Saving
Women’s Lives – A Growing Focus on
Women
and HIV/AIDS
Recent years have witnessed an acceleration in the number of
HIV/AIDS cases involving women. Where
women once accounted for less than 40 percent of all cases, by the end of 2000,
women as a percentage of all HIV/AIDS infected adults reached 47
percent. Accordingly, there is
increasingly attention to the special gender dimensions of the HIV/AIDS crisis
– which include everything from women’s low social status in many nations to
the importance of basic education and continued research on women-controlled methods
of guarding against sexually transmitted infections like HIV.
At the Global
Health Council’s Annual Conference:
http://www.globalhealth.org/view_top.php3?id=92
(May 29-June
1), 1500 health and development professionals will focus on “Health Women:
Healthy World – Challenges for the Future.”
According to the Council, “women and their families are
deeply affected by the realities of globalization, by access to health and educational
services driven by macro-economic policies, and by empowerment and rights
issues driven by political forces. The effects of natural disasters, wars and
other forms of violence can have a profound effect. Growing commercial threats
to health, such as tobacco use, call for our attention as women and children
become targets of marketing of deadly products.”
At the conference, participants will explore the forces shaping these issues
around the world. In addition, they
will measure progress and compare experiences in implementing the major world
agreements reached at the International Conference on Population and
Development in Cairo in 1994 and the Fourth World Conference on Women in
Beijing in 1995.