School of Public Health Roundtable Series
The International AIDS Crisis
2003-2004 Topic: Global Health Issues - Minnesota Perspectives
This event took place on February 20, 2004.
Video
To watch the streaming video, your computer needs:
- Internet connection with a 56K modem or faster.
- Sound card with speakers so you can hear the audio portion of the course.
- Real Player Software - if it isn't installed on your computer, download it for free at http://real.com.
Click
here for video of the February 20, 2004 Roundtable
If you experience technical difficulties during the video streaming, please
call Amy Scheller at 612-624-3962 between 8 am and 4:30 pm CST.
Program Agenda
HIV/AIDS is the greatest international health challenge of our
time. HIV has already infected more than 60 million people around the world.
AIDS has killed 25 million people around the world -- surpassing tuberculosis
and malaria as the leading infectious cause of death worldwide.
Left unchecked, South and Southeast Asia, and, perhaps, China
will follow the disastrous course of sub-Saharan Africa. Rapid increases in
HIV infection are also occurring in Eastern Europe and Central Asia. AIDS represents
a serious threat in Latin America and the Carribean.
- Welcome and Introductions - Mark P. Becker, Dean
- Project PHIDISA - Make Better/Prolong Lives - The Use of Antiretroviral
Therapy in South Africa - James Neaton
- The importance of conducting large, randomized clinical trials
in diverse international settings
- Approaches to training and infrastructure building in South Africa
for Project PHIDISA
- Goals for the first two protocols, PHIDISA I and PHIDISA II
- International Research in HIV/AIDS - Panel Discussion moderated
by James Hart
- Ethical, legal, and human rights challenges in international HIV/AIDS
research
- Stigma, cultural differences and health behaviors affecting health
seeking behaviors
- Attitudes, beliefs and taboos surrounding sex, the status of women
and children and the source and etiology of HIV
- Building capacity and support for operational and health services
research to facilitate translation to clinical practice
- Panel Members:
- Keith Henry
- Alan Lifson
- Frank Rhame
- Questions and Discussion
- Adjourn
Guest Speakers
James D. Neaton, PhD, Professor, Biostatistics, University
of Minnesota School of Public Health, provides leadership for three large
international clinical trials in HIV/AIDS research. He also works as an advisor
for Project PHIDISA which means "make better/prolong lives" in
three of South Africa's home languages. Project PHIDISA was launched on World
AIDS Day (December 1, 2003). It is a partnership project led by the South
African National Defense Force (SANDF) and includes the Medical Research
Council, Medicine Control Council, National Institutes of Health, the U.S.
Department of Defense, and several academic institutions, including the University
of Minnesota.
Keith Henry, Director, HIV Clinical Research, Hennepin
County Medical Center.
Alan Lifson, Professor of Medicine and Epidemiology,
University of Minnesota.
Frank Rhame, Research Director, Clinic 42, Abbott-Northwestern
Hospital, and Adjunct Associate Professor of Epidemiology and Adjunct
Professor of Medicine, University of Minnesota.
Handouts