If we think about the obvious long enough, it dissolves.
Since most of the transmission is sexual transmission, you have a regional or local response to the virus.
I think we should put the same weight now on the co-factors as we have on HIV.
It's clear that prevention will never be sufficient. That's why we need a vaccine that will be safe.
We don't know why, but there are some gradients of infection.
My proposal now is to test a vaccine first on people who have been infected, and if you show some efficacy at this level, you might be able to go further to study uninfected people in a population with a high rate of infection.
Another interesting field, which is my own, is cofactors, not only to the disease but also to transmission. I am still puzzled by the fact that you get more sexual transmission in some ethnic populations. One way to answer this is to look for genetic factors.
It's a whole lot more productive to be in problem-solving mode than it is to be in behavior modification mode.
I was sometimes called 'coconut' when I was at school.
The people with the best sense of what is essential to a community, of what gives and maintains its spirit, are often doing very humble, manual tasks. It is often the poorest person - the one who has a handica[p, is] ill or old - who is the most prophetic. People who carry responsibility must be close to them and know what they think, because it is often they who are free enough to see with the greatest clarity the needs, beauty and pain of the community.
I don't love Photoshop; I like imperfection. It doesn't mean ugly. I love a girl with a gap between her teeth, versus perfect white veneers. Perfection is just. . . boring. Perfect is what's natural or real; that is beauty.