Edward C. Green, a member of President's Advisory Committee on HIV/AIDS, looks objectively at countries that have succeeded in reducing HIV infection rates...along with a worrisome flip side to the progress.
EDWARD C. GREEN is a medical anthropologist and Senior Research Scientist at the Harvard Center for Population and Development Studies, part of Harvard University's School of Public Health.
"A truly remarkable book. If heeded it will save numerous lives.
Honest to a fault. Well documented. Powerfully written. A credit to
social science and policy analysis."-Amitai Etzioni Author of My
Brother's Keeper
"Green's book is incredible. The author has done such a first rate
job of putting data together in a logical and convincing way that I
think it will impact AIDS prevention initiatives worldwide. As one
who has written several books I know the hard work and agony that
went into what the author has done. A job well done."-Joe
McIlhaney, MD, Chairman, The Medical Institute author of "1001
Healthcare Questions Women Ask"
"Green's Rethinking AIDS throws out the bath water but rescues the
baby. He refuses to reject recommendations of abstinence and
fidelity from religious conservatives simply because they come from
this source. The world has been slow to catch on that the
successful Uganda AIDS story is about abstinence, fidelity and for
others, reducing dramatically their number of sexual partners.
These are powerful epidemiologic strategies and once again, Green
is a pioneer in bringing the story to a wide audience."-Elaine M.
Murphy, Ph.D. Professor of Global Health George Washington
University School of Public Health
"In Rethinking AIDS Prevention, Ted Green shares with the reader
his vast experiences in the study of sexual behavior, and argues a
convincing case for fundamental sexual behavior change as the
cornerstone for reducing HIV infections. This is compelling reading
for all."-Dr. Vinand Nantulya Senior Advisor to the Executive
Director The Global Fund for AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria
"Rethinking AIDS Prevention is a readable but compelling account of
how Uganda turned back its AIDS epidemic. It's a must-read for
professionals and lay audiences who want to learn how and why the
ABC approach to AIDS prevention works."-Tom Merrick The World Bank
Institute
"Ted Green argues with evidence and experience for an AIDS
prevention paradigm in Africa based on primary behavior change the
ABC approach: abstinence, be faithful, and if not, use condoms. He
shows that this approach works, as demonstrated by the case of
Uganda, through locally driven, culturally appropriate, and
politically acceptable strategies. Green's book challenges
simple-minded approaches to AIDS prevention: it is essential
reading for anyone seriously concerned about AIDS control in
Africa."-Dr. Michael R. Reich Director, Harvard Center for
Population and Development Studies
"The implications of Edward C. Green's research are profound for
global health policy in the midst of this, the greatest pandemic of
all time. Shouldn't Africans have access to ALL of the facts about
AIDS education and prevention? Green's analysis, demonstrating the
efficacy of emphasizing abstinence and partner reduction, with
condoms playing a secondary role (ABC), if heeded, might just save
millions of lives over the next ten years."-Rich Stearns President,
World Vision United States
"While the religious right "just say no" and the traditional left
"just says condoms" the numbers of people dying from AIDS grows
exponentially. Green's approach, based on his in depth analysis of
the evidence from Uganda and elsewhere, is a refreshing and
important challenge to rethink what really works in stemming this
worldwide epidemic."-Dr. Marc Mitchell Harvard School of Public
Health
"This is an important book that deserves to be widely read and
pondered. It is important both because the AIDS epidemic in
sub-Saharan Africa is an ongoing tragedy of colossal magnitude and
because Edward Green is a member of President Bush's Advisory
Commitee on HIV/AIDS at a time when the president has committed the
United States to spending $15 billion on the fight against AIDS,
much of this sum in Africa to facilitate the work of "faith-based
organizations..,.".Green's book is llikely to be the major
intellectual input into that policy, hence it's arguments should be
taken very seriously."-Population and Development Review
?[F]orceful, but controversial, arguments for faith-based
initiatives....General readers; graduate students and
above.?-Choice
?[G]reen presents excellent evidence of the inadequacies of condom
campaigns in Africa and successes of PBC in developing countries
around the world....a compelling argument for both the health
behavior specialist and the layperson in search of an alternative
take on the behavioral potential to overcome high rates of HIV
transmission. He mixes academic research with international
articles and profiles in order to present a colorful, informative
account of a topic too many other authors paint in redundant
shades.?-African Studies Quarterly
?For 20 years, American and international policymakers have
emphasized condom use to prevent AIDS transmission. Now, Edward
Green, who is a senior research scientist at the Harvard Center for
Population and Development Studies, is asking health officials to
rethink that approach, particularly in programs targeted at African
countries where AIDS is rampant.?-Harvard Chapter of NOW
?Green's book persuasively argues for making faith-based
organizations (FBOs) central to the worldwide assault on HIV/AIDS.
Green argues that Western health agencies' largely antagonistic
attitude toward religious organizations is counterproductive,
particularly in areas where religious organizations have long been
the most influential institutions around....Coming from a liberal
Harvard research scientist, this approach to the world's worst
pandemic may appear novel, but it's far from fiction, it's
abundantly educational, it's practical, and it's truly engaging
reading for a topic that could have been bogged down by culturally
sensitivities and academic esotericism.?-Focus on Family
?If Green's analysis is correct, we are faced with a troubling
paradox: while our technologically sophisticated system often
operates at the margin of acceptable cost efficacy, halfway around
the world, secular bias and biomedical fiscal power are responsible
for discouraging and discrediting simple yet effective solutions,
at the cost of millions of lives.?-JAMA The Journal of the American
Medical Association
?Long before the AIDS crisis, international health agencies were
largely dedicated to distributing health-related commodities,
including vaccines, antibiotics and contraceptives, in poor
countries all over the world. This approach was rapidly embraced to
deal with AIDS. But condoms were not commonly used in Africa, and
people have been slow to adopt them. If only these experts properly
understood African culture and indigenous concepts of sexuality,
disease, danger and death, Green argues, the power of the Ugandan
Zero Grazing campaign might have been recognized years ago.?-The
New York Times
?Rethinking AIDS Prevention is a brave book, critical yet hopeful,
aiming to put HIV prevention firmly back on the global agenda. It
has achieved this in record time by providing analysis that appeals
to both sides of the political spectrum, with a genuine interest in
Africa.?-The Lancet
?The most important audience for this book is the Bush
administration, which has pledged to spend $15 billion on AIDS
prevention in Africa and the Caribbean, and which is now being
prodded to hand over billions of this sum to the multinational AIDS
establishment so thoroughly exposed in this book. If the
administration heeds Green's message, it will not assume that the
experts are experts, will not assume that the basic facts they cite
are facts, and will not assume their good ill or even truthfulness.
Africans will be better off for it. There is hope that this message
will resonate.?-National Review
?This is a book that tries to focus on those successes in AIDS
prevention rather than the failures, even though the successes may
not be as dramatic as one would hope in this stage of the pandemic.
It is these successes that others in less developed countries can
learn and hopefully be successful in their prevention efforts. The
focus of this book is on heterosexual transmission of HIV in
less-developed countries and on just sexually transmitted AIDS.
Based on the findings that are reported in the book, it is
reasonable that prevention programs should follow the ABCs:
Abstain, Be faithful, or use Condoms if you cannot follow A or B.
It is the C that is stressed the most with little resources going
into A and B. More recently, the dependence on D (Drugs) has become
the norm, resulting in the total disregard of A, B, and C....This
is an excellent book that should be in all academic
libraries.?-Aids Book Review Journal
?This is an important book that deserves to be widely read and
pondered. It is important both because the AIDS epidemic in
sub-Saharan Africa is an ongoing tragedy of colossal magnitude and
because Edward Green is a member of President Bush's Advisory
Commitee on HIV/AIDS at a time when the president has committed the
United States to spending $15 billion on the fight against AIDS,
much of this sum in Africa to facilitate the work of "faith-based
organizations..,.".Green's book is llikely to be the major
intellectual input into that policy, hence it's arguments should be
taken very seriously.?-Population and Development Review
?This is not another book about how AIDS is out of control in
Africa and Third World nations, or on complaining about the
inadequacy of secured funds to fight the pandemic. The author looks
objectively at countries that have succeeded in reducing HIV
infection rates....along with a worrisome flip side to the
progress....This book is a bellwether in the escalating
controversy, offering persuasive evidence in support of the ABC
approach and exposing the fallacies and motivations of its
opponents.?-Global Health Council
"ÝF¨orceful, but controversial, arguments for faith-based
initiatives....General readers; graduate students and
above."-Choice
"ÝG¨reen presents excellent evidence of the inadequacies of condom
campaigns in Africa and successes of PBC in developing countries
around the world....a compelling argument for both the health
behavior specialist and the layperson in search of an alternative
take on the behavioral potential to overcome high rates of HIV
transmission. He mixes academic research with international
articles and profiles in order to present a colorful, informative
account of a topic too many other authors paint in redundant
shades."-African Studies Quarterly
"This is not another book about how AIDS is out of control in
Africa and Third World nations, or on complaining about the
inadequacy of secured funds to fight the pandemic. The author looks
objectively at countries that have succeeded in reducing HIV
infection rates....along with a worrisome flip side to the
progress....This book is a bellwether in the escalating
controversy, offering persuasive evidence in support of the ABC
approach and exposing the fallacies and motivations of its
opponents."-Global Health Council
"[F]orceful, but controversial, arguments for faith-based
initiatives....General readers; graduate students and
above."-Choice
"[G]reen presents excellent evidence of the inadequacies of condom
campaigns in Africa and successes of PBC in developing countries
around the world....a compelling argument for both the health
behavior specialist and the layperson in search of an alternative
take on the behavioral potential to overcome high rates of HIV
transmission. He mixes academic research with international
articles and profiles in order to present a colorful, informative
account of a topic too many other authors paint in redundant
shades."-African Studies Quarterly
"For 20 years, American and international policymakers have
emphasized condom use to prevent AIDS transmission. Now, Edward
Green, who is a senior research scientist at the Harvard Center for
Population and Development Studies, is asking health officials to
rethink that approach, particularly in programs targeted at African
countries where AIDS is rampant."-Harvard Chapter of NOW
"Green's book persuasively argues for making faith-based
organizations (FBOs) central to the worldwide assault on HIV/AIDS.
Green argues that Western health agencies' largely antagonistic
attitude toward religious organizations is counterproductive,
particularly in areas where religious organizations have long been
the most influential institutions around....Coming from a liberal
Harvard research scientist, this approach to the world's worst
pandemic may appear novel, but it's far from fiction, it's
abundantly educational, it's practical, and it's truly engaging
reading for a topic that could have been bogged down by culturally
sensitivities and academic esotericism."-Focus on Family
"If Green's analysis is correct, we are faced with a troubling
paradox: while our technologically sophisticated system often
operates at the margin of acceptable cost efficacy, halfway around
the world, secular bias and biomedical fiscal power are responsible
for discouraging and discrediting simple yet effective solutions,
at the cost of millions of lives."-JAMA The Journal of the American
Medical Association
"Long before the AIDS crisis, international health agencies were
largely dedicated to distributing health-related commodities,
including vaccines, antibiotics and contraceptives, in poor
countries all over the world. This approach was rapidly embraced to
deal with AIDS. But condoms were not commonly used in Africa, and
people have been slow to adopt them. If only these experts properly
understood African culture and indigenous concepts of sexuality,
disease, danger and death, Green argues, the power of the Ugandan
Zero Grazing campaign might have been recognized years ago."-The
New York Times
"Rethinking AIDS Prevention is a brave book, critical yet hopeful,
aiming to put HIV prevention firmly back on the global agenda. It
has achieved this in record time by providing analysis that appeals
to both sides of the political spectrum, with a genuine interest in
Africa."-The Lancet
"The most important audience for this book is the Bush
administration, which has pledged to spend $15 billion on AIDS
prevention in Africa and the Caribbean, and which is now being
prodded to hand over billions of this sum to the multinational AIDS
establishment so thoroughly exposed in this book. If the
administration heeds Green's message, it will not assume that the
experts are experts, will not assume that the basic facts they cite
are facts, and will not assume their good ill or even truthfulness.
Africans will be better off for it. There is hope that this message
will resonate."-National Review
"This is a book that tries to focus on those successes in AIDS
prevention rather than the failures, even though the successes may
not be as dramatic as one would hope in this stage of the pandemic.
It is these successes that others in less developed countries can
learn and hopefully be successful in their prevention efforts. The
focus of this book is on heterosexual transmission of HIV in
less-developed countries and on just sexually transmitted AIDS.
Based on the findings that are reported in the book, it is
reasonable that prevention programs should follow the ABCs:
Abstain, Be faithful, or use Condoms if you cannot follow A or B.
It is the C that is stressed the most with little resources going
into A and B. More recently, the dependence on D (Drugs) has become
the norm, resulting in the total disregard of A, B, and C....This
is an excellent book that should be in all academic
libraries."-Aids Book Review Journal
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