Friday, March 19, 2010   01:02 GMT    
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WEST AFRICA: Stopping the Polio Virus
By Brahima Ouédraogo
OUAGADOUGOU - The World Health Organisation (WHO) and its partners hope to eliminate the circulation of the polio virus in West Africa as soon as June by launching the first round of national synchronised immunisation days against the debilitating disease.
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HEALTH-US: Maternal Deaths on the Rise
By William Fisher
NEW YORK - Despite the fact that the United States spends more on maternal health than any other country in the world, deaths in childbirth among U.S. women are on the rise and already surpass the morbidity rates in most developed countries.
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DEVELOPMENT: Bad Water More Deadly Than War
By Thalif Deen
UNITED NATIONS - Bad water kills more people than wars or earthquakes, declares Anders Berntell, executive director of the Stockholm International Water Institute (SIWI).
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NAMIBIA: "If You Kiss for Five Minutes You Get It"
By Servaas van den Bosch
WINDHOEK - "At home we have a bar," says grade seven learner David Bravo* (14). "When my mother puts on the music I cannot concentrate on (my) schoolwork anymore. Sometimes, in the middle of the night, I just sit there and watch the people."
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SWAZILAND: Budget Cuts Ahead but More Money for Education and Health
By Mantoe Phakathi
MBABANE - Her swollen feet are a constant reminder to Sanele Matsebula that she needs to take her medication.
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AFRICA: Corruption Carries High Cost, World Bank Says
By Mohammed A. Salih
WASHINGTON - Poverty is on the rise in Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) and various forms of corruption threaten to undermine the impact of investments made to meet the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) in the continent, said the World Bank in a report released Monday on Africa's development.
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MALAWI: Rural Communities Jointly Care for Orphans
By Claire Ngozo
LILONGWE - At the age of 66, village headman Kamwala of Dedza district in central Malawi is starting to feel the effects of ageing. He gets tired easily and needs frequent naps but says he cannot afford this luxury. He and his wife are caregivers to a one-year-old orphan.
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DEVELOPMENT-KENYA: Rapid Population Growth Threatens Development
By Susan Anyangu-Amu
NAIROBI - Margaret Atieno, a 38-year-old mother of six, says she wanted to avoid her last pregnancy. But consistent stock-outs of contraceptive devices at her health care centre in rural Siaya, western Kenya, gave her no choice but to fall pregnant once again, albeit the fact that she did not want another child.
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HEALTH-UGANDA: EU Supports Law Threatening Access to Medicines
By Wambi Michael
KAMPALA - The European Union (EU) is funding the drafting of Uganda’s controversial Counterfeit Goods Bill, a proposed law that has caused an outcry as it threatens access to life-saving generic medicines in this low income East African country. Some 90 percent of medicines used in Uganda’s health-care system are imported, of which about 93 percent are generics.
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MALAYSIA: Creation of Commercial Hospital Wings a Mistake -Critics
By Baradan Kuppusamy
KUALA LUMPUR - A Malaysian government scheme to create commercial ‘private wings’ in major government hospitals has come under fire from critics, who say it will add to the burden of people who need public healthcare the most.
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HEALTH: U.S. AIDS Fund Flat-Lining, Groups Complain
By Sananda Sahoo
WASHINGTON - The debate between those who favour investment in AIDS treatment and those who favour investment in its prevention came to the forefront Thursday at a U.S House of Representatives hearing on U.S. investments in HIV/AIDS in Africa.
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PHILIPPINES: Reproductive Health Tests Candidates’ Political Guts
By Kara Santos
MANILA - Filipino voters who have yet to make up their minds about their choice for their next president are being advised: look at each aspirant’s stance on reproductive health to help them gauge the candidate’s leadership mettle and political guts.
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CHINA: Binge-drinking Culture Turning from Fun to Lethal
By Mitch Moxley
BEIJING - After Chen Lusheng, a police sergeant from the southern Chinese city of Shenzhen, died in December after an off-duty night of heavy drinking with local officials, his superiors tried to have him designated a "martyr" who "died in the line of duty," so that his family would receive greater compensation.
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INDONESIA: Waste Composting Project Blazes Cleaner Path
By Kanis Dursin
JAKARTA - Battling the pain from a boil on his left thigh, 45-year-old Inggit Tukino pulled his two-wheeled cart through the overcrowded alleys of a slum in Rawabebek, Penjaringan hamlet in here North Jakarta.
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LATIN AMERICA: Abortion - Still Illegal, Still Killing, Despite Growing Awareness
By Estrella Gutiérrez
CARACAS - Although most of the governments in Latin America today are described as progressive, abortion is only legal in one country, while in five countries it is banned under all circumstances, even when the mother's life is at risk.
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News in RSSPromoting sustainable health reinforces and advances human and global development. Epidemics and infectious diseases -- HIV/AIDS, malaria, tuberculosis, cholera, pandemic influenza, and many others -- are affecting entire populations at the social, economic and even political level. The implications for development are so notorious that health-related issues are becoming a policy focus of governments around the globe. The health aspects of humanitarian crises, diseases which persist regardless of the availability of effective treatments, and a widening gap in research and innovation of medications are just some of the issues being tackled by international health organisations and health rights activists..

Bitter Pill - Obstacles to Affordable Medicine
Flu Viruses Go Global
Swine Flu
HIV / AIDS
Bird Flu - A Virus Goes Global
Millennium Development Goals
News in RSS
GUATEMALA: Ok for Ex-President's Extradition to US Just One Step
EDUCATION-MALAWI: Local Language Dictionary Released
ECONOMY-SENEGAL: 'Only The Rich Get Loans'
WEST AFRICA: Stopping the Polio Virus
CLIMATE CHANGE-BRAZIL: The Threat Posed by Livestock
HEALTH-US: Maternal Deaths on the Rise
CLIMATE CHANGE: The U.N.'s Boys' Club
DEVELOPMENT: 'Aid Industry is Part of the Problem'
DEVELOPMENT: Bad Water More Deadly Than War
PERU: Priest on Campaign Trail Defrocked
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