U.N. group sets compromise on AIDS policy. Document sets no targets, cites risks to women.

UNITED NATIONS, June 2 — Delegates to a United Nations conference on AIDS reached agreement Friday after difficult negotiations on a policy declaration that sets no targets for the number of people who should be treated and makes only indirect reference to high-risk groups such as homosexuals, prostitutes and intravenous drug users.

Food or drugs? How famine and hunger compound Africa’s AIDS crisis.

Delegates at the UN summit on Aids have been hammering out the finer details of a declaration to combat HIV/Aids.Meanwhile, 40 million people worldwide are living with the disease.In countries like Kenya, the prospect of getting anti-retroviral drugs is improving – there has been a six-fold increase in the numbers getting treatment in the past two years.

AIDS vaccine testing goes overseas. U.S. funds $120 million trial despite misgivings of some researchers.

CHONBURI, Thailand — Inside a ramshackle Buddhist temple here on the country’s southeastern coast, curious villagers gathered last fall as part of the United States’ biggest gamble yet on stopping the AIDS pandemic.

Cure for neglected diseases: funding. Large doses of donations will lead to new drugs, report says.

Drug and biotechnology companies have launched more than 60 projects in recent years to discover new treatments for a wide array of neglected diseases, a report has found, and the result could be nine or 10 drugs by the end of this decade with the potential to improve the lives of the world’s poorest people.

Saving millions for just a few dollars: cost-effective health measures for poor nations

Who would have thought those annoyances were one of the great health-care investments of our age? At a cost of $5 for every year of life they save or year of disability they prevent, speed bumps are a bargain that no health minister in a poor country is going to want to pass up. It’s in the same league with these exceptionally good deals: once-a-year treatment to rid rural African children of intestinal worms — $3 to save a year of disability — and having extra measles vaccine on hand in c