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Banff Jasper Servers Against AIDS Day: Date Announced

We will be hosting our Banff/Jasper Servers Against AIDS Day (SAAD) on July 26th, 2008. The event will run as long as restaurants are open and servers are working! We are thankful for the volunteers from both regional AIDS services here in the Alberta Rockies who will, in the upcoming months, begin contacting food and beverage service workers to take part in the event. We already have the interest of a number of restaurants!

March 30, 2008 | 2:03 AM Comments  0 comments



March Update

Dear Mountain Movers,

Spring is upon us, though it might not look anything like it in Eastern Canada. All the more reason to head back out to the Rockies, where apparently the Banff area is relatively snow-free! Paul and I will both be back in the mountains by the end of March, and are excited to start planning for our summer event. We don’t have too much to report this month, but read on for the latest news.

*New Website*
Some of you may have already, but we have acquired www.themountainmovement.com thanks to the generous donation of one of our supporters. The website also features a new feedback link, so that readers can easily provide ideas, stories, and comments, request more information, or be added to our e-newsletter list. We are excited about the opportunity to raise awareness online and be an active presence in the community of HIV activists and educators.

*Facebook* The Mountain Movement is on Facebook, for those of you who have an account there. Simply search for our group in the Groups section and you are sure to find us. We also have a Cause set up, so you can search for that as well. Any donations given through our Causes page will go directly to The Stephen Lewis Foundation.

*Banff/Jasper Servers Against AIDS Day* We have received confirmation from both
AIDS Bow Valley and HIV West Yellowhead to run a joint Servers Against AIDS Day this upcoming summer. We are excited about these partnerships and the ability to support regional AIDS services in the Rockies, who work so hard to educate their communities about the dangers of sexually transmitted infections.

Thanks for reading, and visit the website frequently. We are always posting new articles to read, photos, and links to interesting websites and organizations.

Take care!

Meghan and Paul

March 16, 2008 | 8:03 AM Comments  0 comments



SOUTH AFRICA: HIV major factor in rising child deaths

Story originally published by http://www.irinnews.org/.

JOHANNESBURG, 13 March (IRIN) - Mothers and children in South Africa are dying in alarming numbers. Far from being on track to meet the Millennium Development Goal (MDG) of reducing child mortality by two-thirds, the country is among only a dozen worldwide where child deaths are rising.

In 2000, South Africa committed to eight MDGs set by the UN, which included reducing child and maternal mortality and reversing the spread of HIV/AIDS by 2015.

And yet, every year 20,000 babies are stillborn and another 22,000 die within the first month of their lives. In total, at least 75,000 children die before their fifth birthday, while 1,600 mothers die due to pregnancy or childbirth complications, according to a report on infant, child and maternal mortality, released at a conference on perinatal care in Johannesburg this week.

The report, Every Death Counts, produced jointly by the Department of Health, the Medical Research Council and the University of Pretoria, asserts that HIV/AIDS is one of the main reasons South Africa has failed to reduce its child mortality rates, while other countries with similar gross national incomes, such as Brazil and Mexico, are on track to meet the MDG.

The authors estimate that more than a third of maternal and child deaths in South Africa are AIDS related. Other factors are poor quality of care during childbirth, failure to prevent and treat childhood infections such as diarrhoea and pneumonia, and poor nutrition and living conditions associated with poverty.

"We have the solutions to save lives but they are not reaching those in most need, or they are not being implemented with the quality needed," the report noted. The authors estimated that at least 40,200 babies and children could be saved every year if government policies and programmes already in place were better implemented and were reaching the entire population.
In more than half the deaths, the authors identified "modifiable factors", such as lapses in both the coverage and quality of care mothers and children received at health facilities.

In the case of HIV/AIDS interventions, the report highlighted the need for universal testing of pregnant women, implementation of the health department's recent commitment to switch to more effective dual antiretroviral (ARV) therapy for the prevention of mother-to-child transmission (PMTCT), and PCR testing, which can detect HIV in infants under 18 months, of HIV-exposed infants at six weeks of age.

According to health department figures, 41 percent of the more than one million women who attended antenatal clinics in 2006 were never tested for HIV, while antenatal HIV prevalence figures indicate that just less than a third of those women would have been HIV positive.

Not only did these women miss the opportunity of receiving the ARV drugs that would have reduced the likelihood of infecting their babies, they did not receive treatment for their HIV infection either. In the majority of maternal deaths, the HIV status was unknown.

Children born to HIV-positive mothers are three times less likely to survive, regardless of the infant's HIV status. Their survival becomes even more precarious if the mother dies, said Mickey Chopra of the Medical Research Council, one of the authors of the report and a presenter at the conference.

"As much as we focus on PMTCT, we must keep mothers alive to raise their children," said Dr Mitchell Besser, founder of mothers2mothers (m2m), a non-governmental organisation that runs mentoring and support programmes for HIV-positive pregnant women and new mothers in four African countries.

Besides poor uptake of HIV testing, Besser identified several other reasons for South Africa's high infant mortality rate, including lack of education and support of HIV-positive mothers in making the best infant-feeding choices, insufficient testing and monitoring of HIV-exposed babies, and too few nurses and midwives.

"We keep giving more and more jobs to nurses," Besser told conference delegates. "Their job keeps getting bigger and bigger, but the number of nurses doesn't."

The m2m initiative aims to relieve some of the pressure on clinical staff by training HIV-positive mothers to mentor new mothers and pregnant women infected with HIV.

An evaluation of the programme by the Population Council, an international non-profit organisation, found that women who had received education and support through m2m were more likely to disclose their status, accept PMTCT treatment and exclusively formula- or breast-feed, which have all been proven to reduce the likelihood of mother-to-child infection.

HIV interventions during pregnancy and birth are fairly widely available in South Africa, but the report points to a drop in such interventions in the crucial period soon after birth. Chopra said HIV-infected infants deteriorated so quickly that "even testing infants with PCR at six weeks may be too late". He recommended asking mothers and babies to return for checkups and PCR testing a week after birth.

PCR testing of infants was only recently adopted in South Africa and is still rolling out. Precious Robinson, the health department's national PMTCT manager, described Chopra's recommendation as "not feasible", and said limited laboratory capacity already meant that in some provinces it could take up to four weeks to receive the results of a PCR test.

"Mothers can collect the results when they come for their 10 week visit," she told IRIN/PlusNews.

Chopra responded that "Many kids who can benefit from early diagnosis and treatment will have died by the time they receive test results."

March 14, 2008 | 5:03 AM Comments  0 comments



Harm Reduction

A recent article in The Ottawa Citizen (Wednesday, March 5, 2008 - A4) reported that the United Nations drug control board came down hard on the Canadian Government in order to encourage it to shut down safe injection sites for drug users in Canada. Claiming that these sites 'enable illicit use,' the UN is also accusing Canada of a lack of compliance with a number of international anti-drug treaties.

Coming 'clean' is not as simple as just stopping regular injections. Drug addicts deal with serious effects of withdrawal. Within just six to eight hours of their last injection, for instance, heroin addicts will start to feel the symptoms of withdrawl, which can include tremors, panic, cramps, vomiting, insomnia, shaking, and irritability. The symptoms can be debilatating, leading to other obvious issues such as an inability to work or focus, and isolation from relationships, which are major roadblocks to quitting altogether. Moreover, in Canada, a significant portion of HIV transmission occurs through needle-sharing. In prisons, make-shift needles are made out of pens, paperclips and old syringes. These needles can be used by dozens of inmates, a hundred times each, without being cleaned at all. A drug user might also overdose. If the drugs are taken in the street, unsupervised and far from medical attention, an overdose is almost sure to be fatal.

One of the best solutions in the grand scheme of things is to reduce harm to drug users by providing safe spaces for them to inject, as well as clean, unused needles. One such program is Insite, a Supervised Injection Site located in Downtown East Side Vancouver, an area in Canada notorious for issues associated with drug use, HIV, poverty, and abuse. Being the first site of its kind in North America, Insite has been a hub of controversy over such sites, as well as a leader in the field of harm reduction.


While it is easy to say that creating spaces for drug injection encourages drug use, results are proving just the opposite. In fact, research conducted on Insite shows that it is leading to an increase in detox and addiction treatment, has reduced the number of people injecting in public spaces, is attracting the highest-risk users, has reduced needle-sharing, is disseminating information on safer injecting to at least 1/3 of its users, and has not increased the rates of relapse among former drug users or those seeking to quit nor increased the rate of drug-related crime (source).

Psycho-social issues are incredibly complex. There is always an entanglement of one issue into the next, and it is impossible to compartmentalize them and deal with them individually. Approaching the issues in this way will only perpetuate them. Harm Reduction may not be the ideal, but it is the most realistic approach.

Shutting the doors of drug injection sites will not put an end to illicit drug use. Instead, it will put an end to the lives of more and more users before they even have the chance to stop their dependence on drugs.

Insite is saving lives.

For more information, please visit these sites:
Insite- Supervised Injection Site (Vancouver, Canada)
Insite- Supervised Injection Site (Research Results)
HIV in Canada
Drug Use and Offending in Canada



March 6, 2008 | 12:03 PM Comments  0 comments



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