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NEWS RELEASES
HOUSTON – (April 17, 2009) –
Groundbreaking ceremonies were held today in Mbeya, Tanzania, for a
new center of excellence that will provide comprehensive pediatric
HIV/AIDS care to children and their families through the
Baylor
International Pediatric AIDS Initiative and Texas Children's
Hospital.
The center in Mbeya is a result of a public-private partnership that
includes the Tanzanian government, the U.S. President’s Emergency
Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) through USAID, BIPAI’s sponsoring
institutions (Baylor College of Medicine and Texas Children’s
Hospital), the Abbott Fund, Jan and Dan Duncan and the Sisters of
Charity of the Incarnate Word.
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Taking part in the
groundbreaking ceremony in Mbeya, Tanzania, from left,
were Dr. Eleuter Samky, Director of the Mbeya Referral
Hospital; Michael B. Mizwa, Vice President-International
Affairs, BIPAI; Honorable John L. Mwakipesile, Regional
Commissioner of Mbeya; and Christy Wistar, Vice
President, Abbott Fund-Tanzania. |
“The new BIPAI program in Tanzania is
the result of a true public-private partnership that will benefit
thousands of Tanzanian children and families,” said
Dr. Mark Kline, president of BIPAI, professor of pediatrics at
BCM and chief of
retrovirology at Texas Children’s.
On hand for the groundbreaking ceremony were Guest of Honor and
Regional Commissioner of Mbeya, Honorable John L. Mwakipesile;
Honorable Atanasi Kapunga, Mayor of Mbeya, Dr. Eleuter Samky,
Director of the Mbeya Referral Hospital; Christy Wistar, Vice
President, Abbott Fund-Tanzania; and BIPAI Vice Presidents Michael
Mizwa and Dr. Gordon Schutze, as well as a multitude of community
partners.
Construction of the center is expected to be completed in mid 2010.
The Mbeya region has a population of over 2 million and an HIV
prevalence rate of 13.5 percent. Currently, there are few resources
in Tanzania for the care and treatment of HIV-infected children.
Groundbreaking for another center in Tanzania, in the region of
Mwanza, is planned for next week. BIPAI has centers of excellence
throughout Africa, but this is the first time two centers have been
located in one country.
”I believe to become a center of excellence the center will have to
have and to produce the best health workers in the field. As a
center of excellence, it will work in collaboration with various
stakeholders to find solutions to the problems of the poor
infrastructure, shortage of drugs and consumables and failure of the
referral systems for health that enable us to achieve our targets
and goals in health,” said Prof. David H. Mwakyusa, Minister of
Health and Social Welfare.
The new center in Mbeya will be affiliated with and located on the
campus of the Mbeya Referral Hospital.
The Abbott Fund, the philanthropic foundation of the global health
care company Abbott, is supporting the center’s construction. The
Abbott Fund is a long-time supporter of BIPAI’s efforts in Africa.
"We are excited that today's groundbreaking of the first pediatric
HIV/AIDS center in Tanzania brings together two longstanding
partners of the Abbott Fund in the fight against HIV/AIDS -- Baylor
and the Government of Tanzania," said Christy Wistar, vice
president, Abbott Fund, Tanzania. "We believe that this center will
make an important and lasting difference in the lives and health of
children affected by HIV/AIDS not only in the Mbeya region, but
throughout the country."
Last August, PEPFAR announced a grant award of $22.5 million over
five years to support the operations of the two centers of
excellence in Tanzania, along with the satellite facilities that
will develop from the centers.
Through the two centers and the satellite clinics, 20,000 children
will receive care. The centers will be staffed primarily by local
health care workers, with assistance from physicians in BIPAI’s
Pediatric AIDS Corps program.
The two centers in Tanzania are the eighth and ninth established by
BIPAI. The first center of excellence opened in Romania in 2001.
Other centers are located in Botswana, Malawi, Uganda, Lesotho,
Burkina Faso and Swaziland. |
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