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Puerto Vallarta News NetworkHealth & Beauty | November 2007 

Proportion of Mexican Women With Aids Doubles From 5 Years Ago
email this pageprint this pageemail usSun Yunlong - Xinhua
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AIDS 2008

Planning for the XVII International AIDS Conference (AIDS 2008) is now underway, with planning committee’s organized along the three main programme areas: the Scientific Programme, the Community Programme and the Leadership Programme.

The AIDS 2008 Conference Coordinating Committee, comprised of individuals representing people living with HIV, scientists, public health experts, community leaders and other stakeholders from around the world, have begun to identify key issues to be explored in Mexico City.

The International AIDS Conference is the world’s largest and most important HIV/AIDS forum, with over 20,000 participants, including 2,500 journalists. As the first International AIDS Conference to be held in Latin America, AIDS 2008 is expected to increase awareness of the disease and its impact throughout the region.

Visit the Conference website
Mexico City - Women now account for more than 20 percent of Mexico's 112,000 AIDS cases, a huge jump from the 10 percent five years ago, local radio reported on this week.

The figure was "both sensitive and serious," said the country's Secretary of Health Jose Angel Cordoba Villalobos.

He said the infection trend suggested that HIV-carriers who do not know their status are spreading the disease to their partners.

More than half of the 112,000 known AIDS patient died of the disease, Cordova said, noting the remainder were being treated with anti-retroviral medicines.

Mexican health experts feared that there were a great many undetected AIDS cases, and the figure may be as many as 200,00, he said.

Also on Wednesday, mayor of Mexico City Marcelo Ebrard said an international conference on AIDS, scheduled for Aug. 3-8, 2008 in the Mexican capital, is expected to draw some 25,000 experts from 127 nations

Mexico City was chosen as the venue at the last session of the conference held in Canada's Toronto in 2005. Mexico is the first Latin American nation to hold such an event.

At the conference "we will be able to discuss the public policy measures we need to carry out and the decisions we need to make to protect our population," Ebrard said.



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