Saving 'Magdalen'
An Australian obstetrician who may have discovered the means
to prevent the spread of the AIDS virus cannot raise the $US100,000
necessary to conduct the field trials and is applying to the
UK government instead.

Professor Roger Short, of the University of Melbourne at the
Royal Women's Hospital, is to collaborate with Nigeria's Professor
Solomon Sagay, Dean of Medicine and Professor of Obstetrics
at the Univeristy of Jos in a trial involving female sex workers
in Nigeria who are already using lemon juice in an apparently
successful strategy to prevent both pregnancy and AIDS. The
Catholic AIDS ministry, the Australian AIDS Fund Inc, is showcasing
the programme, the
Mary Magdalen Project, on its website at www.aids.net.au.
It has been a long time supporter of the work of Professor
Short.
"We have already proved the effectiveness of lemon juice
as a microbicide in the laboratory," Professor Short told
Online Catholics. "However to test the theory in humans
raised enormous ethical issues and until now we have been unable
to progress.
"But two years ago, a Nigerian student, Godwin Imade, told
me that Nigerian female sex workers swore by lemon juice and
that they had already submitted a paper to show that 81% of
women studied had not contracted the virus."
This was the opportunity scientists had been waiting for: to
be called the Magdalen Project, the study would involve some
400 female sex workers who would be followed for about a year.
"Some of these girls will be HIV positive already and some
are not," Professor Short said. "They do not know
themselves. But if we can follow them all for a year we will
be able to determine finally whether lemon juice kills the AIDS
virus."
"With 16,000 new infections every single day - which mostly
affect women and children - time is critical," Professor
Short, said.
But neither the Australian Government, represented by Ausaid,
nor the Catholic Church, will fund the study. Ausaid funds Australian
consultants in Africa, but not field trials. Undeterred, Professor
Short is approaching the Department of International Development
in the UK after Tony Blair announced an increase in funding
for HIV prevention in the developing world.
Australian Aids Fund Inc's Brian Haill is critical of the attitude
of the Australian establishment toward Professor Short. "He
is a prophet who goes unrecognised in his own country,"
Haill said yesterday. Professor Short is saving lives, but his
work could also help prevent developing countries from economic
collapse, Haill says.
"What Australia must begin to understand is that so called
'failed states' are not 'failing', they're dying."
"On our own doorstep, AIDS is already beginning to cripple
PNG. In Africa, the pandemic is sweeping all before it, causing
the disintegration of infrasctuture and society, with children
even robbed of their teachers who are being decimated by the
disease." Mr Haill said.
Australian Catholics have a golden opporutnity to make a worthwhile
contribution to suppport Australian initiatives to seek to find
some of the answers to the pandemic, says Haill. "Globally
the Catholic Church offers so much, especially in health care.
But it needs to bite the bullet and say the things that people
need to hear, which includes the fact that they need protection.
There are an estimated half a million AIDS orphans in Africa
alone. Who will care for them?"
Professor Short recalled, "I was at a meeting of the World
Health Organisation recently where former US President Clinton
spoke. He said to us that the developed world must massively
help the underdeveloped world, or that 9/11 would become an
everyday occurance."
Brian Haill called on Catholic Australians to donate generously
to the Magdalen Project. "If an Australian scientist really
has found a way to prevent HIV infection in women, that really
would be Good News!"
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