AIDS: Looking for treatment 788, 400 minutes According to data published by the New York Health Department in 1999, patients need an average of 19 months to survive after diagnosing the occurrence of AIDS: 788, 400 minutes. These figures have about 20 years of available knowledge: HIV has not appeared in the United States till the late 1970s and was not recognized until the 1980s, making AIDS research a relatively new field. AIDS consciousness has long traveled a way when being initially humiliated and associated with dangerous lesbian sex, then professional basketball player Magic Johnson announced that he is mainstream as infected .
What is AIDS? How do you cure it? Please read this report on treatment and prevention of HIV and learn about this. In this report, some of the covered topics will be small reports on AIDS, prevention and possible treatments. This report aims to prove whether there is treatment for AIDS and whether there is a way to prevent HIV infection. In other words, do you think that AIDS patients just kill people? There are four ways to spread HIV. The first is sexual relations with people infected with viruses. In this way, AIDS spreads through semen. This is another way most people take on AIDS. (Madaras, 187) The second most common way for people to develop AIDS is intravenous injection. It diffuses through the blood on the needle and other body fluids, and when others use the same needle, they are more likely to become infected by the virus. The third most common way to spread AIDS is transfusion
In the 1980s, AIDS entered the world stage. This is a new, horrible disease that can not be healed and is preoccupied in the region and country. People believe that you can get AIDS by touching people who have AIDS and even sitting on the same toilet seat. Patients are avoided and up to 50% of patients surveyed in the United States think that AIDS patients should be isolated. After January 15, 2009 US Airways Flight 1549 struck a large group of geese, the two engines lost momentum immediately after taking off from LaGuardia airport. Captain Chesley Sullenberger recognized that he would not send it back to the airport, landed on the Hudson River, and rescued 155 passengers and crew. He expressed it as "the most disgusting thing he experienced ever, painful appetite, a feeling of falling to the ground", but it remained calm. I stayed on the board
At the beginning of the 21st century, AIDS has not been treated yet, so that potential AIDS women victims can take appropriate precautionary measures to avoid sexual relations with high-risk groups To People at risk, usually those who are drug related. Significant progress has been seen especially with regard to the progress of children. Toxicosis is a fatal disease for mothers and fetuses. It is characterized by hypertension, swelling and weight gain due to accumulation of body fluids in body tissues and the presence of protein in the mother's urine. In severe cases, women may experience convulsions and coma, and may take her to the unborn with great pressure. Women with toxicity often have premature infants and age less than average during pregnancy.