AIDS babies shouldn't get top medicine, doctors say By LAURAN NEERGAARD Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON, D.C. Hun dreds of doctors say they would recommend withholding expensive medical care from babies born to HIV-infected mothers even when they didn't know if the baby actual ly had the AIDS virus. Most babies born to HIV-infect ed mothers do not develop the virus. The findings, reported in yester day's American Journal of Public Health, are "shocking," said Arthur Ammann of the Pediatric AIDS Foundation. New York researchers studied 951 neonatologists nationwide to determine how they would treat newborns who had such expensive to-treat conditions as kidney or heart disease in addition to being born to HIV-infected mothers. Some 700 neonatologists said they would recommend withhold ing certain aggressive treatments, such as cardiac surgery or kidney dialysis, from babies who definite ly have HIV. An additional 400 said knowing the mother was infected would alter their treatment deci sions even if the baby's own HIV tests weren't complete. The doctors were surveyed in 1991, and there is no way to know whether their opinions have changed, acknowledged the study's author, Betty Wolder Levin of the City University of New York. But some AIDS activists said doctors may be more reluctant to offer expensive therapy to infected babies today because of growing pressure to cut health costs. Ninety percent of HIV-infected children get their health care from Medic aid. "A lot of these children live well into their teens" with proper care, said Troy Petinbrink of the Nation al Association of People With AIDS. "That study could turn out to be even more (worrisome) now." Added Ammann: "It really tells us we've got to get the message out that there is treatment for HIV." About 25 percent of mothers with the HIV virus infect their babies, and women can cut the risk by two-thirds by taking the drug AZT during pregnancy. Doctors often don't know for several weeks which infants are infected, because babies are born with their mothers' immune cells. Newt Gingrich: Reform findings too late for '96 By JIM ABRAMS Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON, D.C. House Speaker Newt Gingrich pitched his plan yesterday for a commission on political reform, but said its find ings would come too late to affect the 1996 election. "Nothing is going to be done before the next election and every body knows that," the Georgia Republican said on NBC's "Meet the Press." "Nothing will apply to the 1996 election." Gingrich brushed aside criti cisms, from both parties, that the GOP leadership has cooled on cam paign and lobbying reform since Republicans gained control of Con gress and began seeing big gains in contributions. "The issue is much bigger than they think it is," Gingrich said. "We want to look at the totality of power in America, not just a very narrow definition of campaigns." At the urging of Republican freshmen, the House will take up a bill Thursday on restricting free meals, trips and other gifts mem bers can accept from lobbyists. Gingrich showed little enthusi asm for limitations, saying that if Congress is going to go that route, an outright ban on gifts would be better. "I would have an automatic thing that says, 'don't bring T shirts, don't bring caps."' On campaign reform, he promot ed his idea, first proposed a week ago, of appointing a bipartisan commission, with eight members from each side, to "look at the totality of politics." Under his proposal, the House and Senate would automatically have to take up any idea that is endorsed by three-fourths of the commission members, and review any idea that gets majority sup port. He said the commission would report to Congress by May 1, and legislation could probably be pre sented on the House floor by next summer. President Clinton and Gingrich agreed to set up such a commis sion during a joint appearance in New Hampshire last June, but the idea has made little headway since ~ ...00.,".„,* ~ • The Daily Collegian Mandy .50 . , • )Gr••%55142F • "••:, ' , -,, tv. / t., • • •"'. . A , 96,,..is by •■•.•••""" ' sitestritt r . -0-- nrionr)ay i : if s , ' 144 4' ; lie foll" ___„,....16 irogillf mild4aossirtisk tie WW I* • ! ;.! i' , ".. *_ i '1%., ~. Acoustic Daze 1 4 , 4. i, kodi v; • eirmia .i.,,T• - ~ ,,,.I ,f r . I got& 40* - the - giiii i ' ' .*.-';> ( I 4 (II - • 40.11 Daily Pitcher ~ . c 0 , ,, p .i.,41 1 .,. a d ..., ; „... ,arr Tfr : i..„;., ~ ... I 4 , 1 .. I '4.lmll"ft* Feature ' } fregsw -, ° 7-f:4; i ~•,,- i ~,, 0 ~, , -. , ~ f ~.. 4 : Happy Hours t g "' ' ~, 4,. 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