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1st appeared 26 April 2000

New Program to Focus on Global HIV/AIDS Issues

The UCSF AIDS Research Institute is launching a new international program that will focus on stemming the worldwide HIV/AIDS epidemic.

Directed by Nancy Padian, MPH, PhD, a UCSF AIDS researcher widely recognized for major epidemiological studies on HIV and STD transmission, the new UCSF ARI International Research Program will collaborate with health professionals throughout the UC system and in various global sites on projects related to AIDS policy, education, prevention, testing, and treatment.

The goal, according to Padian, is to build partnerships with researchers and institutions in other countries to work collaboratively to prevent HIV/AIDS.

The program will be strongly linked to the Institute for Global Health -- of UCSF and UC Berkeley and directed by Richard Feachem, PhD, DSc -- bringing together the already extensive international efforts in the Schools of Medicine, Nursing, Pharmacy, and Dentistry at UCSF, and the School of Public Health and other schools at UC Berkeley. The new program also will work to develop stronger ties with the San Francisco Department of Public Health on global HIV/AIDS issues.

"San Francisco is a unique place, as we all know," said Thomas J. Coates, PhD, executive director of the UCSF ARI. "It is one place in the world where science, public health, communities, politics, and policies have worked together to provide innovation in science, prevention, and care. We want to work with investigators and public health officials in other parts of the world to help stem the tide of HIV/AIDS in those countries."

Over the past 15 years, UCSF researchers have been involved in a number of AIDS-related activities in Africa, India, Brazil, Peru, Mexico, China, and Vietnam, and the international program will focus on strengthening and building on these efforts, Padian said.

"We will look at AIDS as a global issue, but our emphasis will be on practical applications in developing countries because the populations in these areas have been devastated by HIV in disproportionate numbers to the rest of the world. This is not research for research’s sake but a program that is committed to working with our international colleagues, who are experts in their own cultures, on how to stem the HIV/AIDS epidemic in their homelands," she added.

Coates emphasized that the ARI continues its commitment to HIV/AIDS issues at the local, regional, and national levels and that formalizing the international efforts of UCSF AIDS specialists strengthens all ARI programs. "The foundation of the San Francisco program is that we attend to all aspects of HIV/AIDS, from very basic molecular biology to policy sciences and application," he said.

A member of the UCSF faculty since 1988, Padian has developed and directed a number of research studies on HIV and STDs in high-risk populations. She was one of the first investigators to study heterosexual transmission of HIV in the US, and findings from her research projects in the 1980s and ‘90s are considered major works in this field.

In the past few years, Padian has collaborated with the University of Zimbabwe on several projects related to female reproductive health and HIV/STD prevention.

Links:

UCSF AIDS Research Institute

Source: Corinna Kaarlela, News Services


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