In The News

Pennapa Hongthong June 18, 2003
After more than 30 years of research, Thai scientist Yongyuth Yuthavong has discovered the enzyme that allows malaria to become resistant to drugs. Colleagues from the UK collaborated with him on his research, and Western aid organizations funded it at various stages. However, transnational support is not matched by big business interest. Large pharmaceutical companies – the primary purveyors...
Joseph Kahn June 18, 2003
The negative effects that unbridled capitalism can have on workers in developing countries raises the hackles of many anti-globalization activists. This New York Times article describes the severe diseases that Chinese workers have developed in the dreadful working environment of a jewelry company that exports its products to the US and other Western countries. To the author, these scenes...
June 17, 2003
Since it was first diagnosed three months ago, the SARS virus has spread worldwide, infecting 10,000 people and threatening tourism in Canada and East Asia. Now, new cases of the disease appear to be on the wane, due to unprecedented cooperation between public health officials as well as draconian containment measures in some affected areas. Still, it remains to be seen how affected economies...
Roger Pedersen June 16, 2003
Like the internationally known Human Genome Project, stem cell research is attracting much attention because of the promises it holds for medical science. In this article, biomedical expert, Roger Pedersen, argues that in order to ensure success for this project, more international collaboration is needed. He emphasizes the importance of transparent communication and exchange, among researchers...
Jamila Qadir June 16, 2003
Plans for “Dubai Aid City” were recently released by the United Arab Emirates with promises that the complex will have both humanitarian and economic benefits. The site, described as a “fully integrated aid distribution and storage facility,” will provide a strategic location for international aid organizations to dispense aid to surrounding locales, including Iraq, Eastern Europe, the Indian...
Lawrence K. Altman June 13, 2003
Small African rodents have infected over 60 Americans with Monkeypox, a virus endemic in West and Central Africa. The international and domestic trade web brought the animals from Ghana to the United States, where they were then sold to distributors. Along the way, the rodents infected prairie dogs that in turn transmitted the virus to humans, creating the first Monkeypox outbreak in American...
Donald G. McNell, Jr. June 13, 2003
How HIV first infected humans is still a puzzle waiting to be solved. Past research has traced the virus to chimps in Africa. Now scientists have gone a step further – they have found that chimps got the virus from two kinds of monkeys that they ate, each with its own virus. The HIV virus may have been a combination of these two viruses. It is still unknown when and how the viruses merged,...