The AIDS and HIV epidemic once captured global attention, proliferating from a single case in 1981 to the nation’s leading ...
40 years of AIDS taught us epidemiologic humility. We need to apply that lesson in fighting Covid-19
Forty years later, I can still recall my visceral reaction to reading an article in the June 5, 1981, issue of Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR), which opened with this sentence: “In the ...
A look at how HIV/AIDS continues to affect people worldwide. — -- It has been 35 years since researchers from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention first reported on a mysterious ...
“I never thought this would happen to me,” she said, in between attempts to catch her breath and wipe away the tears that fell from her face. “HIV isn’t supposed to happen to me.” I will never forget ...
Medical experts say the COVID-19 vaccines do not make people more susceptible to HIV or AIDS and that the shots don’t weaken the immune system. They bolster it. See the sources for this fact-check ...
With more than 36.9 million people infected globally, HIV continues to be a major public health issue. Those living with the virus are at an increased risk for other non-AIDS diseases, such as ...
In a cohort of patients receiving ART, lower CD4-cell counts increased the risk not only for AIDS-defining conditions but also for non-AIDS-defining disease. Lower CD4-cell counts among HIV-infected ...
From AIDS to Covid-19: Trump’s decades of spreading dangerous misinformation about disease outbreaks
Donald Trump has spent decades spreading and sowing dangerous misinformation about disease outbreaks – from falsely suggesting AIDS can be transmitted through kissing to warning Americans not to get ...
No evidence of exponential increase in ‘AIDS-associated diseases and cancers’ after COVID-19 vaccine
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said it hasn’t detected any unusual or unexpected patterns for HIV or AIDS-associated diseases and cancers following COVID-19 immunization. The ...
Many say it took a televised handshake for China to wake up. On World AIDS Day 2003, Prime Minister Wen Jiabao shook the hand of an HIV-positive person, and a closeup of their joined hands was ...
Researchers have identified a mysterious new disease that has left scores of people in Asia and some in the United States with AIDS-like symptoms even though they are not infected with HIV. The ...
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