Despite progress made against the HIV/AIDS crisis in the U.S, it has stalled for Hispanic and Latino Americans.
HIV has been a disease of younger adults, but the need for long-term care is increasing as more patients surpass their 50th birthdays and develop comorbidties much more common in older people.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention first used the term “AIDS” on Sept. 24, 1982, more than a year after the first cases appeared in medical records. Those early years of the crisis were ...
SINCE the 1980s, researchers have worked tirelessly to develop effective treatments that can suppress the HIV virus to undetectable levels. As a result, by taking a single daily dose of an ...
As a child in her native Jamaica, Cheryl Smith watched her grandmother treat people as a natural healer and deliver most of ...
Among the dignitaries and invited guests at the memorial for the late Senator Dianne Feinstein in San Francisco on Thursday is Dr. Anthony Fauci, who worked shoulder-to-shoulder with the then-San ...
Michael G. Lee's book "When the Band Played On" tells the life story of Randy Shilts, a San Francisco journalist who covered the HIV/AIDS crisis in the 1980s. He worked to confront homophobia that ...
PHOENIX - The growth of new HIV cases in Arizona reached 20% in 2022, marking the highest growth rate since the height of the HIV/AIDS Pandemic in the late 1980s. According to the Arizona Department ...
Fewer people contracted HIV last year than at any point since the rise of the disease in the late 1980s, the United Nations said Tuesday, warning that this decline was still far too slow. Around 1.3 ...
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention first used the term “AIDS” on Sept. 24, 1982, more than a year after the first cases appeared in medical records. Those early years of the crisis were ...
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