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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 28th
Annual Conference (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.”
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