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Top : 2007 : 2007_02_26

Governors seek aid for child health care

Mon, 26 Feb 2007 11:54:11 GMT
By ROBERT TANNER, AP National Writer
WASHINGTON - Governors from both parties are opposing http://www.cms.hhs.gov/home/schip.asp
National Governors Association: http://www.nga.org

Panel Military health system needs help

Mon, 26 Feb 2007 06:57:52 GMT
By SETH BORENSTEIN, AP Science Writer
WASHINGTON - Many http://www.apa.org/releases/MilitaryDeploymen
tTaskForceReport.pdf
The http://www.ha.osd.mil/DHB/mhtf/default.cfm
The U.S. Veterans Administration:
http://www.va.gov/
Veterans for America:
http://www.veteransforamerica.org/

Mass. would offer cancer vaccine free

Mon, 26 Feb 2007 01:54:39 GMT

BOSTON - Every Massachusetts girl between the ages of 9 and 18 would be eligible to receive a free vaccine against the virus that causes cervical cancer under Gov. Deval Patrick's budget proposal.
However, the shots would not be mandatory, an aide to the governor said.

The budget plan, to be unveiled Tuesday, also includes funding for a new rotavirus vaccine for infants and an improved bacterial meningitis vaccine for children. The cost to the state for all three would be $24.8 million.

"These investments not only save lives but also reduce treatment costs in the future," Patrick said in a statement Sunday.

Supporters of the vaccine against human papillomavirus, or HPV, say it will help fight a cancer that kills 3,700 American women each year. But proposals to require the vaccine have inflamed some conservatives who say it could encourage sexual activity in preteens and teens.

Texas is the only state to make the vaccine mandatory for schoolgirls. Gov Rick Perry bypassed the legislature with an executive order, but lawmakers are considering overriding it. A group of families also has sued.

A bill that would make the vaccine mandatory in Virginia is under consideration by the governor.


Mo. group donates nets to fight malaria

Sun, 25 Feb 2007 09:54:46 GMT
By BETSY TAYLOR, Associated Press Writer
ST. LOUIS - During Andy Sherman's two-year Peace Corps service in Thioke Thian, Senegal, 9-year-old Salimatou helped him navigate village life and learn the language, telling him words in Pulaar as he'd point at objects. But after returning from a stint working in another village, Sherman learned the girl had died of malaria. And after completing his service in 2002, he learned two women who had been like mothers to him also died of the mosquito-borne disease.
Their deaths, and the deaths of more than 1 million people each year from malaria, prompted Sherman and fellow Saint Louis University medical student Jesse Matthews to start NetLife, a nonprofit organization that distributes mosquito nets in Africa. It's motto: Saving lives one net at a time.

"Previously when we bought them, they were $8.50 a net. That's way more than a typical villager in Senegal could afford," said Sherman, 29. The group, which now buys nets for $5 each, distributes them for free in remote villages where people don't have them.

The concept sounds almost too straightforward. But the docs-in-training say the nets work, and health agencies agree.

The malaria parasite, which is primarily transmitted by the female anopheles mosquito, is the leading cause of death in African children under age 5, Sherman and Matthews said. Tens of millions of people suffer chronically from the debilitating disease, even though it is preventable and curable.

Because the mosquitoes that cause malaria are largely active from dusk to dawn, insecticide-treated mosquito nets hung over beds are an inexpensive way to help prevent malaria, the two said.

Sherman and Matthews buy the nets, pay their own costs and take them to rural Senegal in west Africa, biking between villages in sometimes oppressive heat to distribute them.

"It's beautiful, green, semi-mountainous. The earth is a red color. Where we bike is relatively untouched," said Matthews, 27, of Poulsbo, Wash.

The two last went to Africa in 2005 to distribute 600 nets, and plan to return again this summer for 10 weeks to deliver 1,000 more. Before dropping off the nets, they scout out a village, talk to the chief and make a list of women in the community. Then, they return later with the nets, involve villagers in a skit explaining the specifics on how to use them and keep them from getting damaged. They then distribute them to the women, who make sure their families are protected by the net when they sleep.

The reaction in the African villages is immediate: "Every time we give out the nets, there's a big dance party and we cannot stop it," Sherman said.

Nationally, other efforts to distribute mosquito nets have gotten some high-profile support.

In December, First Lady http://www.netlifeafrica.org
Netting Nations: http://www.nettingnations.org
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