Some people think that homosexuals, drug addicts, sleeping people, HIV and AIDS are necessary for others to worry about. All these ideas are wrong. All young people need to seriously tackle the threat of HIV, except for guarded guards.
HIV (scientifically known as human immunodeficiency virus) is a virus that causes AIDS. By killing or destroying cells in the body's immune system, HIV gradually destroys the body's ability to combat infection and certain types of cancer. People diagnosed with AIDS may develop life-threatening diseases called opportunistic infections caused by microorganisms such as viruses and bacteria that normally do not cause health problems. The virus spreads from person to person through blood, blood and sexual contact. In addition, infected pregnant women may infect their babies with HIV during pregnancy or during birth and breastfeeding. People living with HIV have so-called HIV infection. Some people are diagnosed with HIV and are more likely to develop certain types of cancer. Most of these people will develop AIDS due to HIV infection.
Over the past decade, more than 400,000 people in the United States have been diagnosed with HIV or AIDS. Staff of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported that the number of deaths from HIV and AIDS in the United States decreased by 47%. The officials are attributed to a highly effective combination medication that allows this living to live with HIV to live longer and healthier lives. Unfortunately, there is no reduction in the number of new HIV infections in the United States. The infection rate is about 40,000 new patients annually.
HIV can be infected with HIV as it is found in infected people's body fluids and blood. When infected blood or sexual fluid enters your blood,
Today's AIDS crisis is very different. There are more treatment and prevention options than ever. People living with HIV live a more fulfilling and happy life, but HIV and AIDS are still around us. They continue to unduly influence the color community, the transgender people, the young people, and homosexuals and bisexual men. Currently, 2 million people are still living with HIV in the United States, and about 50,000 people are newly diagnosed each year. In sub-Saharan Africa, nearly 60% of people living with HIV are female and girl. Despite the existence of tools to end the epidemic of this disease once more, there are still too many deaths today.
In 2011, sub - Saharan Africa accounted for 69% of the total number of people living with HIV / AIDS around the world. In response, a number of initiatives to promote HIV / AIDS have been initiated. These include the most effective initiatives, abstinence, loyalty, use of condom sports, and combined prevention programs considered Desmond Tutu AIDS Foundation's outreach program. According to a special report issued by the United Nations Joint HIV / AIDS program (UNAIDS) in 2013, the number of HIV-positive people who received antiretroviral treatment in Africa in 2012 was significantly higher in 2005 It exceeded the number. In 2011, the number of AIDS-related deaths in sub-Saharan Africa decreased 33% compared with 2005. The number of new HIV infections in sub - Saharan Africa in 2011 was 25. The percentage is lower than the figures for 2001
Sub-Saharan Africa accounts for only about 11% of the Earth's population, but it is the center of the world's HIV / AIDS. These figures are difficult. HIV prevalence of adults worldwide is 1.2% (0.6% in North America) but 9.0% in sub-Saharan Africa. As of the end of 2001, UNAIDS estimates that 40 million people are infected with HIV / AIDS, of which 28.5 million are from sub-Saharan Africa. In 2001, 5 million adults and children were newly infected with HIV, of which 3.5 million were from sub-Saharan Africa. In 2001, three million people died of AIDS-related causes, of which 2.2 million people died of sub-Saharan Africans.