Referenties

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Referenties:

  • UNAIDS press release Geneva, 20 November 2007

    ,,Global HIV prevalence has levelled off; AIDS is among the leading causes of death globally and remains the primary cause of death in Africa Improvements in surveillance increase understanding of the epidemic, resulting in substantial revisions to estimates"

    This press release contains the following statement: ,,The current estimate of 33.2 million [30.6 – 36.1 million] people living with HIV replaces the 2006 estimate of 39.5 million [34.1 – 47.1 million]."
  • 'U.N. to Cut Estimate of AIDS Epidemic Population with Virus Overstated by Millions’

    An article in The Washington Post on 20 November 2007 about the revision of data by UNAIDS. Here is a relevant comment from this report:

    ,,Some researchers, however, contend that persistent overestimates in the widely quoted U.N. reports have long skewed funding decisions and obscured potential lessons about how to slow the spread of HIV. Critics have also said that U.N. officials overstated the extent of the epidemic to help gather political and financial support for combating AIDS."
  • The AIDS Pandemic: The Collision of Epidemiology with Political Correctness

    A book by Dr. James Chin, the former head epidemiologist at WHO
  • Threat of world Aids pandemic among heterosexuals is over, report admits

    An article in The Independent by Jeremy Laurance, Sunday, 8 June 2008
  • The writing is on the wall for UNAIDS

    by Roger England in BMJ 2008;336:1072 (10 May)
  • Lieben wir gefährlich? Ein Arzt auf der Suche nach den Fakten und Hintergründen von Aids (Do we love dangerously?)
    Christian Fiala, ein Buch erschienen im Deuticke Verlag Wien, 1997
  • Why I Quit HIV
    An article by Rebecca V. Culshaw explaining why she stopped developing mathematical models about the HIV/Aids epidemic
  • Science Sold Out: Does HIV Really Cause AIDS?
    A book by Rebecca V. Culshaw on the problems with the HIV/AIDS theory and the alleged epidemic.
  • The citation from the journal of the German Medical Council is from:‚Kumulative Verwirrung’, Deutsches Ärzteblatt, 1989, 86, Heft 17, B 853/C 749
  • Reference for the citation of drinking water
  • The data on Uganda come from the Uganda Bureau of Statistics:,,The high rate of population growth is mainly due to the persistently high fertility levels (about seven children per woman) that have been observed for the past four decades. The decline in mortality reflected by a decline in Infant and Childhood Mortality Rates as revealed by the Uganda Demographic and Health Surveys (UDHS) of 1995 and 2000-2001, have also contributed to the high population growth rate." (2002 Population Census)
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