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Article Index
HIV Drug and Treatment
General
- Changing Antiretroviral Therapy: Why, When, and How
- Nutrition and HIV
Fuzeon
- Introduction: Why Do We Need a New Class of HIV Medications?
- Entry Inhibitors: A New Class of HIV Medications
- How Does Fuzeon Work?
- What We Know About Fuzeon
- Who Fuzeon Works Best For
- Fuzeon's Side Effects
- Conclusion: Fuzeon's Role in Treatment
- Ten Tips on Injecting Fuzeon
- FUZEON: avoiding injection-site reactions
Alternative
- Could green tea prevent HIV?
- Ayurvedic Management of HIV/AIDS

News
- Scouts get the HIV message
- Perspectives on Asia Pacific AIDS conference
-
Myanmar: Towards universal access
-
Orphans with HIV/AIDS and Family Health and Wellness Programs to Benefit from Constella's Enhancing Human Health Grants
- Foods debunked as alternatives to AIDS meds
- Thailand HIV/AIDS Situation
- Kenya: HIV Patients Suffer As Drug is Recalled
- Niger's Religious Leaders Form Alliance To Prevent Spread Of HIV
- Morality Gets a Massage
-
An African Solution
- Greytown Hospital Kept Open with Help of Umvoti AIDS Centre Volunteers
- Guangdong faces severe HIV situation
- UN corrects itself, India’s HIV situation isn’t that bad
- New AIDS figures show low prevalence (India)
- The Sydney Declaration: Good Research Drives Good Policy and Programming - A Call to Scale Up Research
- Million more AIDS deaths forecast in South Africa by 2010
- Brazilian President Silva Issues Compulsory License for Merck's Antiretroviral Efavirenz
- FDA Approves First Oral Fluid Based Rapid HIV Test Kit
- HIV/AIDS funding gap could hit 50% by 2007: U.N. agency

Miscellaneaus
- Red ribbon history
- HIV and AIDS in africa
-
Dr Krisana Kraisintu first used her pharmaceutical expertise to make HIV/Aids treatment affordable in Thailand, then she moved on to Africa
- Speech at Harward by Bill Gates
- Quit complain in
- Urban action networks; HIV/AIDS and community organizing in New York City
- Living With HIV

2007/08/24

Foods debunked as alternatives to AIDS meds

source : http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/20394521/

Study disputes S. African official’s claims that garlic, lemon can replace pills

Updated: 3:53 p.m. ET Aug. 22, 2007

CAPE TOWN, South Africa - A study by South African scientists said Wednesday there was no evidence that foods such as garlic and beetroot were a substitute for AIDS medicine, disputing claims by the country’s health minister.

The report — confirming what experts worldwide have said — was likely to increase pressure on the minister, who has been ridiculed for promoting olive oil, garlic, lemon and the African potato for people with AIDS and for questioning the effectiveness of anti-retroviral drugs.

Health Minister Manto Tshabalala-Msimang is also under fire because of the dismissal of her deputy and over newspaper allegations her liver transplant may have been needed because of alcohol abuse. Recent news reports also said she was banned from Botswana for 10 years in the 1970s after being accused of theft at a hospital.

“The panel has concluded that no food, no component made from food, and no food supplement has been identified in any credible study as an effective alternative to appropriate medication,” said professor Barry Mendelow, one of the authors of the 300-page study by the Academy of Science of South Africa.

Nutrition can help
The 15-member panel said healthy eating does appear to help slow the progression of AIDS and tuberculosis. But it cautioned that there was little reliable evidence about the influence of nutrition on the diseases.

"This contrasts dramatically with the huge cloud of often acrimonious controversy that hangs over the subject and has become a source of widespread concern in, and about, the government, both within and outside the country,” the panel said.

Tshabalala-Msimang’s spokesman could not be reached for comment on the report.
Controversy about the country’s AIDS policy has raged for years, with critics accusing the government of doing too little to slow the epidemic, which affects an estimated 5.4 million South Africans. An estimated 900 people die each day of the disease in South Africa, and some 1,400 are newly infected. A report last year warned that only half the 15-year-olds now alive would live to celebrate their 60th birthdays.

readmore : http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/20394521/

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