WISHH News ASA Applauds Landmark HIV/AIDS
Legislation Signed by President Bush
The American Soybean Association (ASA), a trade group representing
26,000 U.S. soybean farmers, expresses appreciation to the United
States Congress and President George W. Bush upon the signing of
landmark legislation that recognizes the need to integrate nutrition
into international HIV/AIDS programs. ASA contributed soy protein
nutritional information prior to passage of the U.S. Leadership
Against HIV/AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria Act of 2003, a $15 billion
five-year package that expands U.S. leadership in the global fight
of HIV/AIDS.
“ASA strongly supports the efforts of United States government
agencies to address the HIV/AIDS crisis in developing countries,”
said ASA President Dwain Ford, a soybean producer from Kinmundy,
Ill. “ASA has urged policy makers and implementers to recognize
the role nutrition can play in mitigating the effects of HIV/AIDS
on populations in developing countries, and called on the U.S. Agency
for International Development (USAID) to increase its nutritional
emphasis in dealing with the AIDS pandemic.”
At their annual meeting held in March in Charlotte, North Carolina,
ASA's voting delegates, a group of more than one hundred farmers
from across the country, expressed strong support for U.S. food
aid programs and urged greater emphasis on the role proper nutrition
and protein play in combating HIV/AIDS (human immunodeficiency virus/acquired
immunodeficiency syndrome). An estimated 36.1 million people worldwide
have HIV/AIDS. Some African countries have infection rates of 25
to 35 percent of their populations.
“According to HIV-specialist dietician, HIV/AIDS-infected
people may need 50 to 100 percent more protein than uninfected people,”
Ford said. “Soy is ideally suited to help meet their requirements
for protein, calories and more.”
The new initiative includes care for 2 million people living with
the virus and 10 million orphans affected by the pandemic in 14
African and Caribbean countries. Addressing nutritional needs will
be a key factor in treatment programs, especially where anti-HIV
drugs are initiated.
“This legislation is a breakthrough because it calls for
the U.S. Agency for International Development to include nutrition
components in HIV/AIDS programs, and soy is well-suited to make
those programs succeed,” Ford said. “The integration
of nutrition into treatment programs may make the difference between
success and failure in many of the countries targeted to receive
the assistance funded by this bill.”
For more information, contact:
Dwain Ford, ASA President, 618/547-3404, ussoy1@yahoo.com
Bob Callanan, ASA Communications Director, (314) 576-1770, bcallanan@soy.org
Access this release at www.soygrowers.com

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