“Most people who get infected don’t even know. It’s only in hindsight they recognize the symptoms,” says Michael Horberg, M.D., director of HIV/AIDS for Kaiser Permanente. During the first few weeks ...
Less testing means fewer diagnoses, which means reduced treatment of this chronic disease. The UK-based charity’s 'Not PrEPared' report uncovered that no local authority surveyed had more than five ...
Beginning with the first wave of diagnoses among gay men in the early 1980s, the notion of HIV/AIDS as a “gay disease” — and one that primarily impacts gay men — has, unfortunately, persisted in the ...
Despite advances in HIV prevention, thousands of new cases occur annually, with Black communities in the South—especially women—often overlooked. Despite advances in treatment and prevention since the ...
Limited healthcare access and sociostructural factors were stronger predictors of HIV than behavioral risk factors among Black women in the southern United States, based on modeling data from more ...
Most women living with HIV achieved an immunologic response after 2 years of initiating antiretroviral therapy. A higher baseline HIV viral load increased the odds of an immunologic response in women ...
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