HIV and AIDS Information and Resources What is AIDS
AIDS is the most serious stage of HIV infection. It results from the destruction of the infected person's immune system
Your immune system is your body's defense system. Cells of your immune system fight off infection and other diseases. If your immune system doesn't work well, you are at risk for serious and life-threatening infections and cancers. HIV attacks and destroys the diesease-fighting cells of the immune system, leaving the body with a weakened defense against infections and cancer.
How HIV is Transmitted
HIV is spread by sexual contact with an infected person, by sharing needles and/or syringes (primarily for drug injection) with someone who is infected, or, less commonly (and now very rarely in countries where blood is screened for HIV antibodies), through transfusions of infected blood or blood clotting factors. Babies born to HIV-infected women may become infected before or during birth or through breast-feeding after birth.
In the health care setting, workers have been infected with HIV after being stuck with needles containing HIV-infected blood or, less frequently, after infected blood gets into a worker’s open cut or a mucous membrane (for example, the eyes or inside of the nose). There has been only one instance of patients being infected by a health care worker in the United States; this involved HIV transmission from one infected dentist to six patients. Investigations have been completed involving more than 22,000 patients of 63 HIV-infected physicians, surgeons, and dentists, and no other cases of this type of transmission have been identified in the United States.
Some people fear that HIV might be transmitted in other ways; however, no scientific evidence to support any of these fears has been found. If HIV were being transmitted through other routes (such as through air, water, or insects), the pattern of reported AIDS cases would be much different from what has been observed. For example, if mosquitoes could transmit HIV infection, many more young children and preadolescents would have been diagnosed with AIDS.
HIV/AIDS DIAGNOSES
At the end of 2003, an estimated 1,039,000 to 1,185,000 persons in the United States were living with HIV/AIDS [1].* In 2005, 38,096 cases of HIV/AIDS in adults, adolescents, and children were diagnosed in the 33 states with long-term, confidential name-based HIV reporting [2]. CDC has estimated that approximately 40,000 persons in the United States become infected with HIV each year [3].
How is HIV passed from one person to another?
HIV transmission can occur when blood, semen (cum), pre-seminal fluid (pre-cum), vaginal fluid, or breast milk from an infected person enters the body of an uninfected person.
HIV can enter the body through a vein (e.g., injection drug use), the lining of the anus or rectum, the lining of the vagina and/or cervix, the opening to the penis, the mouth, other mucous membranes (e.g., eyes or inside of the nose), or cuts and sores. Intact, healthy skin is an excellent barrier against HIV and other viruses and bacteria.
These are the most common ways that HIV is transmitted from one person to another:
- by having sex (anal, vaginal, or oral) with an HIV-infected person;
- by sharing needles or injection equipment with an injection drug user who is infected with HIV; or
- from HIV-infected women to their babies before or during birth, or through breast-feeding after birth.
HIV also can be transmitted through receipt of infected blood or blood clotting factors. However, since 1985, all donated blood in the United States has been tested for HIV. Therefore, the risk of infection through transfusion of blood or blood products is extremely low. The U.S. blood supply is considered to be among the safest in the world.
Important Information in AIDS and HIV Issues
02/07/2012
HIV/AIDS specialist new to UConn
FARMINGTON — Dr. Lisa Chirch, an infectious diseases physician with expertise in HIV/AIDS and travel medicine, is now seeing patients at the University of Connecticut Health Center.
HIV/AIDS specialist new to UConn
02/06/2012
Asia Pacific countries in crucial HIV AIDS follow up
Government leaders, civil society representatives and people living with HIV from 34 Asia-Pacific countries are meeting in Bangkok, to speed up progress towards an AIDS-free region.
Asia Pacific countries in crucial HIV AIDS follow up
02/01/2012
Research and Markets: The Global HIV/AIDS Testing Market to Grow at a CAGR of 5.2 Percent Over the Period 2010-2014
Research and Markets has announced the addition of the "Global HIV/AIDS Testing Market 2010-2014" report to th
Research and Markets: The Global HIV/AIDS Testing Market to Grow at a CAGR of 5.2 Percent Over the Period 2010-2014
02/06/2012
Asia Pacific countries in crucial HIV AIDS follow up
Government leaders, civil society representatives and people living with HIV from 34 Asia-Pacific countries are meeting in Bangkok, to speed up progress towards an AIDS-free region.
Asia Pacific countries in crucial HIV AIDS follow up
02/07/2012
HIV drugs not linked with child psychiatric problems
CHICAGO (Reuters) - Drugs used to treat children infected with the virus that causes AIDS do not appear to increase the risk of psychiatric problems in children, U.S. researchers said on Monday. Scientists have been worried about the high rates of psychiatric and academic problems in children infected with the human immunodeficiency virus, or HIV -- the virus that causes AIDS. "The question that ...
HIV drugs not linked with child psychiatric problems
02/06/2012
Asia Pacific countries in crucial HIV AIDS follow up
Government leaders, civil society representatives and people living with HIV from 34 Asia-Pacific countries are meeting in Bangkok, to speed up progress towards an AIDS-free region.
Asia Pacific countries in crucial HIV AIDS follow up
02/07/2012
HIV drugs not linked with child psychiatric problems
CHICAGO (Reuters) - Drugs used to treat children infected with the virus that causes AIDS do not appear to increase the risk of psychiatric problems in children, U.S. researchers said on Monday. Scientists have been worried about the high rates of psychiatric and academic problems in children infected with the human immunodeficiency virus, or HIV -- the virus that causes AIDS. "The question that ...
HIV drugs not linked with child psychiatric problems
02/07/2012
HIV/AIDS specialist new to UConn
FARMINGTON — Dr. Lisa Chirch, an infectious diseases physician with expertise in HIV/AIDS and travel medicine, is now seeing patients at the University of Connecticut Health Center.
HIV/AIDS specialist new to UConn
02/06/2012
Asia Pacific countries in crucial HIV AIDS follow up
Government leaders, civil society representatives and people living with HIV from 34 Asia-Pacific countries are meeting in Bangkok, to speed up progress towards an AIDS-free region.
Asia Pacific countries in crucial HIV AIDS follow up
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