HIV-AIDS

Apo-TriAvir, the generic HIV/AIDS drug. A Canadian law making its manufacture and export easier is likely finished in parliament. Image courtesy Apotex.

How the Conservatives killed a law providing cheap AIDS drugs to Africa

In March, Canada came improbably close to establishing a system to deliver drugs cheaply and quickly to poorer countries. In a vote of 172 to 111, the House of Commons passed Bill C-393, which would have streamlined Canada’s Access to Medicine Regime, a program to provide low-cost generic drugs to the global south. It wasn’t… More »

Tamara Dawit. Photo by Nabil Shash.

This45: Natalie Samson on educator Tamara Dawit

Tamara Dawit co-founded the 411 Initiative for Change, a non-profit public education program, to tackle the problem of community disengagement among young Canadians. Through 411 she produces and tours 90-minute school assemblies on social issues such as human rights, HIV/AIDS, and girls’ empowerment to encourage students to learn about and get active in their communities…. More »

Illustration by Dave Donald.

Progressive Detective: Could I be criminally charged for transmitting HIV?

Dear Progressive Detective: I’m an HIV-positive Canadian, and I’ve heard troubling stories about people being criminally charged for transmitting the disease. Can that happen here? What are my rights and responsibilities under Canadian law? Under Canadian law, criminal charges can be laid if an individual does not disclose his or her HIV-positive status prior to… More »

G8 Leaders meet in L'Aquila, Italy, July 8, 2009.

What Stephen Harper should really do to support global maternal health

Prime Minister Stephen Harper announced on January 26 that he was going to use Canada’s Group of Eight presidency to push for an annual G8 summit agenda focused on women’s and children’s health. Former UN Special Envoy for HIV/AIDS in Africa Stephen Lewis said it best when he called the announcement an act of “chutzpah.”… More »

Syringe

Supervised injection sites work—but the feds still don't get it

Despite ongoing efforts by the Harper government to shut it down, Insite, the Vancouver-based supervised-injection site, is alive and thriving, with over 10,000 registered users and around 800 daily visitors. To Mark Townsend, an Insite representative, it’s a success story that needs to be replicated in other cities. Established in 2003 as a scientific research… More »

Dr. Jane Philpott, founder of the Give a Day to World AIDS campaign. Photo by Molly Crealock.

"Give a Day" campaign makes fighting HIV-AIDS all in a day's work

One day’s salary might not mean much to most of us, but to Dr. Jane Philpott, founder of the Give a Day to World AIDS campaign, it might be just enough to save a life. In 2004, the Markham, Ont.-based family physician gave a presentation to her colleagues about the AIDS epidemic. Knowing that she… More »

Legalize Hate Speech

Strengthen democracy and fight bigotry head-on — Legalize Hate Speech

The fight for free speech is not the work of angels. Academics love Evelyn Hall’s famous saying, “I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it.” In the age of promiscuous online speech, the sentiment of two university protestors seems more apt: “Free speech for all…. More »

How the University of Manitoba revolutionized HIV care in Nairobi

Blended into the colourful storefronts of Nairobi’s River Road area is the Sex Workers Outreach Program (SWOP), a discreet but accessible clinic offering HIV and STD testing and treatment to the estimated 7,000 prostitutes who work in the central business sector of Kenya’s capital city. While the clinic was created in close consultation with Nairobi’s… More »