outcomes for the most vulnerable children.

Mr Stephen Kidd, of DFID's Social Protection Division, called attention to social welfare as being a core human right, specifically quoting from the Convention on the Rights of the Child, Article 26: "for every child the right to benefit from social security" and Article 27: " the right of every child to a standard of living adequate for the child's physical, mental, spiritual, moral and social development". These rights have attracted little attention in poor countries, yet they should be a core response to tackling child poverty, especially in the context of AIDS.

Social transfers can improve household food security, increase rates of participation in education and the uptake of health services. A study commissioned by UNICEF in Southern and Eastern Africa found that cash transfers in the form of child care grants and social pensions were effective in helping families support children in their care. The study concluded that transfers had the potential to strengthen the capacities of families and individuals to support children affected by HIV and AIDS; that predictable ongoing support was most effective and that cash payments afforded flexibility in utilisation which in turn allowed recipients to maximise other multiplier effects.

Social protection can promote growth by allowing people to take up higher return - but also more risky - economic activities. It is also an investment in people, generating a healthier workforce and gives children the opportunity to break the poverty cycle; especially important in the context of HIV and AIDS. This increases the number of people contributing to the economy, as those receiving transfers are more likely to be in work than non-beneficiaries.

Social welfare should complement other interventions though and should not replace interventions in health, education and tackling HIV and AIDS. Social welfare is essential to improving impact on child poverty outcomes, including in health and education.

Fee waivers, for example, are not sufficient for many of the poorest to access school and health as they face other barriers. Even antiretroviral drugs are less effective when recipients have poor nutrition. Other interventions can build on the platform provided by social welfare.

National governments should develop a strategic framework for social welfare provision, integrate social welfare and child poverty outcomes into national Poverty Reduction Strategies, revise National OVC Action Plans to incorporate social protection and embed them within national social policy frameworks.

It is essential that governments take forward national planning on social welfare and increase budget allocations. The international community also needs to invest in building coherent institutions to deliver social welfare for the most vulnerable.

Ishdeep Kohli-CNS