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NEWS RELEASES
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A children's dance
group performs outside the newly renamed Romanian
Clinical Center of Excellece during ceremonies at
the center in Constanta, Romania. Photo by Smiley
Pool |
HOUSTON (Dec. 6, 2007) – A center
that opened in Romania in 2001 to help young children with HIV/AIDS
survive for longer periods is now adapting to its success with an
expanded focus of caring for the adult needs of these individuals.
This week, formal
ceremonies were held to dedicate the Baylor International Pediatric
AIDS Initiative’s Romanian Clinical Center of Excellence. The center
is a joint program of the Infectious Diseases Hospital Constanta,
Baylor College of Medicine and Texas Children’s Hospital.
“We are adapting to changing needs,” said Dr.
Mark Kline, president of BIPAI,
chief of the retrovirology clinic at Texas Children’s and professor
of pediatrics at BCM. “We are dealing with issues today that we
couldn’t have imagined a decade ago. At the time, we were just
concerned with keeping the children alive for another month, another
year. And today, we find that the HIV care is a relatively minor
part of what we are doing. We are much more involved with primary
medical and psychosocial needs.”
BIPAI opened the
state-of-the-art Romanian-American Children’s Center in 2001, with
funding support from the Sisters of Charity of the Incarnate Word
and Abbott Laboratories, to provide outpatient care to the hundreds
of HIV-infected children in the area. At the time, the situation was
grim, with children dying at a high rate.
As a result of the
center, the mortality rate dropped from 15 percent in 2001 to 1
percent in 2006.
Now many of those
children are in their late teens and early 20s, with different
issues to face. Kline said the decision was made to transition the
program, rather than transition the patients away from the center to
an adult program.
“We’re choosing to
expand our own range of services to accommodate the entire age range
from infancy to adulthood,” Kline said. “We will continue to provide
medical and psychosocial services to these individuals, but we’re
also going to tackle issues like housing and job training, education
and subjects surrounding marriage and family.”
The Center of
Excellence will provide services under the same roof, including
programs in infectious diseases, pulmonary diseases, gynecology and
dental care; psychosocial and vocational counseling, social
assistance, family planning and support groups; and education for
healthy independent living.
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