A good example of the potentially harmful influence of stereotypes may be representative of people with AIDS and AIDS (PWA). These images influence the number of people who think about this disease and those who suffer from it. Critics document the impact this stereotype has on education, funds, law, and even research and treatment problems. Recall the surprising power of the late Diana who holds the image of PWA at a London hospital. AIDS activists often complain about how this disease manifests in the mass media. Therefore, this disease is often related to homosexuality in many cases, hiding other similar relevant facts. For example, most of the AIDS patients in New York City belong to the color race, the proportion of women is rising. This erroneous statement continues itself as it affects counseling and diagnostic patterns. Be distorted
When AIDS epidemic began at the beginning and this disease was first discovered in 1981, it was thought that this disease only affected the LGBTQ community (1). This is done for images that associate disease with white people with negative meaning, images of gay men. AIDS begins to affect other communities and will soon be considered false in order to prove that anyone can recognize it regardless of what they perceive. AIDS has an impact on the American black community, but the black community is aware that this disease poses a threat to the community. However, in the black community, there is a narrow and narrow view that only "certain kinds" of blacks can develop AIDS. For example, writer William Hawkwood points out that AIDS affects black men related to white homosexuality in his book "Deformation Anthropology".
Illness is an abnormal condition affecting living things. Disease is generally understood to be a pathology involving a pathological process associated with a particular set of symptoms. Regional diseases affect certain parts of the body, diseases spread to other parts of the body, systemic diseases affect the whole body. Each disease process has its origin or cause, but it is difficult to diagnose or judge because certain diseases have different or confusing symptoms. The physical symptoms of the disease may be accompanied by emotional symptoms, and some diseases affecting the chemical balance of the nervous system may appear as physical symptoms.