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NY / STOCKTAKING REPORT

The Fifth Stocktaking Report 2010" launched on Tuesday, charts the progress that's been made in preventing the transmission of HIV from mothers to children. UNICEF
U101201b
Video Length
00:02:24
Production Date
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MAMS Id
U101201b
Description

STORY: NY / STOCKTAKING REPORT
TRT: 2.24
SOURCE: UNICEF
RESTRICTIONS: NONE
LANGUAGE: ENGLISH / NATS

DATELINE: 30 NOVEMBER 2010, NEW YORK, USA / FILE

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Shotlist

NOVEMBER 2010, NEW YORK, USA

1. Pan left, panelists at the conference
2. Med shot, audience listening to announcement of the launch
3. Zoom in, cover page of “Children and AIDS: Fifth Stocktaking Report 2010”

DECEMBER 2008, LESOTHO

4. Various shots, mother and baby in a hospital’s maternal ward

NOVEMBER 2010, NEW YORK, USA

5. SOUNDBITE (English) Anthony Lake, Executive Director, UNICEF:
“When we released the first stocktaking report in 2005, fewer than 2 out of 10 HIV positive pregnant women from low and middle income countries received antiretroviral treatment to prevent transmission of the virus to their children. Today it’s over half”
6. Med shot, audience member at the press conference in New York takes down notes
7. Med shot, panelists at the press conference in New York

FILE, DATE UNKNOWN, KENYA

8. Wide shot, health worker talks about the “Mother Baby Pack’ to a group of women
9. Med shot, health worker holds up a ‘Mother Baby Pack’
10. Med shot, group of women listening to the health worker

NOVEMBER 2010, NEW YORK, USA

11. SOUNDBITE (English) Anthony Lake, Executive Director, UNICEF:
“We know how to reach those hit hardest by the AIDS crisis and the time has come for us to recognize that because we can, we must”

FILE, DATE UNKNOWN, NAMIBIA

12. Med shot, nurses handing medicines to a patient over the counter
13. Close up, little girl
14. Med shot, pregnant woman in a hospital ward

NOVEMBER 2010, NEW YORK, USA

15. SOUNDBITE (English) Jimmy Kolker, Chief of HIV/AIDS, UNICEF NY:
“Everyone has to do more, national governments need to increase responsibility for both prevention and treatment, care and support, and donor money needs to be used effectively. We are working clearly in a 190 countries around the world for UNICEF to help build that that government capacity to use resources as effectively as possible.”

FILE / DATE AND PLACE UNKNOWN

17. Pan left, babies sleeping in a hospital ward

NOVEMBER 2010, NEW YORK, USA

18. SOUNDBITE (English) Vanessa Redgrave, UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador:
“I myself can’t imagine any greater monument, that any human being in a position of leadership temporarily or longer, than the respect of their people because they put children first. That’s the goal on which ‘must’ and ‘can’ becomes possible”

FILE / DATE AND PLACE UNKNOWN

19. Wide shot, baby being weighed at a clinic
20. Close shot, baby sleeping
21. Med shot, mother and baby in a hospital ward
22. Close up, newborn baby

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Storyline

An AIDS free generation is possible, that’s the big message of a new report released by the United Nations in New York, marking World Aids Day

“Children and AIDS: the Fifth Stocktaking Report 2010” charts the remarkable progress that’s been made in preventing the transmission of HIV from mothers to children.

SOUNDBITE (English) Anthony Lake, Executive Director, UNICEF:
“When we released the first stocktaking report in 2005, fewer than 2 out of 10 HIV positive pregnant women from low and middle income countries received antiretroviral treatment to prevent transmission of the virus to their children. Today it’s over half”

While highlighting the significance of the report, experts stressed the importance of reaching the hardest hit communities, a complex challenge that has simple solutions like this easy to administer Mother-Baby pack developed by UNICEF that brings life-saving antiretroviral treatment to women in remote areas

SOUNDBITE (English) Anthony Lake, Executive Director, UNICEF:
“We know how to reach those hit hardest by the AIDS crisis and the time has come for us to recognize that because we can, we must”

UNICEF and it’s partners called for the complete elimination of new infants by 2015

SOUNDBITE (English) Jimmy Kolker, Chief of HIV/AIDS, UNICEF NY:
“Everyone has to do more, national governments need to increase responsibility for both prevention, and treatment, care and support, and donor money needs to be used effectively. We are working clearly in a 190 countries around the world for UNICEF to help build that that government capacity to use resources as effectively as possible”

UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador and a passionate advocate for children, actress Vanessa Redgrave said putting children at the center of the global fight against AIDS has been a huge step forward

SOUNDBITE (English) Vanessa Redgrave, UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador:
“I myself can’t imagine any greater monument, that any human being in a position of leadership temporarily or longer, than the respect of their people because they put children first. That’s the goal on which ‘must’ and ‘can’ becomes possible”

And the latest UN Report does give reasons to believe that the final chapter to the story of children and AIDS may not be too far away

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