Friday, November 16, 2007

American Prospect Looks at What HIV/AIDS Policy Might Look Like In A Giuliani Administration

Since I love blogging infrequently, here is an article that follow's up on my last post about a month ago! The article from the The American Prospect examines what the U.S. HIV/AIDS policy would look like if Giuliani became the next president.

Giuliani's Awful Record on HIV/AIDS

Also worthwhile from the current issue of The American Prospect is the cover story on how comic books and graphic novels are taking on current issues in American Politics.

The Revolt Of The Comic Books

Thursday, October 18, 2007

Giuliani's Healthcare Advisor Says To Thailand: "Quit Thievin' Our Patents!!"

Okay, the headline is a lot more simplistic than what the post is really about. But I thought it was funny.

Anyhow, The Hill has an op-ed today from Sally C. Pipes, the president and CEO of the Pacific Research Institute, a research institute partially funded by the pharmaceutical industry. Oh, did I mention she's Rudy Giuliani's healthcare advisor? In the aforementioned op-ed, she admonishes Rep. Tom Allen (D-ME) and Sen. Sherrod Brown (D-OH) for sponsoring a resolution commending the government of Thailand for allowing for the manufacture of generic versions of branded anti-retrovirals.

Of course, the entire piece reads as thinly disguised partisan tripe and I have a real tough time taking it seriously given her affiliations. However, where is the counterpoint to this op-ed? Either The Hill is doing us a disservice or they're playing the good showman and keeping us waiting.

What do you think? Should we take this seriously and accept the usual argument of "stolen patents will destroy the pharmaceutical industry's innovation?" Or is this really a case of drops in a bucket considering how much pharmaceutical companies make from drugs sold in developed nations?

Tuesday, October 9, 2007

WHOA! BACK FROM HIATUS!!! With a new article to read!

I know, crazy right??

Anyway, the New York Times today has an article regarding the debate over the distribution of mosquito nets for the prevention of malaria in poor countries. The article touches on WHO's new malaria czar and his blunt declaration that the social marketing of these bednets is now over.

Distribution of Nets Splits Malaria Fighters [NYT] (Thanks Rachel!)

Also, I'm planning on posting more now, but the newslinks section is being scrapped, because who wants a blog of all links and no real content?

Tuesday, September 11, 2007

Blog Hiatus Again

To My Loyal Reader:

I'll be posting intermittently again as my daily schedule has gotten a lot busier again and I'm trying to figure out how to manage my time appropriately.

Back soon, hopefully.

Monday, September 10, 2007

(Back From Hiatus) Newslinks - September 10th, 2007

•China reports leap in new HIV/AIDS cases [Reuters]

•African Leaders To Meet To Discuss Ways To Fight HIV/AIDS, Improve Women's Health [Kaiser]

•China's Blood Supply Not Being Monitored Properly for HIV, Needs International Assistance, Report Says [Kaiser]

•Senate Passes Foreign Aid Bill That Increases Funds To Fight HIV/AIDS, Malaria, TB Worldwide [Kaiser]

•Vietnamese City To Launch Methadone Program To Reduce Spread of HIV Among IDUs [Kaiser]

•British Prime Minister Brown Announces Campaign Aimed at Improving Health Systems, Fighting Diseases, Better Coordinating Aid in Developing Countries [Kaiser]

Wednesday, August 29, 2007

Bloggering Break!

I will be out of town until next Wednesday. Regular updates will resume next Thursday.

Enjoy the 3-day weekend!

Monday, August 27, 2007

Newslinks - August 27th, 2007

•Fires Rage On Across Vast Swaths of Greece [WP] (Not global health related necessarily, but of personal interest and concern to me)

•Making TB services more affordable in Malawi [Eldis]

•Tanzanian Pharmaceutical Company Launches New ACT [Kaiser]

•Japan To Assign Counselors to Core Hospitals To Provide People Affected by HIV/AIDS With Psychological Support, Officials Say {Kaiser]

•Lack of coherent government support is hampering success of Community Health Insurance Schemes in Uganda [Eldis]

Friday, August 24, 2007

Funtastic Friday

Go enjoy the last days of summer instead of reading blogs!!

See you on Monday.

Thursday, August 23, 2007

Checking In With: WITHERED

(Checking In With is a featurette we do at Pastepunk.com, where I also write, and I decided to check in with the totally fantastic Atlanta band WITHERED)

Death is a very common theme for a great deal of metal bands, many of who take to it ludicrous extremes of either stupidity or hilarity. However, Atlanta's WITHERED took a far more serious look at death and dying on 2005's Memento Mori, an album of sweeping guitar melodies and doomy riffs and easily one of the best metal releases of the past few years. Since then, things in the WITHERED camp have remained relatively quiet, but we checked in with guitarist/vocalist Mike Thompson to see what they've been up to.

Pastepunk: What have you guys been up to during 2007?

Mike: Man, it's been a bit crazy for us. In fall of '06, we lost our bass player. A few months later, our drummer told us that he couldn't tour anymore so we had to basically put together a new rhythm section. In March '07, our friends Mike and Beau from a local Atlanta band told us they wanted to do it. They are both amazing musicians and I feel lucky to have them step up to the plate for us. There aren't many extreme metal musicians in Atlanta, much less very talented ones. We were faced with bringing someone in from out of town and trying to make that work. It was pretty bleak for a while. Anyway, we're up and running now and we're trying to finish writing the new record. We've got over 30 minutes of music so far and it should be finished soon. We also plan to include a cover of "Into Armageddon" by NECROPHOBIC on the album. It's a badass song and we're pretty excited about that too. We started touring again over the summer. We had some dates with MAYHEM lined up but Hellhammer hurt his arm and the dates were cancelled. We went out with SKELETONWITCH, who are amazing, for a couple of weeks. It was a good time. They're awesome dudes and a great band. We're gonna go out again in September with our friends ZOROASTER to help them promote for their new album. Hopefully, we'll enter the studio before the end of the year and get the new record finished.

Pastepunk: How do you think the new rhythm section has impacted your new material?

Mike: Wow, I think it's stronger than ever. Mike and Beau have done an amazing job of keeping the WITHERED "sound" in tact. They've also been able to put a new level of passion behind it and have really helped us take the next step writing the new album. I think the new material is more focused and has more direction behind it. We're very proud of the new stuff. It's a blast to play. We've been doing 3-4 new songs live since the July tour.

Pastepunk: Will your upcoming album will be thematically similar to Memento Mori, or will you be examining a different aspect of humanity this time around?

Mike: I think it will be thematically similar. We haven't quite gotten the dark & morose feeling out of our music. Don't know if we ever will. I think there will be somewhat of a nihilistic approach on this one in addition to pondering mortality. I think there will be a general overtone of disgust for humanity as a whole. We've been studying some existentialist and nihilistic ideals from a philosophical point of view. It's quite interesting to consider these perspectives and what the outlook on life would be from an existentialist perspective.

Pastepunk: What's in store for this fall and for 2008?

Mike: Well, we're touring this September with ZOROASTER and hope to wrap up writing and recording for the new record. We hope to plan the album release by early spring '08 and will likely tour as much as we can. Hopefully, a lot of folks will get to catch us on tour and at some festivals. They are always a lot of fun.

Pastepunk: What bands from your area, or even beyond, should we be looking out for?

Mike: Well, Mike and Beau have another project called WAITED. They're quite good. Real heavy trio; Mike plays baritone guitar, Beau's on drums, and our friend Dylan is the vocalist. It's kind of a PIG DESTROYER meets TOOL dynamic if that makes sense. Of course, ZOROASTER is great too. Super heavy, 70's tone, doom/rock trio. They've got 4 bands worth of gear! Also, our friends BATTLEMASTER, from Richmond, are great. Really crazy technical death/black metal. Their drummer, Alex, filled in for us on our UK tour in '05. He's one of the most incredible drummers I've ever known. The rest of the band keeps up very well too. Lots 'o shredding. SKELETONWITCH is awesome. They blew me away every night on tour. Really enjoyed those guys. Think I'll stop here before I get crazy and write a novel. Oh, also check out LUDICRA, BARONESS, NACHTMYSTIUM, and almost every French black metal band.

WITHERED photo courtesy of the band's Myspace page. Head over to their page to check out an untitled new song.

Newslinks - August 23rd, 2007

•Foreign Aid Groups Face Terror Screens [WP]

•Asia must step up HIV/AIDS fight, experts say [Reuters]

•U.N. Agencies To Launch Initiative To Expand HIV Prevention Programs Aimed at IDUs in Asia [Kaiser]

•Infectious Diseases Emerging, Spreading More Rapidly Worldwide, WHO Report Says [Kaiser]

•Results of Malaria Vaccine Trial Among Mozambican Children Expected By End of 2007, Researcher Says [Kaiser]

Wednesday, August 22, 2007

USAID Proposes Partner Vetting System

The following email came over the series of tubes from the Global Health Council:
Global Health Council Opposes Implementation of the Proposed Partner Vetting System at USAID

The U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) proposed a sweeping information-gathering and recordkeeping measure, the Partner Vetting System (PVS), to vet individuals, officers or other officials of nongovernmental organizations who apply for USAID contracts, grants, cooperative agreements, or other funding or who apply for registration with USAID as Private and Voluntary Organizations (PVOs).

The Partner Vetting System would require all organizations that apply for USAID contracts, grants and cooperative agreements to submit detailed information about each employee including full name, date and place of birth, government issued identification information, address, phone and fax numbers, country of origin and/or nationality, citizenship, gender and profession. The proposed measure was printed in the Federal Register on July 17. Notice, Privacy Act System of Records, Federal Register, Vol. 72, No. 136, July 17, 2007, Pages 39041-39044. View specific guidelines

The rule change was issued in an effort to improve processes for making sure that USAID funds are not being used to support activities or individuals "associated with terrorism." There is no evidence that USAID funds are supporting terrorist organizations or terrorist activities through NGOs.

The Council believes that the Partner Vetting System is overly burdensome for NGO partners, unnecessary, and compromises privacy rights and due process as envisioned. Please see the Council's Statement on PVS for sample language to include in your letter to the USAID Chief Privacy Officer. View statement

Please send your message opposing the Partner Vetting System as soon as possible. The deadline for comments is Aug. 27, 2007 - the same date PVS is scheduled to take effect.

Please address your message to:

Mr. Philip M. Heneghan
Chief Privacy Officer
United States Agency for International Development
1300 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW
Office 2.12-003
Washington, D.C. 20523-2120

E-mail: privacy@usaid.gov


So, will this truly be a "burdensome" system and a step further towards the US becoming an Orwellian dystopia. Or is the Council suffering from a bit of a jerky knee? Will this be used responsibly or will the government now unfairly deny grants to NGOs that do great work simply because the name of an employee might appear "suspect" to a government official? Or, as the Council posits in its statement, will NGO workers now be viewed as a US government agents and be at risk of terrorist attacks?

If the new privacy act is indeed as burdensome as the Council believes it will, many important programs could be at risk of shutting their doors. At a time when USAID could be seen as the most positive arm of US foreign policy, losing the trust of aid recipients by abandoning them when they are most in need is something the State Department and the nation as a whole can ill-afford.

What do you think? Leave comments below.

Newslinks - Wednesday, August 22nd, 2007

•Human trafficking helps spread HIV/AIDS in Asia: UN [Reuters]

POZ Examines How Stigma, Violence Fuel HIV/AIDS Epidemic in Jamaica [Kaiser]

JAMA Examines Global Efforts To Create 'Viable' Malaria Vaccine [Kaiser]

•Human Rights Watch Criticizes UNAIDS for Praising China's HIV/AIDS Efforts, Cites Harassment Against Advocates [Kaiser]

•HIV/AIDS Could 'Wipe Out' Lesotho, Official Says [Kaiser]

•WHO Guidelines Do Not Recommend Forgoing Subsidized ITNs in All Contexts, Letter to Editor Says [Kaiser]

•Japan Donates $1M to UNICEF for Malaria Prevention, Control Efforts Among Children in Ethiopia [Kaiser]

Tuesday, August 21, 2007

Album of the Day — August 21st, 2007


COLISEUM - No Salvation

Great things come from Kentucky. One of them being bourbon. The other being Louisville's COLISEUM. Think grimy guitars a la TRAGEDY and voicebox-in-the-gutter vocals desperately warning us about the miserable state of the nation and the world. If that's not enough to inspire you to educate yourself about development issues (see what I did there?!?!), I don't know what will...

Monday, August 20, 2007

(Extended!) Newslinks - August 20th, 2007

•Op-Ed: A New Home for DDT [NYT]

•Anti-AIDS Program To Fund Circumcision [WP]

•Sex now primary cause of China HIV spread: report [Reuters]

•Researchers Studying How Religious Groups Provide HIV/AIDS Support, Education [Kaiser]

•WHO Backs Free, Treated Mosquito Nets to Prevent Malaria [WP]

•The minister and the liver transplant - South Africa's AIDS row gets personal [Guardian]

•Six Companies Win USAID Contract To Support PEPFAR [Kaiser]

•NASTAD Releases New Report on AIDS Drug Assistance Programs [Kaiser]

•India Records Decrease in Number of Malaria Deaths, Health Minister Says [Kaiser]

Friday, August 17, 2007

Friday is For...Uh, Not Blogging

I'll save the newslinks for Monday, because, honestly, there are no major news developments at the moment.

However, come Monday, there will be newslinks and a spotlight on a great article from the Global Health Council's AIDSLink on the South African youth anti-AIDS organization loveLife.

In the meantime, have a great weekend and I'm going to sit back and enjoy the new BARONESS record. :-)

Thursday, August 16, 2007

Bear With Us...

It's a bit of a slow season, so hang in there while I get caught up with articles, etc for review. Posting only newslinks can get a bit impersonal, can't it?

Newslinks - August 16th, 2007

•U.N. Special Envoy for HIV/AIDS in Africa Mataka Urges SADC Members To Commit 15% of National Budgets to Health Care [Kaiser]

•Study Shows That Use of DDT for Malaria Control Is Effective, Editorial Says [Kaiser]

•'Real Drama' in Release of Medical Workers is Changing Libyan Regime, Opinion Piece Says [Kaiser]

•Authorities in China's Henan Province Ban HIV/AIDS Group From Hosting Conference To Discuss Efforts To Fight Disease [Kaiser]

•Peoples’ report on MDG: Bangladesh: information and communication technology [Eldis]

Wednesday, August 15, 2007

Newslinks (80% Kaiser Links Edition) - August 15th, 2007

•Rwanda Launches ICON Spraying Campaign for Malaria Control [Kaiser]

•Some Ugandans Refuse Indoor Pesticide Spraying for Malaria Control Because of Concerns Over DDT [Kaiser]

•HIV/AIDS Programs' Limited Time Spans, Other Issues Hinder Efforts To Curb Disease in Mozambique, Official Says [Kaiser]

•NGOs Host Activities To Raise Awareness of HIV/TB Coinfection in Indonesia [Kaiser]

•How sustainable is our latte?: an assessment of trends and standards in Fair-Trade from the perspective of a new truly sustainable people and planet-centred paradigm [Eldis]

Tuesday, August 14, 2007

Newlinks - August 14th, 2007

•Editorial: Firing an AIDS Fighter [NYT]

•Pediatric AIDS pill approved [Reuters]

•Women, water policy, and reform: global discourses and local realities in Zimbabwe [Eldis]

•Kaiser Family Foundation, CSIS Release Report on Donor Funding Commitments for Health in Low, Middle-Income Countries [Kaiser]

•Gendered citizenship in Sudan: competing perceptions of women's civil rights within the family laws among northern and southern elites in Khartoum [Eldis]

Monday, August 13, 2007

Album of the Day - August 13th, 2007


DARKEST HOUR - Deliver Us

What could I possibly say about the most recent album from DC's premiere metal band? Honestly not much that I haven't already said, so why mince words: this album is fantastic. From the cover art to the stunning conclusion of the title track, this album has is another fantastic addition to the band's already stellar catalogue.

Check out the band's Myspace — DARKEST HOUR

Newslinks - August 13th, 2007

•Five-part Ottowa Citizen series on malaria in Africa [Kaiser]

•Indian Medical Association Agrees to Public-Private Partnership To Fight TB [Kaiser]

•HIV/AIDS Group Calls on Indian Generic Drug Makers To Reduce Cost of Second-Line Antiretrovirals [Kaiser]

•Political complexities of humanitarian intervention in the Pakistan earthquake [Eldis]

•Global cause and effect: how the aid system is undermining the Millennium Development Goals [Kaiser]

Friday, August 10, 2007

(Late) Newslinks - August 10th, 2007

•S. Africa Fires Official Praised for Anti-AIDS Work [NYT]

•Experts in Senegal Concerned About Effect of Male Circumcision Studies on Sexual Behavior of MSM [Kaiser]

•Ugandan Medical School Receives $386,000 Grant To Establish Malaria Vaccine Trials, Ethics Center [Kaiser]

•Medical Workers Sentenced to Death in HIV Infection Case Were Tortured During Incarceration, Gaddafi's Son Says [Kaiser]

•GAO Report on Vanuatu: A Case of He Said/She Said and What Should Have Been Said [CGD]

Thursday, August 9, 2007

Sustainable seafood meets malaria control??


Reuters is reporting today about a study conducted in Kenya about a local fish that may be beneficial in preventing malaria. The Nile tilapia was shown to have nearly wiped out the entire mosquito population of three Kenyan ponds studied and the study was the first of its kind to test the potential to fight malaria in the field. However, the fish is considered a very nutritious meal and many of the fish ponds in the country are usually poorly maintained or lacking in fish.

Which brings to mind the current sustainable seafood movement. Oceans are becoming dangerously overfished and the damage that this ecosystem imbalance could cause to the world is immeasurable. However, allowing for the seafood population to grow and remain sustainable, many benefits will be seen, including, for example, malaria control. If the Kenyan ponds are cleaned and maintained, and a Nile tilapia population is sustained, it ought to provide a great example of non-chemical and non-phamaceutical malaria prevention.

Hopefully, more studies and reports on the Nile tilapia's malaria prevention potential will be published, because this could be a very innovative and very beneficial method of prevention.

For more on sustainable seafood, check out EarthEcho International.

Newslinks - August 9th, 2007

China Daily Examines HIV Testing Strategies Among High-Risk Groups [Kaiser]

•Palestinian Doctor Imprisoned for Allegedly Intentionally Infecting Libyan Children With HIV To File U.N. Human Rights Complaint [Kaiser]

•Malaria Control Conference Opens in Nigeria [Kaiser]

•Niger's Religious Leaders Form Alliance To Prevent Spread of HIV [Kaiser]

•New Drugs, Vaccines Targeting Both Active, Latent TB Needed To Effectively Combat Disease Worldwide, Study Says [Kaiser]

Wednesday, August 8, 2007

Hump Day Hiatus

Hi Reader(s)!

Going to take a small blogging break for today to fiddle with the Pipes and read up on some backlogged articles. DC is slow in the summer anyway and this heat is brutal...

Stay cool!

Tuesday, August 7, 2007

Newslinks - August 7th, 2007

•U.N. sees health crisis risk from South Asia floods [Reuters]

•New AIDS Drug Is Approved [NYT]

•Rep. Lee Introduces Legislation To Repeal Ban on Immigration of HIV-Positive People to U.S. [Kaiser]

•TB Control Measures in Pakistan Should Be Increased, Health Officials Say [Kaiser]

•French Candidate for IMF Head Would Reform Selection System [CGD]

•A New Entrant in Developing Country Health Systems? [CGD]

Monday, August 6, 2007

Album of the Day - August 6th, 2007


TORCHE - In Return EP

Wow. Simply wow.

Florida's TORCHE have returned after too long with the UNBELIEVEABLY heavy In Return EP on Robotic Empire. This EP, with its incredibly elaborate packaging and art courtesy of BARONESS' John Baizley, takes us from sweltering tarpits to the majesty of "Olympus Mons."

If the fans were allowed to pick songs for the soundtrack to the upcoming Watchmen film, this EP has Dr. Manhattan written all over it.

Check out the band's Myspace page — TORCHE

Newslinks - August 6th, 2007

•Hollywood producers to make film about HIV medics [Reuters]

•Indian Court Rejects Novartis' Challenge to Country's Patent Law [Kaiser]

•UNDP Calls on Chinese Media, Private Companies To Increase Efforts Aimed at Fighting HIV/AIDS Discrimination [Kaiser]

•Millenium Development Goals or Most Distracting Gimmicks? [Eldis]

•Just security: an alternative foreign policy framework [Eldis]

Friday, August 3, 2007

Newslinks - August 3rd, 2007

•World Bank Approves $10M Grant To Support Afghanistan's Efforts To Fight HIV/AIDS [Kaiser]

•Campaign Against Cross-Generational Sex Launched in Uganda To Fight Spread of HIV Among Girls, Women [Kaiser]

•One dose of vitamin D boosts TB immunity [Reuters]

•Strait-laced Chechens admit AIDS is a problem [Reuters]

•Poor Case Management Fueling Spread of TB in Malaysia, Health Official Says [Kaiser]

Thursday, August 2, 2007

Album of the Day - August 2nd, 2007


DOOMRIDERS VS. BORIS - Long Hair And Tights 2XLP Live Split

Not too long ago, Japanese label Daymare recordings released Long Hair & Tights, a split 2xLP live album between Boston stoner rock/sorta-biker band DOOMRIDERS (featuring Nate from CONVERGE) and Japanese droners/rockers BORIS. Featuring full live sets from both bands and package artwork designed by Fangsanalsatan in homage to the art for JUDAS PRIEST's Screaming for Vengeance, this rollicking, noisy affair is a must-have for any fan of heavy rock. It is a limited pressing, and is only available from the Hydra Head store at this point (I believe Deathwish has sold out of their stock)

Check out the bands at their respective internets pages — BORIS & DOOMRIDERS

Newslinks - August 2nd, 2007

•Indian Government Launches Campaign To Curb Mother-to-Child HIV Transmissions [Kaiser]

•TB vaccine shows promise [Reuters]

•Cambodia, Thailand Launch Two-Year Initiative To Fight Malaria Along Border [Kaiser]

•Michael Gerson Op-Ed: Bipartisan Shortsightedness on MCC Cuts [CGD]

•S.Africa HIV/AIDS rate falls on behavior change: minister [Reuters]

Wednesday, August 1, 2007

Amazing Video for KILLSWITCH ENGAGE Cover of DIO's "Holy Diver"

Though KILLSWITCH ENGAGE's fantastic cover of the 80s cheeseball metal classic "Holy Diver" by DIO came out last year, KSE have finally graced us with an amazing video for the song. Set in some generic medieval fantasy locale, the band themselves play a variety of roles in the video, but the best, of course, is guitarist Adam D as the sleeping princess. It is clearly a role he MUST have volunteered for upon initial discussion (KSE fans know Adam D has an eccentric sense of humor) and his finest moment comes when his wig at one point flips around to reveal his massive sideburns...

Witness the glory for yourselves right here:

Holy Diver

Newslinks - August 1st, 2007

•Sex Slaves Returning Home Raise AIDS Risks, Study Says [NYT]

•Scientist Gets $15 Million Grant To Develop Potential AIDS Vaccine [WP]

•House Foreign Affairs Committee Approves Global Poverty Measure [Kaiser]

•U.S. House Foreign Affairs Committee Approves Global TB Control Bill [Kaiser]

•Malaria Costs Nigeria About $1B Annually, Health Minister Says [Kaiser]

Tuesday, July 31, 2007

Newslinks - July 31st, 2007

•House Foreign Affairs Committee To Consider Global Health Measures [Kaiser]

•Rep. Waxman Releases Drafts of Global Health Report Reportedly Blocked by Bush Administration Official [Kaiser]

•China Bans Advocates From Holding Meeting on Rights of People Living With HIV/AIDS, Organizer Says [Kaiser]

•Draft Reflects Tensions At HHS [WP]

Sunday Times Examines Development of Malaria Treatment System Artimist [Kaiser]

•House Passes Farm Bill, Thumbs Its Nose at Poorest Trading Partners and WTO [CGD]

Monday, July 30, 2007

Global Health Policy Steel Cage Match: The U.S. Surgeon General vs. the Department of Health & Human Services Office of Global Health Affairs

The Washington Post ran a story on the front page of Sunday's paper about a Bush political appointee blocking a report by then-Surgeon General Richard H. Carmona that called on Americans to help tackle global health problems. The report, entitled "Call to Action on Global Health," was blocked because it did not "promote the administration's policy accomplishments" according to the article. The political appointee in question is William R. Steiger, the director of the Department of Health and Human Services Office of Global Health Affairs. Mr. Steiger, according to the article, is a "a specialist in education and a scholar of Latin American history whose family has long ties to President Bush and Vice President Cheney" and is "without any background or expertise in medicine or public health."

The report touches on many of the issues in global health and how America could be working towards improving health worldwide. More importantly, however, is that the report examined how global health problems are linked to violence and social ills and also how these public health issues impact America's security, a topic which is a core focus of Bush administration policy. However, the administration's discomfort with some aspects of the report led to each side fighting tooth and nail over this report, with the surgeon general and medical experts fighting to have it released, while the administration, and specifically Steiger, fought to keep it under wraps claiming that "sloppy work, poor analysis, and a lack of scientfic rigor" delayed the release of the report. Steiger also said in a statement that the report addressing global challenges to health ought to "at least let Americans know what their generosity is already doing in helping to solve those challenges."

While the report addressed health topics that are a priority in the Bush administration (i.e. HIV/AIDS and malaria), it also called for more action on such issues as the international tobacco treaty and including global health as an element of US foreign policy. These latter two matters are considered quite politically sensitive, contributing to the administration's unease with the report. Furthermore, the article notes that Steiger was more concerned with making the Office a political arm rather than an office operating with a clear public health focus. According to Richard Walling, a former career official in the global health office, Steiger always operated with his "his political hat on" and that "[w]hat he was looking for, and in general what he was always looking for, was, 'How do we promote the policies and the programs of the administration?'"

Though the Bush administration has indeed provided a great deal of funding for certain global health issues, the selectivity towards certain global health issues that administration officials are displaying is of concern. As the draft of the report noted, certain diseases and the social ills that accompany them were once limited to remote parts of the world, but in the era of globalization, they can easily spread to the most developed of nations. The reasons for the blocking of the report are specious at best and it should be pointed out that improving global health could have a positive impact on the administration's goal of "securing the homeland." Furthermore, the improvement of global health abroad will result in healthier populations, healthier workforces, and most importantly, healthier economic partners for the United States. According to an Economist article from July 5th, the private sector is already taking steps to improve global health because of the costs of an unhealthy workforce. Large local and multinational firms are promoting anti-AIDS and anti-malaria programs for their workforces in Africa and Asia, for example, and other private sector efforts promote sustainability in the countries they work in. Certainly, some aspect of this approach towards improving global health must appeal to the Bush administration.

Fortunately, with the publicity this story from the Washington Post is receiving, the message of the report is getting out there. But, like almost anything in Washington, it is not without controversy.

Chain of Strength's First Major Props!

Courtesy of social networking/blog site Buzznet:
Hot New Blog Alert! For those interested in music and global health (simultaneously, of course)

Check it out in context here.

Newslinks - July 30th, 2007

•Bush Aide Blocked Report; Global Health Draft In 2006 Rejected for Not Being Political [WP]

•China Orders Hotels, Other Venues To Provide Condoms, Education Material in Effort To Fight Spread of HIV [Kaiser]

•WHO To Advocate for ITN Price Reduction [Kaiser]

•TB Vaccine Trial Begins in South Africa [Kaiser]

•Is there equality in inequality? Scope and limits of affirmative actions [Eldis]

•Overcoming one of the greatest environmental challenges of our times: re-thinking policies to cope with desertification [Eldis]

•Impact of trade liberalization on agriculture in the Near East and North Africa [Eldis]

•Quiet. Libya Has an AIDS Problem. [NYT]

•More money than sense (July 5th, 2007) [The Economist]

Friday, July 27, 2007

Newslinks - July 27, 2007

Apologies for the delay of the newslinks today. Some administrative affairs got the best of your blogger for the better part of the day.

•Libya asks Arab League to cut Bulgaria ties: report [Reuters]

•U.S. Foreign Assistance Triumvirate Confirms Bolder Steps Needed; Fore Confirmation Uncertain [CGD]

•Unlicensed Drug Importers Selling Antiretrovirals in Zimbabwe, Medicines Control Authority Says [Kaiser]

•Indian Businesses Would Gain From Participating in Early Interventions To Prevent HIV, World Bank Report Says [Kaiser]

•Africa's Great Lakes Region Ministers Propose Joint Initiative To Address HIV/AIDS Among Member Nations [Kaiser]

•Former U.S. President Clinton Launches Subsidized ACT Program in Tanzania [Kaiser]

•Number of Malaria Cases in Afghanistan Likely Will Increase in 2007, Health Officials Say [Kaiser]

•Lack of DDT Contributing to Rise in Malaria in Some Parts of Africa, Editorial Says [Kaiser]

•WHO Panel Meets To Discuss Drug-Resistant TB Diagnostics [Kaiser]

•People With TB Should Be More Involved in Treatment Decisions, Study Says [Kaiser]

•Making aid accountable and effective: the challenge for the Third High Level Forum on aid effectiveness [Eldis]

•Remittances during crises: implications for humanitarian response [Eldis]

Thursday, July 26, 2007

All Aboard the Red Ribbon Express

In case you missed it in the newslinks earlier, the Indian Ministry of Health and Family Welfare is in the final planning stages for a seven-coach train that will travel throughout the country to some 60,000 rural villages to raise awareness of HIV/AIDS among youth. The Red Ribbon Express will be equipped with medical equipment, facilities for counseling, examination and treatment, rest rooms, a kitchen, and an auditorium. The train plans to stop at 180 stations throughout the country for the next year, stopping at each station for a few days at a time to head into the rural areas to educate residents about the disease, as well as providing examination and treatment.

While it remains to be seen what impact the Red Ribbon Express will have, this is a very interesting method of tackling the HIV/AIDS problem in rural areas on such a large scale. The issue of access to treatment and care has always been a major focal point in the developing world and the idea of going to the patients rather than having them come to the clinic is one that will, hopefully, gain traction.

Link: Indian Ministry Launches Nationwide Train Trip To Raise HIV/AIDS Awareness Among Youth in Rural Villages [Kaiser]

Album of the Day - July 26th, 2007


JUSTICE -

House music meets rock n'roll bombast and attitude in this debut album from French electro-house duo JUSTICE. I think it is rare to find in dance music a record that will make dance non-stop and also think "Good Lord, these are some mean riffs."

Check out the band at their official Myspace page — JUSTICE

Newslinks - July 26, 2007

•Libya protests over pardons for HIV medics [Reuters]

•Clinical Data Show Pfizer's Antiretroviral Maraviroc Reduces HIV Viral Loads Among Treatment-Naive People, Company Says [Kaiser]

•More People in Lebanon at Risk of HIV Despite Country's Prevention Campaign, Health Official Says [Kaiser]

•Indian Ministry Launches Nationwide Train Trip To Raise HIV/AIDS Awareness Among Youth in Rural Villages [Kaiser]

•World Briefing | Australia: AIDS Spreading Faster Than Treatment [NYT]

•HIV positive women and drug and alcohol use [Eldis]

•Integration between sexual and reproductive health and HIV and AIDS and Malaria: opportunities and strategic options for the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB and Malaria [Eldis]

•Antiretroviral therapy in resource-poor settings: decreasing barriers to access and promoting adherence [Eldis]

Wednesday, July 25, 2007

Administrative Notice - Yahoo! Pipes is 95% Ready To Go!

First of all, to any visitors from the Global Health Fellows Program networking event, greetings! Thank you for visiting my humble site and I look forward to hearing your thoughts and ideas.

But, more importantly, I have finally gotten a good RSS aggregator going thanks to Yahoo's Pipes application, which I had mentioned before. There are still a number of tweaks to be given to the feed generator here and there so that it will be getting the greatest number of useful and interesting links possible. But, the Newslinks will return tommorrow, new and improved, thanks to Pipes!

Cheers!

As if you needed another reason to love The Onion

The Center for Global Development posted an article from The Onion last month which looked at President Bush's request for PEPFAR's budget to be raised to $30 billion when it comes up for reauthorization. The Onion envisioned the following breakdown of the funds:
•$10 billion – Programs to get people off AIDS and back to work

•$30 million – Equipping future Black Hawks with crates of pamphlets and condoms, so next time won't be a total loss

•$1.5 billion – Installing particularly vicious anti-AIDS dictator in Uganda

•$17 million – Global campaign to promote dry humping

•$1,137.62 – AIDS-vaccine research

•$8.2 billion – Guns to shoot AIDS with

•$15 billion – Faith-based initiatives

•$.41 – Strongly worded letter to AIDS

•$14.80 – Nameplate for AIDS czar
According to the CGD, The Onion actually overestimated how much of PEPFAR's budget would be going to AIDS vaccine research by $1,137.62. That's right: zero dollars going towards AIDS vaccine research. Furthermore they note that "a recent recommendation from the outgoing Director of Foreign Assistance would reportedly cut USAID support for the International AIDS Vaccine Initiative entirely - down from $29m in FY07 - as well as for many other critical research efforts to develop vaccines, drugs and microbicides for developing country diseases."

Looks like "The Onion" has taken on a double meaning here because I want to laugh and cry at the same time...

Link: USG Funding for AIDS Research is No Laughing Matter [CGD]

Better Know Your (Music) History: Where Does The Title For This Blog Come From?

I'm sure my one reader probably asked that at upon stumbling across this site when looking for something more important *cough*stupid youtube videos*cough. But for those of you who are legitimately curious, I drew inspiration for the title from the late 80s/early 90s straight-edge hardcore band CHAIN OF STRENGTH.

While I appreciate hardcore, I don't follow the scene as avidly as my friend Jordan, who has educated many a time on some of the great bands in that scene. I should also point out I am not straight-edge, but I respect some of the values and beliefs that straight-edge embodies, particularly the emphasis on strength through unity and personal strength. I feel that these beliefs should be reflected in this blog and that it will, hopefully, inspire my readership.

But why Chain of Strength? The question should be "why not?" The name of the band carries a certain power and ideal behind it that I believe will be reflected in these pages over time and it is my hope that I do the name justice.

In the meantime, check out the band's official Myspace page — CHAIN OF STRENGTH

Tuesday, July 24, 2007

Awesome Website Alert! - Eldis

Courtesy of my friend Christina, thanks to her time spent at the University of Sussex, comes this great website — Eldis.org. Eldis is a website that is geared towards "sharing the best in development policy, practice and research" and is a part of the knowledge services from the Institute of Development Studies.

The site is packed with information and, most notably, a number of RSS feeds. So, look for stories from Eldis to start popping up in the daily newslinks.

Quick Technical Update

Apologies for the limited updates today, but I've been busy with some administrative matters on the home front and, more related to the blog, have been working on getting a more comprehensive source of development news for the blog. I've been working with the fantastic Yahoo! Pipes web application, which is a very powerful aggregating tool and for those of you who are interested in creating a personal RSS feed for yourself or your blog, I highly recommend you check it out.

Hopefully, I'll have the aggregator up and running tommorrow to get a more comprehensive newslinks section up and running.

Newslinks - July 24th, 2007

•HIV Medics Freed After EU-Libya Deal Struck; Move Seen As Another Step by Qaddafi Towards Normalizing Relations With West [Guardian, WP]

•Sens. Obama, Mendendez Probe AID Pick's Diversity Record (From June 7th, 2007) [WP]

•US Is Seen in Iraq Until At Least '09 [NYT]

•TB Tests Show Promise, But Flaws Limit Progress [NYT]

•Article Examines U.S. Policy Requiring Groups That Receive HIV/AIDS Funding To Condemn Commercial Sex Work [Kaiser]

•Biggest Challenge in Fight Against HIV/AIDS Is Shortage of Health Workers in Developing Countries, World Bank Official Says [Kaiser]

• Male Circumcision, New Antiretrovirals, Genetic Engineering Most Promising HIV Prevention, Treatment Methods, Conference Delegates Say [Kaiser]

Monday, July 23, 2007

Listen to Music! - July 23rd, 2007

Some links to songs for you guys to check out:

BARONESS - The Birthing - From the upcoming record Red Album

HIGH ON FIRE - Rumors of War - From the upcoming record Death Is This Communion

COLISEUM - No Benefit and The Fate Of Men - From the upcoming record No Salvation

JUSTICE - D.A.N.C.E. and Waters Of Nazareth - From the record

"Why Do They Hate Us?" - A Look At The Legacy Of US Foreign Policy In Our Current Geopolitical Climate

Wow, how is that for a wonky headline?

Nevertheless, The Washington Post had an interesting article in yesterday's edition written by novelist Mohsin Hamid. Entitled "Why Do They Hate Us?", the article examined why it appears that the Muslim world hates America. Hamid contends that one of the primary reasons is America's foreign policy legacy in the Muslim world, but he also believes that America doesn't have to inspire such virulent hatred. Hamid believes that Americans should educate themselves from a young age about their country's foreign policy history and to hold their government accountable for their actions abroad and to ensure that the United States' foreign policy reflects the TRUE values of its citizens.

But, rather than do disservice to the article, I'll end my paraphrasing and allow you to read the article and form your own thoughts.

However, before you run away to read the article, there was something that really jumped out at me at the beginning of the article. When Hamid was discussing the United States' foreign policy legacy as a reason for anti-Americanism abroad, he made the following point:

These policies are unknown to most Americans. They form only minor footnotes in U.S. history. But they are the chapter titles of the histories of other countries, where they have had enormous consequences.


Disclosure: I am a first-generation Greek-American and my parents have done a pretty great job of educating me about Greek history, both ancient and modern. And it is for that reason that the quote above really struck me. My parents grew up in one of the most unstable periods of Greek history. Both of them were born during the German occupation of Greece and they lived through the Greek Civil War, the second reign of the House of Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Glücksburg (say that 3 times fast), and then a US-backed junta.

The junta is considered a particularly dark period for Greece, but also for Cyprus, because it is due to their intervention in Cypriot political matters that the island was eventually invaded by Turkey. The junta sponsored a coup against the then-president Archbishop Makarios III, who was a vocal proponent of Cypriot independence. However, the actions of the Greek junta led the Turkish government to believe that their Turkish-Cypriot countrymen were in danger now and they launched the invasion of the island.

To bring this back to the Hamid article, the Raw Story recently published an article that confirms
former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger's support of Turkey and their invasion of the island. Like Hamid stated, this is probably a minor footnote in the US' history of foreign affairs, but for Greece and Cyprus, this is a huge part of the modern history of both of these nations. I remember being in Greece during the 30th anniversary of the invasion of the island, and newspapers were filled with retrospectives and one particular newspaper had a long article detailing Kissinger's role in the invasion of the island.

So, clearly, I think many Americans, including my friends, would be surprised to hear about events like these, and Hamid makes an excellent point about how the education on US foreign policy should begin at a young age.

How does this relate to international development, though? Well, I think it has an even greater impact than one might think. USAID and US foreign aid as a whole is supposed to be the "benevolent" arm of US foreign policy and it should reflect the values of the taxpayer and not a small group of ideologues. The opinions in Hamid's article could certainly be tied back to the article regarding the criticisms of US foreign aid that the Post ran on Sunday and it remains to be seen if Congress and the taxpayers will demand accountability from the current administration and future ones.

The Washington Post Examines The Current US Foreign Aid System

As I mentioned in brief over the weekend, the Washington Post currently has a story that examines the criticism the United States' foreign aid system has recently received from Congress and foreign aid groups. The main criticism is that rather than improving the system and implementing transparent processes, that the old "opaque" system has been replaced by another. So, what has been happening is that a small group of individuals have decided how the money is distributed, to which countries (i.e. the "priority" countries), and who controls the coffers.

After Andrew Natsios resigned as Administrator of the US Agency for International Development (USAID) in December 2005, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice announced that USAID would be absorbed more directly under her authority and a newly created Director of Foreign Assistance. Who was the choice for that newly minted position? Ambassador Randall L. Tobias, former CEO of Eli Lilly and Co., former head of the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) and major proponent of abstinence programming as a method of AIDS prevention.

Wait, why is that name familiar? Oh right.

So, clearly, the administration had its abstinence priorities straight!

Well, ironies aside, the article notes some more disconcerting things about the current foreign aid system. Of the $23 billion budgeted for foreign aid, the majority goes to a handful of "key countries," while the remaining $3 billion is left for 120 countries to fight over. Also mentioned is how India will be losing 35% of its aid in the coming year because foreign aid officials believe the country's fast-growing economy allows it to be a considered an "emerging" economy, justifying the reduction in aid. Sure, India has a fast-growing economy, but will that solve all its problems?

The article so mentions in addition to the corporate-style indicators implemented by Tobias and Rice, that:

Long-term development aid often directed by Congress was cut by almost $500 million, or 31 percent, in fiscal year 2008, while "economic support" accounts focused on short-term geopolitical aims and subject to greater administration control were boosted $865 million, or 35 percent.


This particular move was considered by some congressional officials to be nothing more than a power grab by the State Department. Additionally, the use of corporate-esque standards to measure objectives such as "peace and security" or "governing justly and democratically" for aid programs "shows how reducing poverty was not front and center in their minds" according to Center for Global Development senior fellow Steve Radelet. Furthermore, opinions from professionals who work in and with knowledge of the field were "all but ignored" and that the emphasis is falling on a more-centralized, Washington-based decision-making process.

So, what is this article foreshadowing? Most likely a debate over the administration's approach to foreign aid during tommorrow's confirmation hearings of Henrietta H. Fore to become the next Director of Foreign Assistance.

If I may interject some opinion, the current approach to foreign assistance appears to resemble very much the administration's approach to, well...everything. Everything is done with little to no transparency and requests for transparency are more often than not, shrugged off. When such a great amount of your tax dollars are being designated to foreign aid, you have every right to be able to know where it is going and if it is being used effectively and for a good purpose.

Newslinks - July 23rd, 2007

•In Botswana, Step to Cut AIDS Proves a Formula for Disaster [WP]

•Low-Key Recall of AIDS Drug Hits World’s Poor [NYT]

•World Must Act To Achieve Commitments To Provide Universal Access to HIV/AIDS Treatment, Conference Delegates Say [Kaiser]

•European Advisory Panel Recommends Approval of Pfizer's Antiretroviral Maraviroc, Company Says [Kaiser]

•Officials Press on Libya AIDS Case [NYT/AP]

Saturday, July 21, 2007

In Short: U.S. Foreign Aid Criticized

The Washington Post is currently running a story about how the Hill and other foreign aid groups have criticized the State Department's handling of foreign aid. I'll discuss the article more at length come Monday, but in the meantime, take a look at the article and feel free to leave comments below.

Hill, Aid Groups: One Opaque System Replaced Another [WP]

Friday, July 20, 2007

Album of the Day - July 20th, 2007


MUNICIPAL WASTE - The Art Of Partying

While everyone has been crowing about how the 80s are back, the latest effort from MUNICIPAL WASTE not only cements that, but also vomits on your shoes. IRON MAIDEN aficionados take note of the fantastic solo in the song "Beer Pressure."

Newslinks - July 20th, 2007

•Nelson Mandela Launches The Elders, Group Devoted To Tackling Global Crises [Guardian]

Inter Press Service Examines HIV + Malaria Coinfection [Kaiser]

•Russia Pledges $20M to World Bank's Malaria Program [Kaiser]

•George Comstock, Leading TB Expert, Dies at 92 [Kaiser]

•A Washington Post article examines the Millenium Challenge [WP]

•Former President Clinton to Launch Hospital Project In Malawi, Promote HIV/AIDS Program In Zambia [Kaiser]

Wednesday, July 18, 2007

Hello.

So...

Some of you may know me. Others, I'm meeting for the first time. In any case, welcome to the Chain of Strength blog, a new blogging venture through which I hope to bring a more youth-oriented look at the world of international development. The beauty of the world is in its diversity, whether it is through its cultures, languages, music, literature, and so on. Of course, one of my main passions is music and that will be playing a major role in this new internet adventure. However, I also have my Master's in Public Health from the George Washington University's School of Public Health & Health Services, and it was there that my interest in the world of international development was born.

I should note right up top that, no, this blog has nothing to do with the straight-edge hardcore band from Southern California. I merely believed that there was a certain power and urgency to the band's name and thought it was applicable here. But, hardcore fans, fear not — some of the beliefs present in hxc will turn up from time to time in this blog. But, for all other readers, you'll note the link to my Last.fm charts to your right and I hope you will take the time to check out some of the bands that I have been enjoying. You might find that what they believe in isn't really much different from what you believe in either.

On that note (no pun intended), I thank you for taking the time to come by this small corner of the "interweb" and I hope you'll continue to visit as the site grows and matures.

Until next time, ciao!