World AIDS DAY info

Granny wonderin' what dey gonna do when it comes here?
:eusa_eh:
Drug-resistant HIV 'on increase' in sub-Saharan Africa
22 July 2012 - Monitoring of patients helps in detecting drug resistance
Drug-resistant HIV has been increasing in parts of sub-Saharan Africa over the last decade, according to experts writing in the Lancet. Studies on 26,000 untreated HIV-positive people in developing countries were reviewed by the team. They said resistance could build up if people fail to stick to drug regimes, and because monitoring could be poor.

A UK HIV organisation said resistance was a serious problem in Africa where alternative treatments were lacking. The researchers, from the World Health Organization (WHO) and University College London (UCL) found the most rapid increase in drug resistance occurred in East Africa, at 29% per year. In Southern Africa, it was 14% per year. There was no change in resistance over time in Latin America and in West and Central Africa.

'Early warning'

Writing in the Lancet, authors Dr Silvia Bertagnolio from the WHO and Dr Ravindra Gupta at UCL said: "Without continued and increased national and international efforts, rising HIV drug resistance could jeopardise a decade-long trend of decreasing HIV/Aids-related illness and death in low- and middle-income countries." Dr Gupta told the BBC: "Drug resistance is a consequence of people not taking their medication properly. "We do expect to see drug resistance, and it's at around 10% in the UK and US. But here, we monitor people regularly and switch people to different drugs if they develop resistance."

He said that quite basic measures could help people to better adhere to drug regimes in developing countries, such as access to food and clean water so they can take their drugs, and monitoring patients as effectively as possible. The researchers said no changes were needed to the drug regimes, but Dr Gupta said: "This work gives us an early-warning that things could get worse."

More BBC News - Drug-resistant HIV 'on increase' in sub-Saharan Africa
 
Granny wonderin' what dey gonna do when it comes here?
:eusa_eh:
Drug-resistant HIV 'on increase' in sub-Saharan Africa
22 July 2012 - Monitoring of patients helps in detecting drug resistance
Drug-resistant HIV has been increasing in parts of sub-Saharan Africa over the last decade, according to experts writing in the Lancet. Studies on 26,000 untreated HIV-positive people in developing countries were reviewed by the team. They said resistance could build up if people fail to stick to drug regimes, and because monitoring could be poor.

A UK HIV organisation said resistance was a serious problem in Africa where alternative treatments were lacking. The researchers, from the World Health Organization (WHO) and University College London (UCL) found the most rapid increase in drug resistance occurred in East Africa, at 29% per year. In Southern Africa, it was 14% per year. There was no change in resistance over time in Latin America and in West and Central Africa.

'Early warning'

Writing in the Lancet, authors Dr Silvia Bertagnolio from the WHO and Dr Ravindra Gupta at UCL said: "Without continued and increased national and international efforts, rising HIV drug resistance could jeopardise a decade-long trend of decreasing HIV/Aids-related illness and death in low- and middle-income countries." Dr Gupta told the BBC: "Drug resistance is a consequence of people not taking their medication properly. "We do expect to see drug resistance, and it's at around 10% in the UK and US. But here, we monitor people regularly and switch people to different drugs if they develop resistance."

He said that quite basic measures could help people to better adhere to drug regimes in developing countries, such as access to food and clean water so they can take their drugs, and monitoring patients as effectively as possible. The researchers said no changes were needed to the drug regimes, but Dr Gupta said: "This work gives us an early-warning that things could get worse."

More BBC News - Drug-resistant HIV 'on increase' in sub-Saharan Africa

HIV does NOT equal AIDS.

To date, there has been NO scientific paper that proves so.
Diseases born of poor water, food, shelter, healthcare resources that have been treated successfully for decades previously are NOW indicators of AIDS. So time and effort is wasted on trying to eradicate an anti-body that DOES NOT cause AIDS.

Case in point from one of the doctors that helped discover HIV:

UC Berkeley professor denies link between HIV and AIDS - The Daily Californian

http://davidrasnick.com/Home_files/Duesberg 2011, IJAE, AIDS since 1984.pdf
 
Second only to MM global warming, AIDS is the biggest whiny scam in history. If they considered two things we wouldn't need an AIDS day. "Keep it in your pants" and "don't share a dirty needle". What do you think the "A" stands for?
 

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