Introduction Many 18-24 year old adults are sexually active, but not necessarily monogamous relationships. Because of action, people are vulnerable to AIDS and other sexually transmitted diseases. Young people work daytime and socialize at night. It almost always contains substances such as alcohol and drugs. Therefore it is easy to overcome by "feeling it right" rather than "what is safe or whether to protect them". Behavior is the key to controlling AIDS.
The purpose of this research is to study the spread of this HIV / AIDS in the context of globalization. In this article, I will explain how some of the impact of globalization influences the spread of HIV / AIDS, especially in Asia, and the impact that globalization and HIV / AIDS have on individual countries of women and Asia. Globalization can be defined as "the interrelationship between capital, production, idea and culture is getting faster" (Kennedy, 1996). In addition to leading the spread of cross-border ideas, information, people, things and technology, globalization has confronted the world with the rapid spread of infectious diseases like HIV / AIDS (Gupta, 2004).
This report aims to understand the social and behavioral factors that contribute to the epidemic of HIV / AIDS. Inequality has exacerbated the spread of HIV / AIDS at various levels of poverty, sex, education and health. While poor and vulnerable groups are most at risk for HIV / AIDS, rich countries that can purchase antiretroviral drugs have appropriate healthcare systems and educational policies, and the infection rate is rather low. The stigma surrounding HIV exacerbates these effects, fragile groups are still marginal and risky people.
Part of the impact of globalization, such as large-scale migration of population, expansion of economic inequality, development of sex industry, is considered to be the cause of the spread of HIV / AIDS in Asia. Women are particularly vulnerable to economic adverse effects from globalization and are often more vulnerable to HIV / AIDS. Experts predict that Asia will face a potentially serious AIDS crisis unless a new strategy to deal with HIV / AIDS epidemics and delay the spread of disease is developed in the near future.