Unfortunately, if you knew that the U.S. had little knowledge of the spread and progression of HIV 20 years before AIDS first attacked a gay community, it would be possible to take further steps to control virus spread There is sex. However, it was not known at the time that each diagnosed AIDS case represented hundreds of undiagnosed AIDS cases. It is not known that 8 years of HIV hatching and its sexually transmitted model will immediately lead to one of the most serious epidemics in modern history.
AIDS covers every aspect of sex, race, class, and sexuality. That is not only gay diseases. A gay man actually suffered a major blow in the beginning, but AIDS is far beyond this community. Lesbians and homosexuals responded extremely frankly and heroically to epidemics: they have started lots of currently available AIDS services and resources. Response to homosexuality is encouraging, but since AIDS is treated as a homosexual illness, acceptance of the general population to AIDS information is low. This attitude not only makes people feel humiliating, it also leads to unnecessary dangers, inappropriate choice, spread of fear and hatred in our society.
AIDS first took place in a homosexual male community in a city deeply rooted in homosexual liberation movement and art. The first wave of AIDS activity incorporates symbolic graphics and dramatic political actions that demand and win emergency response from government and medical institutions. Artists are still struggling to deal with the sadness, anger, disease, sex, fear, and death of our community, and their work shapes the perception of HIV itself. As the trend changes, both artists and art will change. The art on AIDS is coming from the community most influenced by AIDS today, and these communities may be very different from the work of the first wave. Treatment is far from ideal, but HIV diagnosis is no longer death sentence, the subject of research has changed. Political images and images of death and death are relatively rare. More fundamentally, people living with HIV are more concerned about HIV / AIDS itself.
HIV / AIDS - In 1981, the gay community in the United States discovered the first case of HIV / AIDS and at least one case was reported worldwide by 1985. Today, more than 35 million people worldwide are infected with HIV / AIDS. There is no cure yet, but the current cure can lead patients long and healthy lives. New vaccines are in various stages of development, including research, discovery, preclinical trials, clinical trials (which may take up to seven years), regulatory approval. Once the vaccine is approved (a long process of two years), the vaccine is manufactured and shipped to the required location.