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Peter Piot

    17 février 1949

    Peter Piot est un expert de renommée mondiale qui a dirigé la prestigieuse London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine et a été Secrétaire général adjoint de l'ONU et Directeur exécutif de l'ONUSIDA. Son travail se concentre sur les défis mondiaux de la santé et la prévention des maladies. Piot apporte des perspectives précieuses du domaine de la santé publique et de la lutte internationale contre les épidémies à son écriture. Son œuvre offre une perspective sur les complexités des crises sanitaires et la nécessité d'une coopération mondiale.

    Hepatitis B
    No Time to Lose - A Life in Pursuit of Deadly Viruses
    No Time to Lose
    AIDS Between Science and Politics
    • AIDS Between Science and Politics

      • 216pages
      • 8 heures de lecture
      3,2(9)Évaluer

      Peter Piot, founding executive director of the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS), recounts his experience as a clinician, scientist, and activist fighting the disease from its earliest manifestation to today. The AIDS pandemic was not only catastrophic to the health of millions worldwide but also fractured international relations, global access to new technologies, and public health policies in nations across the globe. As he struggled to get ahead of the disease, Piot found science does little good when it operates independently of politics and economics, and politics is worthless if it rejects scientific evidence and respect for human rights. Piot describes how the epidemic altered global attitudes toward sexuality, the character of the doctor-patient relationship, the influence of civil society in international relations, and traditional partisan divides. AIDS thrust health into national and international politics where, he argues, it rightly belongs. The global reaction to AIDS over the past decade is the positive result of this partnership, showing what can be achieved when science, politics, and policy converge on the ground. Yet it remains a fragile achievement, and Piot warns against complacency and the consequences of reduced investments. He refuses to accept a world in which high levels of HIV infection are the norm. Instead, he explains how to continue to reduce the incidence of the disease to minute levels through both prevention and treatment, until a vaccine is discovered. -- Publisher description

      AIDS Between Science and Politics
    • The story of a microbiologist's remarkable career, from identifying the Ebola virus to pioneering AIDS research and policy.

      No Time to Lose
    • "An invaluable portrait of the evolution of international health in recent decades." —William Bynum, Wall Street Journal When Peter Piot was in medical school, a professor warned, “There’s no future in infectious diseases. They’ve all been solved.” Fortunately, Piot ignored him, and the result has been an exceptional, adventure-filled career. In the 1970s, as a young man, Piot was sent to Central Africa as part of a team tasked with identifying a grisly new virus. Crossing into the quarantine zone on the most dangerous missions, he studied local customs to determine how this disease—the Ebola virus—was spreading. Later, Piot found himself in the field again when another mysterious epidemic broke out: AIDS. He traveled throughout Africa, leading the first international AIDS initiatives there. Then, as founder and director of UNAIDS, he negotiated policies with leaders from Fidel Castro to Thabo Mbeki and helped turn the tide of the epidemic. Candid and engrossing, No Time to Lose captures the urgency and excitement of being on the front lines in the fight against today’s deadliest diseases.

      No Time to Lose - A Life in Pursuit of Deadly Viruses