07 setembro 2006

Catástrofe em África

The Numbers:
Botswana life expectancy at birth, 1990: 64 years
Botswana life expectancy at birth, 2004: 35 years
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What They Mean:
Sixteen years ago, the life expectancy of a Botswana child was 64. The figure was typical for middle-income countries, and one of the longest in Africa. In 2004, a half-generation later, the AIDS epidemic has cut Botswana life expectancy to 35. This is the lowest figure in the world (based on World Bank figures for 208 countries and territories) and barely half the 59-year average for low-income countries. Similar figures appear throughout southern Africa -- The World Bank tables show life expectancy in Lesotho falling from 57 to 36 since 1990; in South Africa from 62 to 45, in Namibia from 62 to 47, in Swaziland from 57 to 42, and in Zimbabwe from 59 to 37.
Comparison puts the calamity in perspective. Life expectancy has risen almost everywhere in the world over the last 15 years, even during periods of conflict. Since 1990, the Bank's figures show Burma, though suffering from continuous low-level civil war and military government turmoil, gaining seven years; Sudan four; and Sierra Leone one. Even in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (formerly Zaire), where continuous warfare is said to have killed as many as 4 million people between 1998 and 2004, life expectancy fell by only two years.
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Further Reading:
Twenty-five years later -- The Centers for Disease Control identified AIDS as a specific disease in June of 1981. By the end of 2005, according to the World Health Organization, the disease had killed 25 million people. Forty million people are now HIV-positive; nearly 5 million became infected in 2005; 3 million die of AIDS-related diseases annually. Africa remains the world's hardest-hit region, home to 26 million HIV-positive men, women, and children and suffering 2.4 million of last year's 3.1 million AIDS-related deaths. WHO's December 2005 report grimly suggests that the southern African epidemic has not yet begun to recede, and may be intensifying in Mozambique and Angola.
More hopeful signs -- WHO finds 1.3 million people in low-income countries receiving anti-retroviral treatments as of December 2005, triple the 400,000 figure in 2003. Its report cites Thailand as especially successful in raising treatment rates; Latin America as having the highest treatment rate overall; and Malawi and Zambia as having rapidly increased the number of treatment sites. In addition, national education campaigns, changes in sexual behavior and more frequent condom use have reduced HIV incidence in a number of countries. Examples include: Cambodia, Uganda, Thailand, Kenya, and perhaps recently Haiti.
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The World Health Organization's HIV/AIDS page, including a comprehensive report from December 2005 and individual country pages, is at: http://www.who.int/hiv/en/
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HIV/AIDS coverage from South Africa's Independent: http://www.iolhivaids.co.za/
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Homepage for "Talk Back Botswana," a national weekly AIDS-focused television show sponsored by the Botswana Education Ministry: http://www.tcbtalkback.net/
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The Centers for Disease Control Global AIDS Program page:
http://www.cdc.gov/nchstp/od/gap/default.htm
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The Kaiser Family Foundation HIV/AIDS page: http://www.kff.org/hivaids/aidsat25.cfm
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The World Bank on HIV treatment in Thailand:
http://web.worldbank.org/WBSITE/EXTERNAL/COUNTRIES/EASTASIAPACIFICEXT/
EXTEAPREGTOPHEANUT/EXTEAPREGTOPHIVAIDS/0,,contentMDK:21024879~pagePK:34004173~piPK:34003707~theSitePK:503157,00.html
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The Clinton Foundation's HIV/AIDS project:
http://www.clintonfoundation.org/cf-pgm-hs-ai-countries11.htm
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Fonte: Progressive Policy Institute

Comments:
Não é que eu me importe de ler inglês... com alguma dificuldade é verdade, não tenho "treinado" muito... mas um blogue português, penso que escrito por um português, porque não é escrito em português? Será que os Bloguistas de outros países, escreverão os seus artigos em Português?
Ou será que "certos" Blogues só podem ser lidos por intelectuais ou similares?

É que, sinceramente, custa-me ver o "meu" Português tão desprezado...se calhar por quem o deveria enaltecer...

Não leve a mal... isto é só um desabafo, ora vamos lá colocar este texto no "tradutor" para não me enganar em questão nenhuma e achar que, uma coisa é outra... ;)

Um abraço ;)
 
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