Broadcast: June 10,
2003
by Karen Leggett
VOICE ONE:
I’m Sarah Long with Bob Doughty, and
this is the VOA Special English program,
SCIENCE IN THE NEWS.
VOICE TWO:
Today--a look at developments in the
fight against AIDS ... and, later,
some advice about how to protect against
malaria.
VOICE ONE:
President Bush speaks before signing
the bill at the State Department on
May 27.
President Bush has signed legislation
to help prevent and treat AIDS in
twelve African countries and two Caribbean
countries. The president said the
United States has a moral duty to
take action against the disease. He
compared American efforts to fight
AIDS to the United States' rebuilding
of Europe after World War Two.
President Bush first announced what
he called an Emergency Plan for AIDS
Relief during his State of the Union
speech in January. The plan calls
for fifteen-thousand-million dollars
in spending over five years. Congress
must approve the yearly amounts.
Eighty percent of the money is to
go to treatment and care. Twenty percent
will go to prevention activities.
Of that share, one-third must be spent
on programs that teach only abstinence,
the traditional idea not to have sex
before marriage.
Some health groups do not like the
fact that organizations that teach
abstinence-only will get money. Other
groups do not want any of the money
to go to organizations that also provide
abortions to end unwanted pregnancies.
The White House negotiated a compromise
in the final law passed by Congress.
Organizations that provide abortions
may still receive money to fight AIDS
as long as they record exactly how
all the money is spent.
VOICE TWO:
The African countries to receive aid
include Botswana, Ethiopia, Ivory
Coast, Kenya, Mozambique and Namibia.
The others are Nigeria, Rwanda, South
Africa, Tanzania, Uganda and Zambia.
The two Caribbean countries are Guyana
and Haiti.Peter Piot, director of
the United Nations AIDS program, strongly
praised the legislation. But Doctor
Piot says there is still a long way
to go for nations to increase spending
to the levels needed to prevent and
treat AIDS. He says ninety-five percent
of the people with AIDS do not receive
medicines that can save their lives.
President Bush signed the bill in
late May before he traveled to Evian,
France, for the yearly Group of Eight
Summit. He said every day of delay
means eight-thousand more AIDS deaths
in Africa and fourteen-thousand more
infections. Mister Bush and the leaders
of Britain, Canada, France, Germany,
Italy, Japan and Russia discussed
AIDS, among other issues. The leaders
agreed to strengthen the United Nations
program called the Global Fund to
Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria.
(MUSIC BRIDGE)
VOICE ONE:
More than twenty million people with
AIDS have died over the past twenty
years. But a new report shows that
rates of infection are falling in
cities in Ethiopia, Rwanda, Tanzania
and Uganda. The report is from the
United States Census Bureau and the
Agency for International Development.
This is the first time since AIDS
was first discovered twenty years
ago that rates of infection are dropping
in sub-Saharan Africa. The study also
found that the increase in H-I-V rates
has slowed in Zimbabwe, Zambia, Kenya,
Ivory Coast, the Republic of Congo
and Senegal.
U-N AIDS program director Peter Piot
expressed hope in comments published
in the Boston Globe newspaper. But
he said it is too early to call the
findings a victory. He added, however,
that the reductions among young people
in some cities -- such as Addis Ababa,
Ethiopia, and Lusaka, Zambia -- likely
show the effects of prevention efforts
there.
VOICE TWO:
AIDS is caused by H-I-V which stands
for human immunodeficiency virus.
It is carried in body fluids. It can
spread when people have sex or share
needles used for taking drugs. H-I-V
can also spread from mother to baby.
AIDS is acquired immunodeficiency
syndrome. When people have AIDS, their
bodies are not able to protect them
against other diseases. There is no
cure for AIDS, but there are medicines
to control the virus. There are also
ways to fight the spread of the disease.
Nine percent or almost one-out-of-ten
of all AIDS cases in the world are
in Ethiopia. Many different programs
in that country tell people how to
prevent the spread of AIDS. For the
past three years, a Washington-based
organization called D-K-T International
has printed advice on shopping carts,
buses and umbrellas. It has also put
the messages on radio and television.
The messages tell about abstinence
as a way to prevent AIDS. They urge
people to remain loyal to their partner
if they do have a sexual relationship.
D-K-T also passed out sixty-seven
million condoms in Ethiopia last year.
Men wear condoms during sex as a way
to prevent the creation of babies
and the spread of disease.
VOICE ONE:
A health worker with D-K-T in Ethiopia
says many girls find it difficult
to talk about sex or condoms. That
may be changing, though, in part because
of the group's radio programs. It
began these programs in two-thousand,
directed to populations that live
away from cities.
The characters, like one named "Ebissa,"
have everyday problems and talk easily
about ways to plan their families
and prevent AIDS. One listener said
the program influenced her to visit
a health care worker and not have
more children. A nurse said more people
asked for family planning services
after hearing about them on the radio.
These services help people to decide
if, and when, they want to start a
family or have more children.
D-K-T also worked with the Ethiopian
military to make a movie about protecting
families from H-I-V and AIDS. All
soldiers began to receive condoms
and information about AIDS when they
returned home from duty outside Ethiopia.
The Ethiopian Orthodox Church, the
Evangelical Church and the Ethiopian
Islamic Affairs Supreme Council also
offer prevention services.
(MUSIC BRIDGE)
VOICE TWO:
Malaria is a major killer in developing
countries. The World Health Organization
says more than three-hundred million
people get severe cases of malaria
each year. At least one-million die.
Most of these deaths happen in African
countries south of the Sahara Desert.
And most of the victims are children.
Experts say one of the most successful
ways to prevent malaria is to sleep
under a net treated with chemicals
that kill the insects that carry malaria.
Malaria is spread through the bite
of female Anopheles mosquitoes. They
leave an organism, a one-celled parasite,
inside a person’s body. Malaria can
be cured but it is a long and difficult
process. It is easier to prevent malaria.
Rakiya Madaki, responsible for a
clinic in a village near Abuja, Nigeria,
shows how to work chemicals into a
net.
VOICE ONE:
Mosquitoes are most active at night.
It is most important that children
and women who may be pregnant or plan
to become pregnant sleep under treated
nets.
Children do not have the protection
that adults sometimes have to fight
the disease. Women are more likely
to get malaria when they become pregnant.
The disease can produce a lack of
iron in the mother's blood. Also,
pregnant women with malaria are more
likely to have babies with low birth
weight.
International health organizations
and some governments are trying to
make sure that it is easy to get nets
that are good quality and do not cost
too much.
Special protection is needed to handle
the insecticide. The net should hang
from a wall or roof and cover the
bed or sleeping mat. The bottom of
the net should be placed under the
bed or mat so mosquitoes cannot get
inside. For people who sleep outside,
the nets can be tied to sticks or
a tree.
Nets need to be treated again with
insecticide at least once a year or
after they have been washed three
times. Insecticides are the chemicals
that kill the mosquitoes. The nets
should not be washed in rivers or
lakes. The chemicals can get into
the water and kill small fish. Water
used for washing a net should be put
into the ground away from animals
or people.
VOICE ONE:
A good time to treat the net is just
before the rainy season. Sometimes
there are health centers or other
places that will treat nets. Nets
can also be treated at home. The net
must sit in a pan of water mixed with
chemicals. You should wear gloves
so your hands do not touch the chemical.
Any of the water and chemicals left
after treating the net can be used
to treat curtains for windows and
doors.
Health experts say it is important
to use the treated net every night
of the year, even if you do not hear
mosquitoes.
SCIENCE IN THE NEWS was written by
Karen Leggett and produced by Cynthia
Kirk. This is Sarah Long.
VOICE TWO:
And this is Bob Doughty. Join us again
next week for more news about science
in Special English on the Voice of
America.
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