The Mary Magdalene Project
Can we help female commercial sex workers to find simple, safe,
cheap and readily available ways of protecting themselves against
HIV infection?
Their profession makes them particularly susceptible to infection.
It is often impossible for them to insist that their male customers
use condoms, and some men make the situation worse by bribing
them to have unprotected sex.
Many female commercial sex workers in developing countries are
living in extreme poverty. Sex may be the only thing they have
to sell. And yet they are in the front line of our fight to contain
the global spread of HIV infection. How can we help them?
Recent research has indicated two exciting possibilities:
Intra-vaginal lime or lemon juice has been used by European
women for centuries as a very effective contraceptive. Doctors
in Jos, Nigeria have recently made a major breakthrough. They
have discovered that over 80% of female commercial sex workers
in that city are routinely using intravaginal douches of lime
or lemon juice immediately before or after intercourse in
the belief that this is protecting them from pregnancy, and sexually
transmitted diseases in general. They do not know their HIV status.
The co-authors of the Jos Lemon/ Lime Juice study who'd
be the beneficaries of the Mary Magdalene Project appeal funds
are, from left to right, D.Viola Onwuliri, Professor Atien Sagay
and Godwin Imade.

We urgently need to discover whether citrus juice is
protecting these women from HIV infection, or whether it is harmful.
They provide us with an amazing opportunity, since there can be
no ethical objection to studying existing citrus juice users.
The study could begin immediately if funding
became available.
Funding opportunities for work on commercial sex workers recently
received a major setback. The Washington Post of March 6th reported
that the Bush administration had announced a new policy that requiring
all U.S. HIV/AIDS groups seeking federal funding for work overseas
to make a written pledge to oppose commercial sex work, or risk
losing funding. The Editorial rightly
criticizes the Bush administration for allowing its AIDS efforts
to be governed by utopian delusions, and concludes by saying "it
would be nice if the prostitutes the world over could be helped
toward a different way of life. But the world's oldest profession
is not going to disappear and
millions of lives depend on getting AIDS prevention services to
its practitioners". Amen to that.
Courageously, the government of Brazil immediately put its money
where its mouth is and refused $40 million of US funding to fight
AIDS, saying that Bush's ideological conditions were too severe.
Bravo Brazil!
In the light of all these developments, we have decided
to launch a Mary Magdalene Project, initially to fund the two
HIV prevention trials among the female commercial sex workers
of Jos, Nigeria, as outlined above.
The project is named after Mary Magdalene who was thought to have
been a prostitute and subsequently became one of Christ's disciples.Her
Saint's Day is observed on July 22nd; she has colleges named after
her in both Cambridge and Oxford.
The Mary Magdalene Project was launched at the Annual
Conference of the Royal Australasian College of Physicians in
Wellington, New Zealand on Tuesday May 10, 2005, by Melbourne's
Professor Roger Short in delivering the Priscilla Kincaid-Smith
Oration.
He said: " It is exciting to think that female commercial
sex workers could lead the way in developing new ways of protecting
women all over the world from HIV infection. They need our support."
Contributions to the Mary Magdalene
Project may be sent to:-
The Australian AIDS Fund Incorporated,
PO Box 1347, Frankston,Victoria, 3199,
AUSTRALIA.
* (Cheques to be made payable to The Australian
AIDS Fund Incorporated) |
Progress will be reported regularly on this website.
Further Information:
| Dateline: December
14, 2006 |
| Latest
News |
Global Campaign for
Microbicides |
14/02/2006 |
* News update - August
2005
* Online Catholics
report - May 25, 2005 (Includes ABC Science Show transcript)
* U.S. backflip on
funding ban, May 2005
* The Australian AIDS
Fund Inc - a signatory to global protest letter to President George
W.Bush - May 18, 2005
* Restrictive U.S.
Policies Undermine Anti-AIDS Efforts - May 18, 2005
|