About Us

Connecting, Supporting, Making a Difference!

The Portland Area Global AIDS Coalition (PAGAC) is a grassroots network connecting the over two hundred local organizations which address issues of HIV/AIDS, global health and global poverty, both here in Portland and around the world. They include faith based organizations, school clubs, chapters of national advocacy organizations and more. They vary in size from large organizations such as Mercy Corps to one person crusades. The work of the member organizations varies from providing direct health care services to working in the arts, engaging in advocacy, educating women and children, working with micro-finance projects and more. Each organization strives to make an impact in the areas in which they work.

News

AIDS Researchers Isolate New Potent And Broadly Effective Antibodies Against HIV Discovery Provides New Directions For AIDS Vaccine Design

 A team of researchers at and associated with the International AIDS Vaccine Initiative (IAVI), The Scripps Research Institute, the biotechnology company Theraclone Sciences and Monogram Biosciences Inc., a LabCorp company, report in the current issue of Nature the isolation of 17 novel antibodies capable of neutralizing a broad spectrum of variants of

The Horn of Africa Famine

UN agencies and humanitarian partners are rallying to provide life-saving assistance to 12.4 million people across the Horn of Africa, but needs are rising.

HIV/AIDS: "Worrying" Drop in Global Spending

Aug. 17, 2011 

International funding for HIV fell by 10 percent in 2010 from the previous year, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation and UNAIDS; activists worry that a continued reduction will undermine progress in global HIV prevention and treatment efforts. 

Midwife Shortage Impacts Maternal Health

According to IRIN News, June 27, 2011, Prince Mshiyeni Memorial Hospital's success that has positively impacted maternal care in the South African township of Umlazi (the largest outside the South African city of Durban) is "because of the teamwork between doctors and midwives." With 1,200 deliveries a month, the staff of 123 midwives and 15 doctors have managed to reduce both infant and maternal mortality rates. 

Read more about the role midwives play in ensuring that 95 percent of those women in need of ARV's receive them, the rate of mother to child transmission of HIV is below 3% at IRIN News.

The OHSU Kathryn Robertson Memorial Lecture in Global Health

In a thoughtful, intellectual, and informative lecture, Dr. Slaughter spoke from a from a personal perspective on how the United States Department of State is shifting its foreign policy focus from state to state/heads of state to heads of state diplomacy to a societal concentration. As such, Global Health is a central part of US foreign policy. Dr. Slaughter was instrumental in shaping the development of the Global Health Initiative (http://www.ghi.gov/) in her work with Secretary Hillary Clinton’s 2010 Quadrennial Diplomacy and Development Review: Leading Through Civilian Power (http://www.state.gov/s/dmr/qddr/).

WHO Releases First List Of 30 Priority Medicines For Women, Children

The WHO on Monday released a list of 30 medicines that “are essential for treating common diseases of mothers and children,” Ghana News Agency reports (3/21).

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