Transcript HIV/Aids
HIV/Aids
Overview
“The most serious disease epidemic of our
time.”
Caused by infection with the human
immunodeficiency virus
Recently tied to wild chimpanzees through
contact with their blood around 1931
Targets and destroys cells which
coordinate our immune system leaving us
vulnerable to diseases and cancers
Incidence
By 2004, 900,00 cases in U.S. with
500,000 deaths
Currently, 850,000 are living with HIV
40,000 new cases a year
Dramatic increases for teens
Worldwide 5 million new cases a year
42 million suffer from it
Another 45 mil. by 2006?
Transmission
HIV typically enters the body through
unprotected bodily fluid exchanges during
oral-genital, vaginal or anal intercourse
An additional 20% contract via
contaminated needles
Children can also contract from mother
before or during birth or through breast
feeding
Symptoms
Often it begins with a brief flulike illness a
few weeks after infection
Fevers, swollen lymph glands, rashes, loss
of appetite, muscle aches
Then bloody stools, repeated fevers, and
especially, oral candidiasis
Eventually antibodies to the virus are
detectable through blood tests
Course
As HIV spreads, the body loses its ability
to defend itself
Within 8-11 years one or more severe
diseases attack
Pneumonia, encephalitis, fungal infections,
salmonella are all common
Now improvement in drug therapies has
slowed the former rapid descent to death
Treatment
No cure
Thousands of scientists worldwide are
trying to cure or prevent
In 1996 a drug which inhibits the virus’
copying abilities emerged
HAART (Highly Active Antiretroviral
Therapy) has stymied the virus
Complicated regimen, toxic side-effects
Prevention
To be completely safe, no interpersonal
sexual contact or a monogamous,
mutually faithful relationship
Short of that:
don’t share needles
avoid contact with semen
keep away from anuses, urine, sex
workers
Preventing STD Transmission
Pleas for abstinence and dissemination of
educational materials have failed to stem
the tide
Perhaps advice concerning assessing risk
rather than insisting on abstinence is the
most practical path
Assessing Risk
Look
to yourself first – get a
comprehensive screening
Spend a lot of time with your
prospective partner before engaging
in sexual activity
Swimming
against the cultural tide
Self-disclosure
– but many lie
Obtain prior medical exams, costs can be
controlled
Use condoms
Avoid multiple partners
Wash, inspect, inform