Archive for December, 2006
Season’s Greetings (again)
An interesting post on NHS Blog Doctor comparing US and UK modes of healthcare. Just thought I should post it here since it is well worth a read!
Add comment December 23, 2006
Season’s Greetings!
Studentmedic wishes all his readers a great time this festive season and will be back with more in the new year (although, I might put a few odd bits up on here during the holiday!). Apologies for the lack of posting in the past few weeks.
===================
Just for today, an article from the BBC: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/lancashire/6205223.stm
Deary deary me, I never realized that homophobic views were not only legal to hold but also rewarded with compensation. I would be very surprised if the material they wanted to put up, far from containing the love that Jesus is said to have preached, was full of hate.
==============
Well worth having a look at on The Daily (Maybe) is the 11th Carnival of Socialism on Sex and Gender.
studentmedic
Add comment December 23, 2006
I’m back! Still having issues with the laptop but have access to other computers now
I found an excellent edition of the studentBMJ waiting for me when I got home – a special edition on HIV/AIDS. It is all available online for free for anyone interested: www.studentbmj.com.
==================
Interesting things happening in Palestine at the moment. I still find it interesting how willing Blair is to say that Hamas should be stopped, despite the fact that is has been democratically chosen by the Palestinian people. Nothing surprising: we hardly have a history of supporting democracy…
==================
Great LondonFed seasonal social on Saturday: enjoyed by all I think. Well done to Noel and Neil for organizing it. I think I should be thinking up something suitable to put up for Christmas. Suggestions please!
1 comment December 18, 2006
Back in action, briefly – probably no more posts until Monday as my computer has decided to die on me…
I thought I’d comment, albeit briefly, about the abandoning of the Saudi investigation. It is a sad day when investigations into bribery or serious fraud are abandoned in the interests of undisclosed ‘national security’ issues. It does highlight, however, Britain’s unusual relationship with Saudi Arabia – something that is quite worrying.
Wish I could write more, but I only get a brief appointment on these library computers…
studentmedic
2 comments December 15, 2006
Down for a few days…
No blogging for a few days it seems… my laptop has finally popped it so it looks like I will be unable to blog.
Just a couple of brief comments:
Pinochet is dead. The only sad thing is that he was never prosecuted in the end – death seems almost too easy, I wanted to see his dirty laundry washed publicly, officially. Interesting post from Greenman about it here, especially with regards to how dictatorships aren’t really just about one man (with further links to other comment & analysis). His obituary in the Guardian is also worth having a look at.
A quick thought on David Milliband’s idea for a carbon ‘credit card’. I have some major issues with this: for a start, it seems a bit big brothery to expect everyone to have a card which will detail all purchases made. Also, I think the poor will end up being encouraged to sell their quota while the rich will be able to afford to buy extra – would this increase inequality?
Anyway, I must stop now – my limited allowance of internet time in this busy library is running around. I should mention: libraries are really amazing places (I think this every time I enter one…).
studentmedic
Add comment December 11, 2006
Post…
Post offices are vital to local communities and local economies. It is absolutely vital that the size of the network is not reduced if sustainable communities are to be developed. Allowing private companies to break the Royal Mail’s monopoly is a big part of the reason for its current problem (that and the lack of funding from the government). Rather than being phased out, they should perhaps be expanded into true hubs for local activity in both urban and rural areas. Better links should be made with other aspects of local communities so that post-offices can strengthen areas even more – paving the way for better economic localization and less dependence on services further away from people’s homes. One suggestion made was to liaise with primary care trusts… perhaps one’s GP, phamacist and post-office could all be in one centre.
People from low-income backgrounds use post offices the most, since some of the services provided are unavailable elsewhere but are available under one roof in the post office. Why should these services be moved to other providers who will inevitably be less efficient and more costly? Already, 4000 post offices have been closed down since 1999. For many people, the post-office card account is one of the only forms of account they can open – to loose it, makes life much more difficult for vulnerable people.
A report by the New Economics Foundation found that:
- Each post office contributes £310,000 to the local economy each year, of which £120,000 is direct spending on local goods and services.
- Following post office closures in Manchester, 60% of local businesses saw significant impacts to their business or the local area.
This is not just an issue about rural post offices – in fact, for every single rural post office that has been closed, eight have closed in urban areas.
This illustrates just how important this issue is.
1 comment December 9, 2006
And Finally
Last post in my quartet about HIV/AIDS.
Only in the past year have the number of heterosexual people infected with HIV in the UK outnumbered the number of gay people with HIV. Among gay men, HIV is extremelly prevalent. I believe that the reasons for this are manyfold and list a few below (not in any particular order).
1) Lack of education – the sex education curriculum in the UK does not even provide the space for sex education for gay people. It is not taught about and not spoken about. Services for gay youth arevery limited. I think the outcome of this is very similar to the outcome of abstinence only programmes in the USA: since young people will have sex if they are not equipped with knowledge about how to do it safely, when they do have sex they are more likely to do it unsafely. It is absoultely vital that some information about gay sexual health is put onto the curriculum so that every child is given the knowledge.
2) HIV as a chronic disease? - more recently, many people think of HIV as a chronic disease and ‘not a big deal’. It is great news that HIV can be treated so well, and as a result life expectancy is now much increased. Of course, it still remains a big deal. Even with the best anti-retrovirals, the side effects are huge and eventually many people’s infections become resistant to drugs. Anti-retrovirals do not reach the fluid surrounding the brain, which is part of the reason HIV cannot be eradicated from the body and also one of the reasons HIV is so problematic in the nervous system – people often die, despite all their treatment, from neurological problems: the treatment cannot prevent these.
3) The Closet – my guess is that being in the closet, feeling (due to society’s prejudices) that their sexuality is something to hide, makes many gay men ‘act out’ when they do engage in relationships.
There are many many more possible reasons for the prevalence rates but that was just a selection of thoughts.
As a final thought, I must thoroughly recommend Joseph O’Reilly’s Blog to anyone interested about this topic. It’s a well kept blog at number 51 in the top 100 Green Bloggers. A very enjoyable read on this and other Green politics issues!
1 comment December 7, 2006
(Red)?
I wonder about the (Red) initiative. While anything which increases awareness is great, I wonder if it is almost making it too simple. The soultions to the epidemic are political and such schemes encourage people to think that it is as simple as buying the right phone…
I suppose what annoys me the most is the spate of ”My Life, My Card” adverts turning up everywhere for Amex’s (Red) card. They almost seem to equate the life of a Masai with the credit card owned by Gisele (who is standing looking very carefree in the advert). So we can get a credit card from one of the least ethical banks, consume as much as we want with it and live with a clear conscience because 1p in every pound is going to pay for antiretrovirals? I think it is much more complicated than that!
3 comments December 3, 2006
Why so difficult?
If used carefully, antiretrovirals (ARVs) can prevent people from developing AIDS (severe immune deficiency caused by the HIV), yet millions are dying due to AIDS in the developing world. Only 5% of those who need ARVs in the developing world are receiving it.The reasons for this seem quite clear.
Poverty makes it difficult to access diagnostic services for many reasons. Not only is the cost of travel to a clinic prohibitive for many, the thought of being diagnosed with a chronic illness requiring long-term therapy scares many away from such services. Only be ensuring that necessary support and counselling is provided after diagnosis can more people be encouraged to use diagnostic services. In low and middle income countries, only 10% of those who require access to diagnostic services have access.
The cost of treatment is prohibitive for many. It is not just the cost of anti-retroviral drugs; even where these are provided free of charge, patients often have difficulties accessing clinics and dispensaries on a regular basis – it is often struggle enough to make ends meet without additional burdens. A recent article (registration required) in The Lancet found that providing weekly home delivery of free anti-retrovirals significantly improved patients’ adherence to treatment, which was reflected in lower viral loads. Lower viral loads mean healthier patients and lower risk of transmission. Lower risk of transmission helps avoid further increase in the size of the epidemic. It is not only important to ensure that drugs are given, but also that patients are monitored to reduce risk of resistance to ARVs developing – something that can be devestating for the patient and for those who contract HIV from him.
In addition, Intellectual Property laws make antiretroviral therapy unaffordable for most and make programmes offering free therapy much more expensive to implement. Despite a WTO waiver for drugs made before 1995 allowing the bypassing of patent regulations during epidemics like this one, many second-line medications are not available in generic forms, having been patented after 1995. It is a sign of a sick society when laws and regulation are not changed despite being the cause of hundreds of thousands of deaths. It shows that money is given more credence than anything else. This is another example of exchange values meaning more than use values in our economic system.
A good article to read about barriers to receiving ARVs here in the student BMJ, although of course the 3 by 5 initiative was never realized – despite the fact that the goal of 3 million people to be treated by 2005 was ridiculously modest!
Add comment December 2, 2006
World AIDS Day
A truly international tragedy. One which creates orphans, kills the young and ruins lives.

The tragedy that is the global HIV/AIDS epidemic is one which can only be solved by a multi-factorial strategy. It is a problem which brings together so many campaigns for reform – all must be successful in order to combat the disease. As I commented in my post “ABC?”, poverty and lack of education are central to the issue. In addition, reform of Intellectual Property law is needed – perhaps as part of a comprehensive rethink of the meaning of property and a fresh look at the ills of capitalism.
As well as the global perspective, on a more individual level the epidemic highlights human rights issues. The right of women to refuse sex and to be protected from rape by the state; the right to easy to access and comprehensive medical care; the right of gay men to not fear discrimination and to a decent sex education for children regardless of gender and sexuality.
All of this makes the HIV/AIDS epidemic an extremely political one. The solutions are societal and require a massive rethink of how society is run.
Over the next few days, I’ll be posting a series of thoughts on various aspects of this epidemic, I hope they’ll be interesting and worthwhile.
Add comment December 1, 2006






