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| "Akhbar Misr" Highlights Circumstances of Women Living with HIV/AIDS |
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The reportage held with HIV/AIDS Regional Programme in the Arab States (HARPAS) Regional Coordinator Dr. Khadija Moalla and Programme Advisor Dr. Ihab Al-Kharat tackled circumstances of women living with AIDS in the Arab world and means of woman's protectection of herself against infection…See more details on the following link |




















Hadeer Hassan, Ahmed Balah: ”I used to see him sitting among his peers in an open circle, taking drugs while sharing one syringe. I advised him a lot, fearing for him, but he often beat me refusing any advice. I used to ask him to visit the doctor, but he kept refusing until the symptoms started. Then the doctor asked me to do the tests and the surprise came that I was HIV positive.
Ahmed Balah – 3 August 2010 The HIV/AIDS research chair of the King Abdulaziz University, Jedda is currently collaborating with the Centre for the AIDS Programme of Research in South Africa (CAPRISA) of the University of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa in a research study on HIV/AIDS epidemiology among vulnerable groups.
Dr.Ghazi Bin Abdullatif Jamjoum wrote: Each year the world looks to the International AIDS Conference for news about new discoveries to help curb the HIV/AIDS epidemic which has so far killed 25 million and infected more than 70 million, of which 33 million are now living with HIV/AIDS. Despite the great and continuous progress in developing AIDS treatments, preventive measures are still very limited.
Vienna- 30 July 2010: A group of scientists have announced that a vaginal cream could reduce the risk of HIV transmission by half, according to a study conducted in South Africa.The study has been carried out by the Centre for the AIDS Programme of Research in South Africa (CAPRISA). The results were announced in the 18th International AIDS Conference, held in Vienna from 18 till 23 July 2010, and published in the American Science magazine.



"Akhbar Misr" website narrates the story of a woman living with HIV/AIDS communicated to her through her husband who administers drug through injection. The reportage demonstrates that infection may have taken place as a result of domestic violence that may be practiced by the husband infected with the virus towards his wife, which limits her ability to negotiate with him and protect herself against communication of the disease to her.