AIDS and Babies

The good news out of the World AIDS Conference in Geneva today: A shorter and less expensive program of AZT for pregnant woman -- one more feasible in poor countries with high infection rates -- can cut the risk of pregnant women passing HIV onto their babies during birth. The bad news: Many women in developing nations don't know they need the drugs, because routine testing simply isn't available.

The good news out of the World AIDS Conference in Geneva today: A shorter and less expensive program of AZT for pregnant woman -- one more feasible in poor countries with high infection rates -- can cut the risk of pregnant women passing HIV onto their babies during birth. The bad news: Many women in developing nations don't know they need the drugs, because routine testing simply isn't available.