Makerere University under the umbrella organization of the Inter-University Council for East Africa (IUCEA) has embarked on a new project aimed at producing drugs to alleviate HIV/AIDS in East Africa.
Makerere University under the umbrella organization of the Inter-University Council for East Africa (IUCEA) has embarked on a new project aimed at producing drugs to alleviate HIV/AIDS in East Africa.
The three year project titled “Value chain analysis and development of plant-derived medicinal products for management of HIV/AIDS in the face of climate change in the Lake Victoria basin” is supported by the Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency (SIDA) and is implemented by the
Inter-University Council for East Africa (IUCEA), through the Lake Victoria Research Initiative (VicRes). The project has a budget of USD$600,000.
This project is going to determine and evaluate plants to produce new anti-HIV therapies. And because plants, the sources of traditional medicines, are threatened, this project will also research, demonstrate and promote plant conservation.
This is a regional project with partnering universities in Uganda, Kenya, Rwanda and Burundi. The project is headed by Prof. Philip Aduma of Maseno, Kenya. Professor John Tabuti, an ethnobotanist in Makerere University's College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences is leading the Ugandan team.
These plans and more were shared during the 23rd Vice Chancellor's Media Briefing held on Monday 7th November 2011. Please see Downloads for full proceedings.
Downloads
Highlights from the 23rd Media Briefing: doc(500KB), pdf(55KB)
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