HIV funding is being spent inefficiently claims Dr Roger England.
Extract:
"He claims that when measured by disability adjusted life years (DALYs) lost, HIV only contributes to five per cent of the burden of disease in low and middle income countries.
The charity chairman adds that although Aids causes 2.8 million deaths every year worldwide, this is still less than deaths attributable to diabetes.
He says that funding could be better spent on bed nets, immunisation programmes or family planning, claiming that HIV interventions are "not cost effective enough to justify this disproportionate spending"."
As I have written previously, if you have HIV+ status and are unable to obtain antiretroviral drugs, or would prefer not to take these drugs anyway, you may like to minimise your salt/sodium intake. - A 40 year old man who is HIV+, and whom I have been advising for many years, chose not to take these drugs although he had/has been offered them at no cost. Instead, he has optimised his diet and he takes vitamin and mineral supplements, and he has eliminated all avoidable salt/sodium from his food intake. - He has been HIV+ since the early or mid-80s and he is still alive...(o: - and still working (part time now) and still quite well most of the time. And of course since he doesn't take the drugs, he doesn't suffer from the adverse side-effects of the drugs...(o:
And read about a good way to reduce your risk of developing type 2 Diabetes here: http://aboutsalt.blogspot.com/2006/08/have-you-noticed-that-diabetes-is.html
Friday, 16 February 2007
Writing in the BMJ, Roger England, chairman of the Grenada based Health Systems Workshop, says that HIV funding is being spent inefficiently.
Labels:
Aids,
antiretroviral drugs,
Diabetes,
eat less salt
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