Since those fateful days, almost 90 million people around the world have been infected with HIV, and more than 40 million ...
The future may be getting brighter in terms of reducing the threat of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), infectious disease experts told Newsweek. With new treatments and maybe even a vaccine ...
This lack of resources limits government health officials — such as Gantes in the Ngäbe-Buglé territory — from being able to effectively diagnose and treat HIV. Gantes explained that once a ...
“People that thought when they were diagnosed with HIV that they were never going to be able to have children or families that were biologically linked to them, now are able to,” he explained.
Repetitive HIV vaccinations can lead the body to produce antibodies targeting the immune complexes already bound to the virus ...
In a new study, people living with HIV who got standard meds to keep the ... the finding was intriguing and there are genetic mechanisms that might explain the link, the scientists said.
Just eight days into his presidency, Donald Trump's executive orders are already impacting South Africa, particularly the ...
She shared her story as part of a campaign by the Health Service Executive to explain advances in HIV treatment and to highlight how delaying going to the doctor is often related to fear of ...
Cardiovascular disease (CVD) is the leading cause of morbidity and mortality globally, posing a particularly significant threat to people with HIV (PWH).
Atlanta HIV educator and activist Masonia Traylor is calling for extensive outreach efforts to convey the risks of HIV to Black women and Black gay men in Georgia.