NEWSPAPER CUTTINGS 2007
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An Aids test? ‘It isn’t for me’
Local (Updated: 18 Dec 2007)
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THE admission form looks the
same — with the addition of a
clause that could be crucial in
the fight against Aids: “I do not
want to be screened for HIV”.
From yesterday, all adult inpatients
at Changi General Hospital
(CGH) had to sign against
that statement if they did not
want to be tested for HIV.
But even as Singapore’s pilot
voluntary, opt-out HIV-testing
scheme takes off, it seems more
must be done to shift society’s attitudes
on managing the disease.
Attitudes towards
managing HIV must
change, as voluntary
screening pilot starts.
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| TODAY • Tuesday • December 18, 2007 |
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CGH first to offer opt-out HIV testing
Local (Updated: 13 Dec 2007)
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ON MONDAY, Changi General Hospital (CGH)
will become the first hospital here to offer
opt-out HIV testing for inpatients 21 years
and above. Patients can decline to be tested.
They can indicate their preference in a
general consent form for medical treatment,
given to them on admission. Those who
agree to the blood test will pay between
$6 and $23, depending on the ward class.
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| TODAY • Thursday • December 13, 2007 |
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Home HIV test by 2009?
Local (Updated: 3 Dec 2007)
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Soon, you could be tested for HIV in the same way you currently take a pregnancy test — in the privacy of your own home, with a home test kit.
Oral-based kit to be available here once it gets US FDA approval.
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| TODAY • Monday • December 3, 2007 |
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New high for HIV cases?
Local (Updated: 1 Dec 2007)
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Only 5% of infected heterosexuals detected via voluntary testing.
WITH 356 newly-detected cases of HIV reported here between January and October, this year’s final total is on track to surpass last year’s figure of 357 — and set a new high.
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| weekendTODAY • December 1 - 2, 2007 |
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Fund for HIV families
Local (Updated: 30 Nov 2007)
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IMAGINE this: Self-administering an HIV test could be
as convenient and accessible as a pregnancy test.
Dr Balaji Sadasivan, the Senior Minister of State
for Foreign Affairs, and Information, Communications
and the Arts, has hopes now that an oral self-test kit
able to give results in 20 minutes is available.
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| TODAY • Friday • November 30, 2007 |
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HPB wants firms to educate about Aids, sex disease
Local (Updated: 15 Nov 2007)
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HPB wants firms to educate about Aids, sex disease
Sexually -transmitted infections (STI), mental wellness and chronic diseases ranked fairly low in workplace halth programmes (WHP), a survey has revealed.
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| TODAY • Thursday • November 15, 2007 |
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HIV law is only part of the equation
Local (Updated: 17 Oct 2007)
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HIV law is only part of the equation
Letter from KAREN TAN
Director, Corporate Communications
Ministry of Health
MR GOH Kian Huat supported the proposed
legislative amendment to require
those with high-risk sexual behaviour to do
regular HIV testing, inform their sexual
partners and/or use condoms. But he felt
that it would be difficult to enforce the new
law (“How will authorities know?” Oct 3).
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| TODAY • Friday • October 12, 2007 |
in responds to:
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How will authorities know?
Proposed HIV legislation will only be as effective as it can be enforced
I REFER to the report, “Know or don’t
know, it’s still illegal” (Sept 29-30).
Until a cure is found, a person
infected with the HIV virus has effectively
been given a death sentence.
He or she has the potential
to kill others by passing
the virus on to them. And
if the victim dies as a result,
a “murder” has been
committed.
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| TODAY • Wednesday • October 3, 2007 |
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When Passion Gets the Better of Reason
Local (Updated: 07 Oct 2007)
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THE law may compel you to do certain
things, but can it endow you with reason in
the heat of passion?
An ignorance-no-excuse
law may yet discourage
some from taking HIV tests.
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| TODAY Page 8• Friday • October 5, 2007 |
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Know or don't know, it's still illegal
Local (Updated: 29 Sep 2007)
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THE Government doesn’t want
to pry into your bedroom. But it
does want you to be responsible
if you engage in high-risk sexual
behaviour, as what you do in
your most private moments may
have repercussions on public
health here.
Bottom line? Go for
HIV test as ignorance
is no longer an excuse.
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| weekendTODAY Page 1• September 29-30, 2007 |
| weekendTODAY Page 4• September 29-30, 2007 |
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Almost zero, and it’s worrying
Local (Updated: 18 Aug 2007)
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Many heterosexual
men still ignorant of
sex-related diseases
The ignorance is staggering. Many
men infected with HIV know almost
nothing about sexually-transmitted
infections (STIs) and HIV/Aids before
they get infected.
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| weekendTODAY Page 16• August 18-19, 2007 |
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No Room for Sexual Morality In Aids Conversation
Local (Updated: 13 Aug 2007)
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Campaigns focusing on
those at high risk could
promote denial and a
false sense of security.
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| TODAY Page 2• Monday • August 13, 2007 |
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When Both Hands Work Together ...
Local (Updated: 13 Aug 2007)
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It is winning the battle against HIV. The
Australian state of New South Wales has
seen the number of HIV cases reported
each year generally dropping over the past
decade. And now Singapore knows why,
after its first study trip of this kind.
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| TODAY Page 1• Monday • August 13, 2007 |
| TODAY Page 3• Monday • August 13, 2007 |
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Aids stats point way to HIV tests
Local (Updated: 04 Aug 2007)
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Health Minister 'seriously considering' op-out scheme to stem tide.
With recent statistics pointing to a worrying Aids trend here, the Government is thinking of extending the opt-out scheme to HIV-testing, too. So, if you are male, admitted to a hospital and have not opted out, then don’t be surprised if you are asked to take an HIV test.
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| TODAY Page 1• Saturday • August 4, 2007 |
| TODAY Page 4• Saturday • August 4, 2007 |
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Faster HIV tests at more places
Local (Updated: 27 Jul 2007)
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IT WILL soon be more convenient to get tested for HIV because
rapid-test kits are likely to be available at more clinics.
But should patient anonymity
also be extended to more clinics?
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| TODAY • Friday • July 27, 2007 |
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Should Aids testing be mandatory?
Local (Updated: 20 Jul 2007)
AMID startling statistics that one in 350 hospital patients are HIV-positive, at least one voluntary welfare organisation here has called for mandatory testing of high-risk groups, in what some have described as a highly controversial and intrusive move.
Read more...
| TODAY Page 1• Friday • July 20, 2007 |
| TODAY Page 3• Friday • July 20, 2007 |
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More finding out HIV-positive status during voluntary testing
Local (Updated: 20 Jul 2007)
13% of HIV-infected realised their condition this way last year, up from 6% in 2000.
MORE HIV-positive patients are finding out about their status from tests that they take on their own
accord.
Read more...
| THE STRAITS TIMES • Friday • July 20, 2007 |
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Most with Aids virus don't know they have it
Local (Updated: 20 Jul 2007)
Read more...
| LIANHE ZAOBAO (Chinese)• Friday • July 20, 2007 |
For English.. News dated 18 Jul 2007
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MOH probing person who spread HIV on purpose
Local (Updated: 19 Jul 2007)
SOMEONE here is now being probed by the Ministry of Health (MOH) for what could be Singapore's first
case of a person who knowingly infected someone else with HIV through sex.
This could be the first such case here. If found guilty, the person could be jailed and fined.
Read more...
| THE STRAITS TIMES • Thursday • July 19, 2007 |
| ZAOBAO.COM (Chinese)• Thursday • July 19, 2007 |
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Most with Aids virus don't know they have it
Local (Updated: 18 Jul 2007)
THIS is the bad news in Singapore's fight against Aids: Most adults who are infected do not know it, and some are being treated wrongly in hospitals.
A study of more than 3,000 leftover blood samples from public hospital patients early this year showed that one in 350 was infected with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) which causes Aids...
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| THE STRAITS TIMES • Wednesday • July 18, 2007 |
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Review needed for Aids education
Local (Updated: 19 Jun 2007)
Four suggestions to improve prevention programmes here
Shying away in embarrassment from dealing with youth sexuality more directly is also jeopardising the health of our young citizens.
— Assoc Prof Roy Chan
Read more...
| Original Newspaper: TODAY • Tuesday • June 19, 2007 |
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