Sunday, January 31, 2010

HIV IN THE CARIBEANS


The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria has announced, in common with other NGOs, that they are focussing resources in Haiti on efforts to ensure that people with HIV and AIDS continue to access vital drugs.

Haiti has the highest HIV infection rate outside Southern Africa. 36,000 people currently receive antiretroviral treatment (ART).

The Global Fund has pledged emergency funding of USD 800,000 to guarantee supply of ART for the next 6 months.

For an overview of HIV in Haiti please see AVERTs page on link below

http://www.avert.org/aids-caribbean.htm



DONATE HERE:
http://www.bubbleshake.com/ABG-SOCIETY-FUNDS.html

AAPM Statement On Quality Radiation Therapy

The American Association of Physicists in Medicine (AAPM) has issued a statement in the wake of several recent articles in the New York Times yesterday and earlier in the week that discuss a number of rare but tragic events in the last decade involving people undergoing radiation therapy.

While it does not specifically comment on the details of these events, the statement acknowledges their gravity. It reads in part: "The AAPM and its members deeply regret that these events have occurred, and we continue to work hard to reduce the likelihood of similar events in the future." The full statement appears here.

Today's statement also seeks to reassure the public on the safety of radiation therapy, which is safely and effectively used to treat hundreds of thousands of people with cancer and other diseases every year in the United States. Medical physicists in hospitals and clinics across the United States are board-certified professionals who play a key role in assuring quality during these treatments because they are directly responsible for overseeing the complex technical equipment used.

"The primary day-to-day responsibility of our members is to safeguard the welfare of people undergoing radiation therapy," says AAPM President Michael G. Herman, Ph.D. FAAPM, FACMP. "While adverse events during such treatments are very rare, the recent articles serve as a poignant reminder that they still occur, and like all medical professionals, we are deeply saddened by the stories of human tragedy when they do."

As an organization AAPM has always worked hard to reduce the risk of such adverse events through education, quality, and safety initiatives, and today's statement outlines some of these, adds Dr. Herman. For instance, AAPM already has plans in the works for a cross-disciplinary national summit in June that aims to identify ways of enhancing the safety and effectiveness of human radiation therapy.

"As we continue to support high-quality radiation therapy for every patient in the fight against cancer, AAPM remains committed to identifying and implementing opportunities to improve safety," says Dr. Herman, who is a professor and director of the Medical Physics Division in the Department of Radiation Oncology at Mayo Clinic. "We will achieve this through enhancing routine quality performance in a practical manner for the treatment team, helping to facilitate consistent, national radiation therapy event reporting, and continuing to identify and surmount barriers to improved safety.

Source
American Association of Physicists in Medicine

Donate Here:
http://www.bubbleshake.com/ABG-SOCIETY-FUNDS.html

News Reports Alicia Keys And Swizz Beatz Engaged







The New York Daily News is reporting that singer Alicia Keys and boyfriend
producer Swizz Beatz are going to tie the knot and get married. Alicia Keys received an engagement ring for her 29th birthday on Monday from Swizz, and the couple
is now celebrating in Hawaii.

The rumors that Keys and Swizz Beatz were involved were confirmed in May of 2009 when Swizz admitted to the media that they were dating. Although the producer is going through a bitter divorce with his wife, R&B singer Mashonda, he continues to deny allegations that Keys is the reason for the dissolved four year marriage.

In September, Mashonda wrote a letter confronting Alicia Keys, "You know what you did. You know the role you played and you know how you contributed to the ending of my marriage. You know that I asked you to step back and let me handle my family issues. Issues that you helped to create." She continued, "If it’s so, that you and my husband are meant to be together, then God bless you both and I hope you never have to deal with what I did. I would not wish it on my worst enemy. If you two being together forever is the case, it’s more of a reason for us to get along, because I’m not going anywhere. There’s a child to be raised." Mashonda and Swizz have two children together.