A little over two decades ago, addressing Nigeria’s HIV crisis topped U.S. President George W. Bush’s priorities. Africa’s most populous nation had 3.5 million HIV cases, and the disease threatened to ...
Darwin Tenoria first learned about HIV when he was on his deathbed. He was 27 and weighed just 70 pounds. "I died for two minutes and I was revived in the hospital," he remembers. When he woke up, he ...
"The future looks bright as far as a cure," one top HIV cure researcher told LGBTQ Nation.
One-third of children with HIV who received very early ART had no detectable virus in their body for at least 12 weeks after stopping treatment, according to study findings. It was another sign that ...
Thirty-six years ago, the World Health Organization declared Dec. 1 as World AIDS Day, creating an international day of awareness for those living with HIV and AIDS. For us, every Dec. 1 is a call to ...
Living with HIV means becoming fluent in a language of numbers that might seem confusing at first but actually hold the key to your health and future. Two numbers in particular – your viral load and ...
The science works. The system doesn't.
This poster reaffirms tirzepatide’s use in patients with HIV. As patients with HIV are diagnosed with diabetes at a higher rate, it is important that GLP-1 RAs are known to be safe and effective for ...
Research into this new way of treating HIV is only beginning. When it was first named in 1983, HIV was thought to be a death sentence. The virus replicated rapidly in the people it infected because ...
The use of opioids alone does not significantly impair cognition in patients with HIV infection, but the combined use of opioids and antidepressants is linked to poorer neurocognitive performance.
(The Conversation is an independent and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.) Kathryn Rhine, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus (THE CONVERSATION) A ...