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- From: bigoldberg@igc.apc.org (Billi Goldberg)
- Newsgroups: sci.med.aids
- Subject: CDC Summary 12/23/92
- Message-ID: <1992Dec23.162427.28976@cs.ucla.edu>
- Date: 23 Dec 92 16:15:24 GMT
- Sender: usenet@cs.ucla.edu (Mr Usenet)
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- Lines: 184
- Approved: phil@wubios.wustl.edu (J. Philip Miller)
- Note: Copyright 1992, Dan R. Greening. Non-commercial reproduction allowed.
- Nntp-Posting-Host: sole.cs.ucla.edu
- Archive-Number: 6670
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-
- AIDS Daily Summary
- December 23, 1992
-
- The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) National AIDS
- Clearinghouse makes available the following information as a public
- service only. Providing this information does not constitute
- endorsement by the CDC, the CDC Clearinghouse, or any other
- organization. Reproduction of this text is encouraged; however, copies
- may not be sold. Copyright 1992, Information, Inc., Bethesda, MD
-
- "Unimed Says FDA Cleared Use of Appetite Stimulant" Wall Street Journal
- (12/23/92), P. B6
- The Food and Drug Administration approved the use of a synthetic
- form of one of the active ingredients in marijuana in treating the
- appetite loss frequently experienced in AIDS patients, according to
- Unimed, the manufacturer of the product. The product, Marinol, is
- known generically as dronabinol and is already used to help alleviate
- nausea caused by cancer chemotherapy. The drug was previously given
- orphan-drug status for the treatment of appetite and weight loss in
- AIDS patients. This status provides seven years of exclusive marketing
- rights. While some patients contend they experienced greater relief
- through the use of marijuana, the federal government earlier this year
- discontinued enrolling cancer, glaucoma, and AIDS patients in an
- experimental program where they were given marijuana cigarettes.
- Federal health officials have argued that those patients should switch
- from marijuana to alternative treatments such as Marinol.
-
- "Increasing Numbers of Young in U.S. Lose Their Mothers to AIDS"
- Philadelphia Inquirer (12/23/92), P. A2 (Collins, Huntly)
- Approximately 18,500 American children have been left orphaned by
- the AIDS epidemic--and the figure is likely to exceed 80,000 by the
- year 2000 as more women contract HIV, according to a report published
- in the Journal of the American Medical Association. Authors David
- Michaels and Carol Levine said, "Unless increased attention and
- resources are devoted to this vulnerable population, a social
- catastrophe is unavoidable." They called the children "orphans"
- because their mothers were the primary caregivers. Most of the
- motherless young people, all under age 18, are not infected with HIV,
- but still will encounter problems, such as coping with the social stigma
- of AIDS at school and among friends, finding homes with loving
- caregivers after the mother dies, and receiving continued support from
- government-funded AIDS services, said the researchers. Although women
- make up 10 percent of AIDS cases in this country, their rate of
- infection is increasing, mostly because of IV-drug use. For example, in
- New Jersey, women constitute 27 percent of all AIDS cases. The
- majority of the affected young people are low-income black and Latino
- youths who live in the nation's largest cities, said the researchers.
- These children have often lost siblings to AIDS, added the researchers,
- and the social stigma of AIDS makes their situation worse than that of
- children who lose a parent to cancer or some other fatal illness.
- Related Stories: Washington Post (12/23) P. A2; Los Angeles Times--
- Washington Edition (12/23) P. A7; Baltimore Sun (12/23) P. 3A
-
- "Electronic System Protects Surgeons From HIV, Hepatitis" United Press
- International (12/23/92) (Estrada, Ray)
- Los Angeles--A new apparatus designed to protect operating room
- personnel from infections like HIV and hepatitis was used for the first
- time Tuesday at the University of Southern California Hospital. The
- device is battery operated and is connected to a surgical patient with
- an electrode while the surgeon, nurses, and others in the operating room
- stand on special pads. The manufacturer, San Diego-based InCoMed, said
- that similar monitors can be connected to basins, blood supplies, or
- other potential sources of contamination. If any fluids from the
- patient leak through surgical gloves or gowns, they complete an
- electrical circuit and incite an alarm. At that point, a leaky glove
- can be replaced or a tainted gown changed and the fluid washed away
- before HIV or hepatitis B infection spreads. InCoMed has tested the
- device, called a barrier integrity monitor early warning system, at
- four U.S. hospitals over the past 18 months. Dietmar Rabussay, InCoMed
- president, said, "Before, it would have been very difficult to see
- something [such as a glove puncture] because a surgeon's hand would be
- covered with blood." He also said the company is developing a similar
- system that can be used in emergency rooms and for oral surgery. "It
- is much more dangerous [for hospital workers] in an emergency room
- because there's no way of knowing whether the patient has HIV," said
- Rabussay.
-
- "AIDS Laboratory Reopens Despite Opposition" Reuters (12/23/92)
- Tokyo--An AIDS and tuberculosis research facility in central Tokyo
- reopened on Wednesday, even though local residents objected to it, a
- laboratory official said. Toshihiko Komatsu, director in charge of
- biological safety at the National Institute of Health laboratory, said,
- "We were far behind in our schedule," referring to a rapid increase in
- the number of people seeking HIV tests. The laboratory's blood tests
- and other biological research efforts were stopped in October after the
- facility moving to the center of the city and prompted protests from
- local residents who feared infection. Protesters demanded that the
- laboratory move to another location, but a local court has not yet
- ruled on the matter.
-
- "News in Brief: New York" Advocate (12/15/92) No. 618, P. 24
- The New York State Bar Association committee on AIDS made 53
- recommendations on Nov. 5 which included leniency for prisoners with
- AIDS, access to state-subsidized housing for low- and moderate-income
- same-sex couples, and stepped-up investigation of allegations of AIDS-
- related insurance bias. Committee co-chairwoman Renee White said if
- the recommendations are approved by the association, they will be given
- to the state legislature. After a three-year study, the
- recommendations were comprised by the commission, which includes
- lawyers, social workers, civil rights advocates, and insurance experts.
-
- "News in Brief: Greece" Advocate (12/15/92) No. 618, P. 32
- A number of Greek hemophiliacs died after contracting HIV through
- blood products imported from France in 1985, according to allegations
- that a Greek prosecutor began investigating Nov. 4. The next day,
- health minister George Sourlas disclosed that 14 state hospitals had
- ignored until mid-1987 specific orders to screen and sterilize blood
- and blood products. In September 1985, rules were introduced that
- instructed hospitals to screen all blood received after that date and
- destroy any blood products imported earlier. According to a court
- official, murder charges can be imposed if the investigation shows that
- anyone died of complications from AIDS as a result of negligence.
-
- "Surveillance for Occupationally Acquired HIV Infection--United States,
- 1981-1992" Journal of the American Medical Association (12/16/92) Vol.
- 268, No. 23, P. 3294
- Public health surveillance of HIV infection in the health-care
- setting provides a basis for developing measures to minimize the risk
- for occupational transmission of HIV to health-care workers, writes the
- Centers for Disease Control. Two CDC-supported national surveillance
- systems have compiled data on occupational transmission of HIV: one
- initiated in 1981 for AIDS cases and one initiated in 1991 for HIV
- infections acquired through occupational exposures. Persons reported
- from these two systems have been classified with documented or possible
- occupationally acquired HIV infection. The CDC received reports of 32
- health-care workers in the United States with documented occupationally
- acquired HIV infection and 69 with possible occupationally acquired HIV
- infection. Of those with documented occupationally acquired HIV
- infection, 27 (84 percent) had percutaneous exposure, four (13 percent)
- had mucocutaneous exposure, and one (3 percent) had both percutaneous
- and mucocutaneous exposures. A total of 30 were exposed to HIV-
- positive blood, one to concentrated infectious HIV, and one had a
- percutaneous exposure to an unspecified fluid from an unknown source
- patient. Among these workers, seven have developed AIDS. Among the 69
- health-care workers classified with possible occupationally acquired HIV
- infection, four (6 percent) had occupational exposures to blood of
- patients known to be infected or to research laboratory specimens known
- to contain infectious HIV. Among the remaining 65, none reported
- exposure to blood or body fluids known to be HIV-positive. Of these 69
- workers, 54 (78 percent) have developed AIDS.
-
- "Confidential HIV Testing and Condom Promotion in Africa" Journal of the
- American Medical Association (12/16/92) Vol. 268, No. 23, P. 3338
- (Allen, Susan et al.)
- Rates of condom use increased and rates of gonorrhea and HIV
- infection in urban Rwandan women decreased after a confidential HIV
- testing and counseling program was implemented, write Susan Allen et
- al. of the University of California--San Francisco. A study was
- conducted in 1988 among women attending an outpatient research clinic
- in Kigali, the capital of Rwanda. The study involved 1,458
- childbearing women, 32 percent of whom were HIV-positive, who were
- followed at 3- to 6-month intervals for 2 years. The study found that
- only 7 percent of the women reported ever using condoms before the
- intervention, but 22 percent reported condom use with good compliance a
- year later. The study also revealed that women who were infected with
- HIV were more inclined to adopt condom use than HIV-negative women.
- Independent predictors of condom use, both in HIV-positive and in HIV-
- negative women, included HIV testing and counseling of the male
- partner, having a nonmonogamous relationship, and believing condoms
- were not dangerous. HIV rates were reduced significantly from 4.1 to
- 1.8 per 100 person-years in women whose partners were tested and
- counseled. Also, the rate of gonorrhea decreased significantly (13 to
- 6 percent) among HIV-positive women, with the greatest decrease among
- condom users (16 to 4 percent). A total of 35 percent of women who
- knew that their steady male partners were nonmonogamous had asked these
- partners to limit their outside contacts in order to avoid AIDS.
- Interventions that encourage HIV testing and counseling for both
- members of a couple should be considered in other high-prevalence
- areas, the researchers conclude.
-
- "News in Brief: New York" Advocate (12/29/92) No. 619, P. 25
- The federal government's recently proposed revision of the AIDS
- surveillance definition is likely to boost the number of New York City
- residents who have the disease by 5,000 and nearly double the number of
- new cases that are currently reported per year, according to municipal
- AIDS program coordinator Ronald Johnson. He said on Nov. 13, "We are
- talking about an incredible if not frightening increase in caseloads."
- The new definition will entail a $250 million increase in municipal
- AIDS spending, he added. It is expected to take effect on Jan. 1 and
- will be the first time that people who are HIV-positive and suffer from
- pulmonary tuberculosis, cervical cancer, severely depressed immune
- systems, nonspecific bacterial pneumonia, or any of the 23 conditions in
- the current definition, are classified as having AIDS.
-