Guest guest Posted September 21, 2001 Report Share Posted September 21, 2001 Corporates step into anti-AIDS campaign The Pioneer 20 September 2001, New Delhi - Yoga Rangatia TRUCK TYRES being sold with a booklet on HIV/AIDS prevention, manual of a jeep coming with information on HIV/AIDS and even petrol pumps offering condomvending machines. Indian corporates have taken the plunge in the anti-HIV/AIDS campaign. Indian industries will now look at how their marketing channel, which in many cases network remote areas of the country, can be used for spreading information on HIV/AIDS and supply of condoms. To start with, Indian business houses have come together to set up a trust to fight HIV/AIDS. A Confederation of Indian Industry (CII)-led delegation called on Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee on Tuesday to extend support and draw out modalities of industry support to the cause. The Prime Minister formally launched the Indian Business Trust (IBT) to Fight HIV/AIDS. The CII has taken the lead among industry associations and set up an AIDS trust for the campaign. The main focus will be prevention of the HIV infection and making an active public-private partnership in the area. Among the prominent industrialists who have supported the initiative are Mr. Ratan Tata, Mr. Sanjiv Goenka, Mr. Rahul Bajaj, Mr. Jamshed Godrej, Mr. K K Birla, Mr. Narayan Murthy, Mr. Anu Agha among others. " We are initially focussing on home-based care for persons with HIV/AIDS. We will also initiate a micro-credit society exclusively for HIV positive people since they face difficulties in availing loan from banks, " elaborates Sandhya Bhalla of CII. The business delegation is understood to have assured the Prime Minister that funding will not be a constraint for the task they have taken up. They have adopted the motto: Prevention and Care, making it our business in the interest of our society and the next generation. On the occasion, Union Health Minister C P Thakur stressed on the need for intensive monitoring of the Aids control programme and setting up screening and counselling centres at district-level. The Union Health Minister informed the Prime Minister that National AIDS Control Organisation (NACO) is launching an intensive monitoring of AIDS control programme. Officers of NACO will fang out to various districts, especially the ones worst-hit by the HIV/AIDS, and get first hand information on the implementation of the programme. Surveillance of actual HIV cases has proved to be a problem due to lack of infrastructure. Whatever numbers the Government is handing out is based on a sentinel survey from a few surveillance centres across the country. __________________________________ Dr. Jagdish Harsh François-Xavier Bagnoud (INDIA) E-mail: jamworld@... ____________________________________ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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