Contagious ideas on World AIDS Day

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[PRESS INVITATION 11/27/2014] Should researchers devote all their time to research, or should they also engage in political and practical issues? Do they have to be activists themselves in order for their research to be of use, or does is there a risk of losing their objectivity? This is the theme of a lecture and debate at Karolinska Institutet on World AIDS Day.

The research concerning HIV and AIDS has been enormously successful. The disease became known to the world at the end of the 1980s, and some three decades later there is an effective treatment ensuring an almost normal life for many of those afflicted. But today more than 35 million of the world's inhabitants live with HIV and much remains to be done in the healthcare systems to prevent the spread of infection and provide people with access to treatment. What role should researchers take in order for research to be translated into practice? Should researchers themselves be activists and spread ideas, or do interactions between researchers and activists need to be intensified?

"We researchers are naive in believing that if we just produce good research, it will be put to use. The fact is that a researcher who is also an activist may not be seen as serious by their colleagues, which can be a problem. They can be perceived as becoming biased in their research,” says Sarah Thomsen, researcher and coordinator at the World Health Doctoral Programme and previously employed by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs as an expert advisor.

Both researchers and users of research are invited to the debate at Karolinska Institutet. Several public authorities are represented among the participants, such as Sida (the Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency), the National Board of Health and Welfare, and the Public Health Agency of Sweden. Noah's Ark is among the participating activists. The conference starts with a lecture by Kent Buse, Chief of Strategic Policy Directions and Senior Advisor to the Executive Director of the United Nations programme against HIV and AIDS, UNAIDS. He will speak on the subject of Contagious Ideas and how he perceives the role and responsibilities of the researcher in AIDS issues.

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Sweden's basic grant for UNAIDS for 2014 is SEK 230 million. In total, Sweden has supported the fight against HIV and AIDS with SEK 1.24 million in 2014. That is four per cent of all foreign aid,” says Pia Engstrand, desk officerin the UN group at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, who is also participating in the discussion.

Journalists are welcome to attend the conference and interview the participants
Conference: Contagious ideas: HIV/AIDS researchers as activists?
Time: World AIDS Day, 1 December 2014, 12.30-16.00
Place: Nobel Forum, Nobels väg 1, Karolinska Institutet Campus Solna

View the programme here.

If you have any questions, please contact:
Project coordinator, Associate Professor Sarah Thomsen
+46 (0)70-280 69 79
sarah.thomsen@ki.se 

Professor Anna Mia Ekström
+46 (0)8-524 833 71, +46 (0)73-627 48 84
Anna.Mia.Ekstrom@ki.se 

Press Officer Sabina Bossi
+46 (0)8-524 860 66, +46 (0)70-614 60 66
sabina.bossi@ki.se

Karolinska Institutet is one of the world’s leading medical universities. It accounts for over 40 per cent of the medical academic research conducted in Sweden and offers the country’s broadest range of education in medicine and health sciences. Since 1901 the Nobel Assembly at Karolinska Institutet has selected the Nobel laureates in Physiology or Medicine.

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