Calypte und die Zeit nach AIDS2004 in Bangkok
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Eröffnet am: | 05.07.04 15:03 | von: Kade_I | Anzahl Beiträge: | 6.056 |
Neuester Beitrag: | 19.01.06 14:27 | von: Der_wahre_. | Leser gesamt: | 186.701 |
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Nachdem ich der Meinung bin, dass für Calypte und uns allen Investierten in wenigen Tagen neue Zeiten anbrechen werden, habe ich mir erlaubt einen neuen Thread zu eröffnen.
Ich denke, in Bangkok wird der neue Rapid-Test endlich vorgestellt. Wenn es tatsächlich so sein sollte, dann werden wir in spätestens 1-2 Wochen einen schönen einstelligen $-Kurs haben.
Nur noch mal zur Erinnerung:
PUBLICATION DATE des neuen Rapid-Logos 09.07.04 !!! Das ist in 4 Tagen. Wozu braucht Calypte ein neues Rapid-Logo !? Überlegt mal ! Ich denke da werden bald fette NEWS erscheinen ! Zugegeben, dass denk ich schon ne ganze Weile, aber wenn das mal keine geile Quelle ist !?
Publication in Trade Marks Journal
Journal Page Publication Date
First Advert 6520 27.02.2004
Registration 6538 09.07.2004
http://www.patent.gov.uk/tm/tmj/journals/6520/domestic/2352402.html
(beim Link auf die kleine Nummer links oben klicken!)
EURE MEINUNGEN ?
Uns allen viel Erfolg mit Calypte !!!
Grüße
Kade_I
Gruß Börsenfan.
(hab jetzt mal nen Filter auf Caly gesetzt)
werde ich wieder reger am Forum teilnehmen.
Kade... gute Idee mit einen neuen Thread!!
Mischa na wie gehts alter Einzelkämpfer
Grüße auch an Standing, Bio , Börsenfan, und die ich jetzt vergessen habe.
Es ist alles bereits beschrieben warum Caly am Jahresende bei 5 $ steht!!
meiner Meinung nach.
Also bereit machen und freuen !!!
Grüße Lucky
14 minutes ago Add Health - AP to My Yahoo!
By EMMA ROSS, AP Medical Writer
LONDON - The world is losing the race against the AIDS (news - web sites) virus, which last year infected a record 5 million people and killed an unprecedented 3 million, the United Nations (news - web sites) reported Tuesday.
AP Photo
U.N. Says HIV Cases Hit Record High in 2003
(AP Video)
Yahoo! Health
Have questions about your health?
Find answers here.
The virus has now pushed deep into Eastern Europe and Asia, and tackling it will be more expensive than previously believed, according to the most accurate picture to date of the global status of HIV (news - web sites) infections.
The number of people living with HIV has risen in every region. UNAIDS (news - web sites) chief Dr. Peter Piot said the deaths and infections were a testament to the world's failure to get prevention and treatment to those who need it.
Nine out of 10 people who urgently need treatment are not getting it, and prevention is only reaching one in five at risk, the report said.
The AIDS epidemic is now entering its globalization phase, Piot said at the launch of the U.N. AIDS agency's report, which is compiled every two years and released ahead of the International AIDS Conference, which kicks off this weekend in Bangkok, Thailand.
"AIDS is truly a disease of our globalized world. Whereas until recently AIDS was largely a problem for sub-Saharan Africa, one out of every four new infections is occurring in Asia today, and the fastest growing epidemic is happening in Eastern Europe," Piot said. "The virus is running faster than all of us."
In revised estimates based on improved information, the report says about 38 million people are infected. Until now, experts had put the ranks of the HIV afflicted at about 40 million.
Although there have been successes and money is starting to flow, the cost of tackling the pandemic has risen. Two years ago, the United Nations predicted that $10 billion a year would be needed by 2005. Now that figure is $12 billion, because of the cost of delaying action and because the planned campaign is now more comprehensive than it has ever been, said Piot.
Less than half that money has been set aside so far.
The London-based aid agency ActionAid termed the latest figures "depressing and worrying."
"Business as usual cannot remain the answer. The world needs to spend a lot more money and it must also be more strategic in its approach to the epidemic," the group said.
Among the reported successes, many countries — including Brazil, Uganda and Thailand — have reduced HIV infections; prices for medicines have dropped dramatically; money is beginning to flow in for the global effort; more politicians are showing commitment to the fight; and medicines are becoming increasingly available in poor countries.
Among the major challenges are improving the plight of women; keeping health workers in the developing world; tackling the stigma surrounding the disease; and looking after children orphaned by it. In some places, the size of the health work force needs to quadruple, the report found.
AIDS remains untamed in Africa and progress there has been mixed. Prevalence is still rising in countries such as Madagascar and Swaziland, even though it is declining in Uganda.
In sub-Saharan Africa, the number of people living with HIV appears to have leveled off at about 25 million. However, that stability is deceptive: Both deaths and new infections are up, and it remains the worst-hit region.
Eastern Europe and Asia, which is home to 60 percent of the world's population, are emerging as the new front lines in the fight against AIDS.
In Asia, the disease is confined mostly to drug addicts, homosexual or bisexual men, prostitutes and their clients, and the sexual partners of people who frequent prostitutes.
"A country like Thailand shows that AIDS is a problem with a solution. In 1991, 140,000 people became infected in Thailand. Last year it was 21,000," Piot said. "So there is a major decrease, thanks to a massive promotion of condoms and of encouraging men to change their behavior, to reduce their partners and not engage in commercial sex."
In one worrying sign, there is a lack of leadership in the fight against AIDS in Asia, outside of Thailand and Cambodia, Piot said.
"Without such strong leadership, there's no way that we can contain this epidemic," he warned.
The epidemics in Central Asia and Eastern Europe are being driven by intravenous drug users. About 1.3 million people there have HIV, compared with 160,000 in 1995. More than 80 percent of the infected are under age 30.
Russia, with more than 3 million intravenous drug users, is one of the worst-hit in the region.
In Latin America, the epidemic is concentrated among drug addicts and homosexuals. Countries have low infection rates overall, but pockets are bad. For instance, in Brazil, the most populous country in the region, national HIV prevalence is below 1 percent, but in some cities, 60 percent of intravenous drug users have the virus.
In the Caribbean, the disease is mainly spread through heterosexual sex and in many places is focused around prostitution. The worst-affected country is Haiti, which has the highest infection rate outside Africa with 5.6 percent of the population afflicted.
Infections are on the rise in the United States and Western Europe, particularly among homosexual or bisexual men.
In the developing world, AIDS is increasingly becoming a women's issue, Piot said.
In sub-Saharan Africa, the infection gap between men and women has widened. There are, on average, 13 infected women to every 10 infected men, up from 12 to 10 in 2002, the report found.
The gap is even more pronounced among teenagers and young people. The ratio ranges from 20 infected girls to every 10 boys in South Africa, to 45 women to every 10 men in Kenya and Mali.
___
On the Net:
UNAIDS: http://www.unaids.org/
AFP , PARIS
Monday, Jul 05, 2004,Page 5
A woman participant dances while David Gere, left, brother of Hollywood actor Richard Gere, carries an Indian boy during an AIDS-awarness walk in Calcutta yesterday. More than 50 participants from India, the US, South Africa, Suriname and the UK took part in the walk at the end of a four-day seminar supported by the Gere Foundation and the American Center ahead of the international AIDS summit in Bangkok this week.
PHOTO: AFP
Top researchers, policymakers and activists head to Bangkok this week to assess the global AIDS pandemic as the killer disease is poised to ravage Eastern Europe and Asia's most populous countries.
Up to 20,000 people are registered for the conference starting on Sunday, making it the biggest potential turnout for any meeting in the 23-year history of AIDS and the first time this key event will be held in a developing country in Asia.
Ahead of the conference, the UN agency UNAIDS will tomorrow issue its first detailed update on the world epidemic in two years, giving the latest estimated toll of deaths and new infections and country-by-country figures.
Since it first came to light in 1981, acquired immune deficiency syndrome has left no cranny of the world unscathed.
According to previous estimates, the disease had claimed some 25 million to 26 million lives as of last year, and around 40 million people were living with the disease or the virus that causes it. Around 14,000 more people each day become infected.
There is no cure for HIV, only antiretroviral drugs which keep the virus at bay and which are only just now starting to trickle into poor countries that need them most. And any vaccine to prevent infection seems to lie years away.
Ironically, says UNAIDS Executive Director Peter Piot, the picture is brighter today than it has been in years.
"The landscape of AIDS has changed quite dramatically," he said in a phone interview. "In developing countries, our work has changed, especially in Africa."
The main improvement, he said, is that money is at last starting to flow in big volumes, with funds reaching more than US$5 billion this year alone.
This is still not enough to meet needs, but -- combined with big price cuts for drugs -- it has given a kickstart to the UN's goal of providing three million poor people with antiretroviral therapy by the end of next year.
China, India and Indonesia -- Asia's Big Three, accounting for more than a third of humanity -- are ripe targets for AIDS, as are the former Soviet-bloc countries, experts say.
Each nation is different, but a common thread binds them. The bitter experience of the US, Europe and Africa shows how ignorance, stigma, official indifference and poor resources become a lethal combination, enabling the virus to leap out of small, localized demographic pools and into the population mainstream.
"The handshake of [Chinese] Premier Wen Jiabao (·Å®aÄ_) last year with an AIDS patient was, I think, one of the most significant events in the issue of AIDS of the year. China is waking up, and it will move," Piot said.
But, he said, the level of political awareness was not the same in Eastern Europe, facing the fastest-growing HIV spread of any region in the world.
As for India and its neighbors, "the leaders are in a state of denial and there is a very high level of discomfort to even talk about it," Praful Patel, the World Bank's regional vice president, complained last Wednesday. "[They thought] HIV-AIDS is an African problem and it cannot happen in South Asia."
Published on TaipeiTimes
http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/world/archives/2004/07/05/2003177770
So long,
Calexa
www.investorweb.de
nicht jede firma lässt sich so einfach verklopfen.
jedoch die angebote werden kommen warte ab. aber nicht zu den jetzigen preisen!!!!!!
machen Pleite, ich hätt dir fast geglaubt, zum Glück hab ich meine Nerven strapaziert und bin nicht raus, dann hab ich 750 % Gewinn gemacht, und jetzt zur Übernahme: Achte mal auf Bristol-Meyer und Glaxo Smith, ich glaub die treffen sich regelmäßig mit Calypte, d.h. sie stimmen alles miteinander ab, die Vermarktung, die Produktion, und die weitere Zukunft,
oder bist du vollkommen Blind und achtest nur auf Caly - News, ha !!!
gruß werweiß
und das beste....
viele Steuerfrei!!!
so long Lucky
ich bin natürlich auch noch dabei! vorwärts, rein ins vergnügen YEAAAAAH!!
Aber ich gönne es Euch ja. Nur wie ich schon öfters zu Calypte angemerkt habe: die heutigen Pharma-Konzerne haben Scout-Teams, die bestehen aus mehreren hundert Mitarbeitern. Wenn die gemerkt hätten, was da für ein tolles Unternehmen heranwächst, dann hätten die schon längst Meldung erstattet und den Laden übernommen. Besonders bei so vielen Aktien, die da rumschwirren....... Aber bei Hoffnung ist mit Vernunft nicht viel zu machen.
So long, und schöne Gewinne,
Calexa
www.investorweb.de