HIV/AIDS

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    Proctor HCIN Everest Do you know your status > University Mr. Cole 5/25/2016 Abstract When you hear someone say what’s your status? What do you think? Most people associate knowing your status with the disease, HIV/AIDS. There is a really bad stigma that comes with the disease, HIV/AIDS and it’s a lot of information that people do not know about the disease. I remembered about two years ago it was pouring down raining and there was this woman standing outside of the store and had asked me…

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    the topic of HIV/AIDS has taken awareness of not only the people of the American nation, but the government as well. HIV is an infection that only has the ability to infect human beings. This infection is commonly known as the virus that can potentially lead to the disease as AIDS. AIDS is an acquired disease, not inherited in which there is no cure for. AIDS is the final stage of the HIV infection. The government has taken several strides to help improve the outcomes of HIV and AIDS such as…

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    In this assignment we are looking at the physical development and characteristic of young adulthood and how HIV/AIDS is contracted, and the effect it has on the person living with it and those close or living with the person and how we can prevent it. 2. MAIN CONTENT 2.1 The physical development and the health of the young adulthood Physical development According to Zastrow, C. (2010). Hands and fingers decreases after mid-30s, muscular strength is attained between age 25 and 30 and begin…

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    0725279096 TITLE: THE IMPACT OF HIV/AIDS ON FAMILIES AND THE COMMUNITY 1. Background 1.1. Introduction A few years ago, a terrible disease, previously unknown to the human race, started to kill people in the most shocking and frightening circumstances. According to Karen (2000:1) HIV and AIDS is one of the major challenges facing South Africa today, it affect the lives of all south Africans in many diverse ways. The disease has an extensive influence on individuals, AIDS is raising fast and is…

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    The Great Plague of 1665 and the emergence of HIV/AIDS are similar and different in a variety of ways. Some ways that these two outbreaks differ is that HIV/AIDS affect people globally while the plague was centralized mainly in Europe and central Asia, different hosts or agents were responsible for the outbreaks and affected the body differently, and that the governments of the infected areas responded to the outbreak differently. Various ways that caused the two outbreaks to be similar was that…

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    Vanquishing AIDS/HIV: Olga Golichenko’s Side AIDS/HIV is a treacherous disease that has killed millions of people world-wide for decades due to lack of proper treatment funding and no available cure for the disease itself. A proposed financial tax, known as the “Robin Hood Tax”, could help in funding treatment and a cure for the disease (DeMoro, pg.11). This financial tax can not only help in the “[eradication] [of] HIV/AIDS and other global epidemics” but also improve global healthcare for…

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    Deficiency Syndrome (HIV/AIDS) epidemic specifically amongst African American Women. The research study was conducted on African American women in the Washington DC area with HIV/Aids. The researcher examined the population because HIV/AIDS is an ongoing issue and African American women are more at risk. According to the article, African American women are more likely than other races to contract HIV/AIDS and die. The author suggests that there are more concerning factors than just HIV/AIDS…

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    Philadelphia is a drama film written by Ron Nyswaner illustrating the cultural stigmas of HIV in the 1990s. This film was released in 1993 being one of the first films to acknowledge homosexuality and HIV. The premise of this film is surrounding a court case regarding discrimination of sexual orientation against a fictional character, Andrew Buckett (Tom Hanks). As Andrew Buckett was only recently diagnosed with HIV and had been a closet homosexual for many years meaning none of his colleagues…

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    The conservative indifference to the HIV/AIDS epidemic did not end with Reagan’s administration. As LGBT groups organized and mobilized to combat the blatant negligence of the federal government, President George H. W. Bush continued the legacy of generally neglecting the crisis. Bush embraced oppressive policies such as mandatory testing at certain agencies, as well as implying that local and state governments were primarily responsible for combatting the health crisis. Perhaps worse, there…

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    Arguments Against HIV/AIDS

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    In the early 1980s, the HIV/AIDS epidemic began in Los Angeles with the death of five young gay men. The coverage of their death became the first official reporting of the epidemic in the states and from there the attempt to treat the virus became an uphill battle for decades to…

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