Rwanda will use international aid to offer free
generic drugs by year's end to 90,000 people infected with HIV and
AIDS, a 20-fold increase in the number of people receiving treatment,
an official said Thursday. The program would treat some 100,000 people
by 2007 and would be funded by $85 million in aid from the U.S.
government, the World Bank and the Geneva-based Global Fund to Fight
AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria. "For us to attain this, we plan to
start purchasing generic drugs because they are a lot more cheaper than
the branded ones," said Louis Munyakazi, head of the Treatment Research
for AIDS Center. About 13 percent of Rwanda's 8.5 million people - or
about 1.1 million people - are infected with HIV, the virus that causes
AIDS. [more]
Free drugs cut Taiwan's HIV rate in half .A
government policy since 1997 of giving HIV patients free anti-HIV drugs
has cut the national transmission rate by 53 percent, Taiwanese
researchers said. [more]
Article originally appeared on (http://brownwatch.com/).
See website for complete article licensing information.