Since the 19th century, AIDS is not known as a disease. In fact, it was not when AIDS was discovered in the 1980s when it was called AIDS. Previously it was called homosexual immune deficiency, or GRID ("Natural History of HIV / AIDS"). And since it was not discovered until the 1980's, people are concerned about the disease, and that is so today as well. For thirty years many people have not got adequate education about AIDS (Hawkins 16). There are many potential factors in fear, prejudice and discrimination against people suffering from AIDS and diseases.
AIDS patients are often treated like leprosy patients. AIDS brings fear to people and fear drives people to think and act in unfriendly and sympathetic ways. I have witnessed this incident many times. I am young and innocent. I did not live much, I had no experience as a person dealing with AIDS or homosexuality or a nurse, but I was sitting on the bed while I was going to the department I was working one day . I will have breakfast and watch TV. He is very thin and almost embarrassing. He is certainly different from himself. I dropped in at the door and asked what he did to him saying Hi. At first he did not answer me.
When my parents came out of the room, I even collided with my assistant in the hallway and hit the door to save my falling grandmother. The panic and fear of my family's face, and the painful expression of my poor grandmother have finally made me unacceptable. My grandmother is getting up sooner and earlier. My grandmother has never adapted to the normal grandmother's stereotype or image. She has burning hair, is more sensitive to trends than my mother, and even has a positive social life in some communities. She spent a lot of time outdoors, but she also took time to squeeze out delicious food for our each meal as well as herb soup which made our brothers and me very healthy Called. She lost her preference during the Second World War, but she was able to reproduce the traditional Peranakan cuisine she learned from her mother-in-law.