Malawi to curb fake AIDS healers

The Lancet (Vol 371:9615, March 8, 2008 p. 784) notes that the government of Malawi is working on legislation to prevent traditional and religious healers from deceiving people about AIDS. According to Mary Shaba, a Malawi health official, "when it [the proposed legislation] passes into law, all traditional healers claiming to cure AIDS will be dealt with.... The Act will regulate and protect people from healers who prescribe sex with albinos, the disabled or virgins as a cure for HIV and AIDS."

According to the WHO, the HIV rate of about 14% in Malawi has helped reduce life-expectancy to 36 years.

Health officials say that traditional healers were involved in the drafting of the legislation.

This is huge. Really. If it works. There is so much bullshit out there about AIDS. The U.S. is full of HIV denialists, and their idiocy spreads to where it can do the most harm---Africa. Top African leaders, such as Thabo Mbeki have fallen prey to the denialists.

And let's make no mistake---the "intellectual" home of HIV denialism is the U.S. where the impact is nothing near what it is in Africa. When folks like Peter Deusberg and Henry Bauer (post to follow) spread their nonsense and lies in North America, people have access to all manner of information resources and doctors. Not so much in Africa. If an African leader gets taken in, it can affect policy and have immediate repercussions.

While the fight against AIDS usually focuses (properly) on prevention and treatment, getting rid of the woos isn't such a bad idea, and working to co-opt traditional healers is a great idea. The traditional healers could be a potentially powerful force in combating AIDS. The faith-healing churches are another problem altogether.

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This is more a hat tip to a great article by the New Yorker's Michael Specter. In a recent issue, his piece "The Denialists" was published and it does a great job of providing the exasperating context to what is really a sad state of affairs in countries like South Africa. Zeblon Gwala is a 50-…
The International AIDS conference is barely over, but already it's getting results when it comes to working against stigma and combatting denial--and is receiving help from one U.S. politician. Stories after the fold... First, from Buisness Day comes harsh words for South Africa's leaders:…
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Umm, could you tell us more about prescribing sex with virgins. Is there anything else that might be good for? Maybe I got it...

Re Duesberg

A good question might be asked as to why Duesberg is still employed by the Un. of California (or why Fred Singer is still employed by the Un. of Virginia for that matter)? Clearly, Singers' rejection of the link between cigarette smoking and Duesbergs' rejection of the link between HIV and AIDS qualifies them as total whackjobs and dangerous ones at that.