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IN THE NEWS:

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Community briefs

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By Daily Bruin Staff

Nov. 30, 1998 9:00 p.m.

Tuesday, December 1, 1998

Community briefs

Preventative treatment for AIDS exposure OK’d

Immediate preventative treatment to ward off AIDS following
possible exposure to HIV through sex or intravenous drug use is
warranted under certain conditions, reports a University of
California, Berkeley, researcher and her collaborators in the Nov.
25 Journal of the American Medical Association.

Such prophylactic treatment is already recommended by the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, but only for doctors,
nurses and other medical professionals after accidental exposure to
infected body fluids on the job. In one study of health care
workers exposed to HIV-infected blood, AZT use was associated with
a 79 percent reduction in infection.

"We’re applying this recommendation in certain situations to the
much more frequent modes of HIV transmission – intravenous drug use
and sexual transmission," said UC Berkeley associate field research
supervisor Suellen Miller, a public health faculty member and
co-author of the research paper, which is published in a recent
issue of JAMA.

"A non-infected person who practices safer sex with their
HIV-positive mate and is accidentally exposed through condom
breakage should be considered for prophylactic treatment in the
same way as health care workers suffering a needle stick injury,"
Miller said. "It is ethically mandatory that all persons who
receive similar exposures should receive similar treatment."

Saudi Arabian donation funds Berkeley program

A Saudi Arabia-based foundation is donating $5 million to the
University of California, Berkeley, to establish programs that will
broaden understanding of the Arab and Islamic worlds.

A delegation from the Sultan bin Abdulaziz Al-Saud Foundation
presented UC Berkeley chancellor Robert M. Berdahl with the
contribution on Tuesday. Representing the foundation were its
secretary general, Prince Faisal bin Sultan bin Abdulaziz Al Saud,
as well as Prince Bandar bin Sultan bin Abdulaziz Al Saud, who is
the Saudi ambassador to the United States.

The gift will establish the Sultan bin Abdulaziz Al-Saud Program
in Arab and Islamic Studies within UC Berkeley’s Center for Middle
Eastern Studies. It will comprise five elements: a visiting
professorship, a visiting scholars and graduate fellows program, a
research fund, an outreach fund and new quarters for the
center.

UC Berkeley’s Center for Middle Eastern Studies is ranked first
(along with the University of Texas at Austin) among the 13
universities offering similar programs across the country, based on
the level of funding it receives from the U.S. Department of
Education.

In making the gift, the foundation recognized the "historic
friendly relations" between UC Berkeley and educational
institutions in Saudi Arabia, as well as UC Berkeley’s academic
excellence and public service mission.

Institute aids study of agricultural genetics

The University of California, Berkeley and the Novartis
Agricultural Discovery Institute, Inc. have agreed to create a
unique long-term research collaboration that will keep UC Berkeley
scientists and California farmers at the forefront of agricultural
biotechnology.

Under the terms of the agreement between Novartis and the
Department of Plant and Microbial Biology in the College of Natural
Resources, Novartis will commit $25 million over five years to
support basic research in the department in the area of
agricultural genomics.

It will also provide access to proprietary technology and DNA
databases, which will significantly enhance the university’s
ability to do research at the forefront of plant genomics.

Compiled from Daily Bruin wire reports

Comments, feedback, problems?

© 1998 ASUCLA Communications Board[Home]

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