Aids Epidemic Essay

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    The History of HIV/AIDS Epidemic in the U.S Introduction I. According to the United Nations at the end of 2015 an estimated 36.7 million people worldwide were living with HIV/Aids. 1.8 Million Of those people are children. However, only 1.2 Million of those people are in the United States. Body I. 1980s/Beginning of AIDS Epidemic A. The U.S Centers for Disease Control and Prevention U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) on June 5, 1981 reported what they thought to be very rare

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    Should the HIV/AIDs epidemic in Africa be described as a feminist issue? With higher transmission rates concentrated among African women, and the vast majority of new mother-child transmissions occurring within African countries, HIV seemingly fits into the scope of feminist concerns. As described in Oppong and Kalipeni’s contribution to Kalipeni, et.al.’s HIV & AIDS in African: Beyond Epidemiology, the consistent classifying of the HIV/AIDS epidemic as being the direct result of distinct African

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    we are blessed to have health professional that were able to discover HIV/AIDS and the causes of Kaposi 's Sarcoma and Pneumocystis pneumonia of homosexual men in July 1981, following the report of these cases of PCP and cases of other rare life-threatening opportunistic infections and cancers in America we began to recognize the importance of being aware of HIV/AIDS. These articles outlined major events in the AIDS epidemic. The thing that stood out to me is the information on Kaposi 's sarcoma

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    Summary of The Film A Closer Walk is a movie about AIDS epidemic. The purpose of the film is to illustrate the underlying causes of AIDS; the relationship between health, dignity, and human rights; and the universal need for action, compassion, and commitment to counter what has become the worst plague in human history. Per statistics from the movie, acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) has infected approximately 60 million people, 800,000 children were born with HIV and 10,000 people die every

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    released about the AIDs epidemic, certain groups were targeted in negative ways. Homosexuals and social pariahs were concluded as the ones who could contract AIDs, and everyone else was deemed safe. At the time, this conclusion seemed logical to doctors because the majority of their patients fell into this category. Soon homosexuals were looked at in a negative light once the disease was named GRID or ‘Gay Cancer’. After physicians “alerted the medical community” (Reeves, 14) about AIDs, other clinicians

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    pushes people to make conclusions is readily notable in the AIDS epidemic of Haiti. Haitians reacted to AIDS in a similar manner as other cultures, but there are also differences that are specific to their community. Like many cultures, Haitians reasoned the occurrence of AIDS with explanations beyond the scope of medicine, with diseases that were known to them, or were instead in complete denial. The uniqueness of the occurrence of AIDS in Haiti was that there was no direct cause that could be

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    people receiving antiretroviral therapy will have viral suppression. These goals were enacted by the UNAIDS group in 2014 and the 90-90-90 goal has a target year of 2020. UNAIDS is referring to this as “an ambitious treatment target to help end the AIDS epidemic” (90–90–90 - An Ambitious Treatment). It is ambitious, but it is clear that is goal is possible in at least a single country. The fact that Sweden was able to reach the UNAIDS’s goal within 2 years is incredible. While this goal was achievable

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    AIDS: The Modern Day Epidemic Essay

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    AIDS: The Modern Day Epidemic Did you know that if a straight line of pennies was made down any given road, extending one mile, there would be over a hundred thousand dollars worth of change on the street? Dimes? Well over a million dollars. How about something that hits closer to home, something like lives? In 1996, when the AIDS pandamenic was at its peak, a memorial quilt made of individual panels about six feet by three feet in size was displayed in Washington D.C. Each square of the quilt

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    formally identified as acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS). Another two years would pass before scientists were able to isolate the retrovirus that causes AIDS, which in 1984 was termed human immunodeficiency viruses (HIV). Although a successful discovery, in the absence of a proven treatment, HIV and AIDS had free rein in which to leave in its wake a global path of fear, illness, and death. To understand the totality of HIV/AIDS, consider the following. Since the onset of the pandemic more

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    HIV and AIDS: The Epidemic Essay example

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    HIV and AIDS have affected millions of people throughout the world. Since 1981, there have been 25 million deaths due to AIDS involving men, women, and children. Presently there are 40 million people living with HIV and AIDS around the world and two million die each year from AIDS related illnesses. The Center for Disease Control estimates that one-third of the one million Americans living with HIV are not aware that they have it. The earliest known case of HIV was in 1959. It was discovered in a

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