MONTREAL:
A new digital media service will foster
the global collaboration of physicians and help them to share the latest
advances in AIDS and other virus research, according to its Canadian promoters.
The new
bilingual French and English service, "viroXchange", is funded by
large pharmaceutical companies but will provide "independent"
reporting on the latest medical breakthroughs for healthcare professionals,
they said.
"ViroXchange
broadens access to information by researchers in general, while allowing them
to share their knowledge on a global scale," Dr Mark Wainberg, a member of
the initiative's Scientific Committee, said in a statement.
"It's
important for the scientific community to be aware of the latest trials and of
their impact on research priorities and scenarios. In this context, viroXchange
allows us to better collaborate."
The
digital service, unveiled at an annual HIV/AIDS conference held here in Montreal,
will mainly produce online videos, said Guy-Charles Pelletier, CEO of the
Neuhauz company and architect of the project.
A team
of reporters will cover the 10 major scientific conferences each year,
interviewing specialists on camera about the latest studies and advances in
HIV/AIDS and Hepatitis C research, he said.
The
videos will then be edited by a team led by Dr Rejean Thomas, a leading figure
in the fight against AIDS in Quebec and head of the largest specialised clinic
in the province, in consultation with the Scientific Committee.
The
target audience is doctors and other healthcare specialists, especially those
working in AIDS-ravaged Africa and elsewhere in the developing world, who
cannot afford to attend several international conferences each year.
It will
also be geared towards specialists who want to stay up to date on the latest
findings but do not always have time to leaf through major journals, organizers
say.
The
company will begin with just 20 employees, 10 of them permanent, but Pelletier
hopes to expand the staff to 100 within the next three years, creating what he
calls the "CNN of virology".
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AFP/al
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