News

A modeling study looked at how anticipated cuts to international HIV funding would affect the rate of new cases and ...
A significant number of Americans living with HIV report experiencing stigma. Black and Hispanic/Latinx people living with diagnosed HIV experience more HIV stigma and more instan ...
HIV medications were supposed to be exempt from U.S. aid cuts. In Zambia, for example, those on the ground say otherwise.
Proposed cuts to global foreign aid, including slashing programs in the United States, could lead to millions of HIV deaths and soaring rates of infections around the world in the coming years ...
7Department of Internal Medicine, School of Clinical Medicine, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa 8Department of Internal Medicine, University ...
It is also common to see this infection in more immuno-compromised individuals. They also sometimes have multiple other sexually transferred diseases like HIV and hepatitis B. It may also be ...
It seems like we have a new virus word to add to our vocabulary every single day. Some of them can be quite confusing. Here are some of the words you might have heard in the news. Many people ...
Many people with HIV, such as men who have sex with men, are at higher risk of mpox infection and are therefore recommended to receive mpox vaccination by the UK Health Security Agency.2 Patients who ...
HIV/AIDS researchers in South Africa are reeling from the termination or suspension of grants from the US National Institutes of Health (NIH). Science1 reported that the cuts seem linked to a ...
On average, without antiretroviral medications (ART), chronic HIV will progress to AIDS in five to 10 years, though it may be faster in some people. That said, there are now 39 million people living ...
Currently, individuals living with HIV must take a daily antiretroviral pill to maintain an undetectable viral load. When therapy is stopped, the virus quickly ramps back up. The RIO trial, led by ...
A new generation of drugs called protease inhibitors, when combined with other drugs, made the virus virtually undetectable in people with HIV, giving them a much greater chance of living to old age.