A report by the Kaiser Family Foundation finds that Americans' sense of urgency about HIV/AIDS has fallen dramatically, providing some insights into the AIDS epidemic in Black America. "This report, on the heels of last month's report by the D.C. office of AIDS showing a 4 percent HIV prevalence among Black residents in Washington D.C. provides some context for the AIDS epidemic in Black America," says Phill Wilson, CEO of the Black AIDS Institute. . . .
The National Association of Letter Carriers Food Drive is Saturday, May 9. Place nonperishable food donations by your mailbox on the morning of Saturday, May 9, for the National Association of Letter Carriers Food Drive. More than 3,000 letter carriers across America will collect donations of nonperishable food from their postal customers. . . .
A brief intervention program – consisting of one counseling session and two follow-up phone calls – boosted by tenfold the number of women correctly performing breast self- exams. These are the findings of a Kaiser Permanente Center for Health Research study in the American Journal of Health Promotion. Funded by the National Cancer Institute, this study is one of the first to show intervention programs can be effective in increasing breast self-exams. . . .
The Portland Alumnae chapter of the Delta Sigma Theta Sorority is planning to rehabilitate and expand its June Key Delta House into the Delta Sigma Theta June Key Community Center. The goal is to take what was once an abandoned gas station and turn it into a sustainable, environmentally friendly community center. The Portland Alumnae Chapter of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority (DST) is an organization of 250,000 college-educated women committed to public service. . . .
Another seven probable cases of influenza A, also known as swine flu, were identified in King County Thursday, bringing the probable total to 10. None have been confirmed but officials said laboratory samples have been sent to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for final confirmation. As of late Thursday afternoon, Oregon public officials said the number of cases identified as probable Influenza A remained at one, with additional samples still being tested by the Oregon State Public Health Laboratory. . . .
A man convicted of helping the Taliban testified at a terrorism trial Wednesday that it was his idea to create a militant jihad training camp in Oregon to recruit men from England and the United States to fight in Afghanistan, but he no longer supports terrorist causes. James Ujaama, a Muslim convert who lived in Seattle, told a jury in Manhattan federal court that he envisioned the camp, which never came to fruition, in 1999 as a place for Muslims to get military training to fight in Afghanistan . . .
Black publishers of the National Newspaper Publishing Association (NNPA) are concerned that there is nothing "designed" in President Barack Obama's $787 billion stimulus package to do business with struggling Black newspapers in this flailing economy. "While we publishers wholeheartedly applaud the president's efforts of making certain economically devastated communities of color are able to benefit from the billions of dollars within the stimulus package, it is unclear whether any of the money has been earmarked to otherwise help educate the very communities serviced by the Black media, as well as how they are to access the myriad of opportunities," NNPA Board Chairman John B. Smith, Sr. wrote in an April 23 letter to White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emmanuel; President Obama's Special Advisor Valerie Jarrett, and U.S. Rep. Barbara Lee (D-Calif.), chair of the Congressional Black Caucus . . . .
Oregon State health officials have identified six more probable cases of swine flu, increasing the number of Oregonians likely hit with the illness to 11.
Dr. Mel Kohn, acting director of the Oregon Public Health Division, said the probable cases are in Multnomah, Washington, Polk, Lane, Wallowa, Umatilla and Marion counties and include three children, two teenagers and six adults . . . .
Pamela Butler has become one among the average looking men, women and children from a variety of economic, social and ethnic backgrounds who make up the more than 102,764 active missing persons in the U.S., according to the National Crime Information Center. Mainstream media continues to fail to present what is in fact a very diverse missing persons population while mostly concentrating on White women. Butler's story received local news coverage by the local television networks, News Channel 8, MSNBC and the Washington Post, but not on a national level. . . .