HIV is the Human Immunodeficiency Virus. This virus can eventually cause AIDS.
AIDS stands for Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome and is the final stage of HIV infection.
There are several ways that HIV/AIDS can be spread:
This means that HIV can be transmitted from mother-to-child (via pregnancy, birth or breast feeding), sexual contact with vaginal fluid or semen, sharing of needles or other exposures to blood products.
This means that HIV can be transmitted from mother-to-child (via pregnancy, birth or breast feeding), sexual contact with vaginal fluid or semen, sharing of needles or other exposures to blood products.
** You cannot get HIV/AIDS from casual contact such as hugging, kissing, shaking hands, living together, bug bites, using public restrooms, swimming, saliva, tears or by sharing utensils, cups or plates. You cannot tell someone is positive simply by looking at them.
Many people infected by HIV develop a flu-like illness within a month or two after the virus enters the body. This illness, known as primary or acute HIV infection, may last for a few weeks. Possible symptoms include:
Many people experience no side effects after being infected with HIV/AIDS. Typically people can go for 8-10 years before experiencing any side effects or symptoms from HIV/AIDS.
The best way to protect yourself from HIV is to avoid activities that put you at risk. Some ways to protect yourself are:
Having HIV doesn’t mean that you can no longer have sex. There are many steps that a person living with HIV and their partner can take to protect each other and prevent the transmission of HIV during sex.
You cannot tell that someone has HIV/AIDS simply by looking at them. The only way to know your own HIV status or your partners HIV status is by getting tested for HIV. Without being tested for HIV no person can be sure of their HIV status. Know your status, get tested!
We’ve come a long way from the days when a diagnosis of HIV automatically equaled complicated medical issues. There is no cure for HIV/AIDS but there are a variety of treatments that, when used in combination can significantly slow down the progression of HIV infection allowing people to live long and prosperous lives.
After HIV infection is confirmed, your doctor can start you on a combination drug regimen that controls the virus from making copies of itself. There are several types of anti-HIV drugs, also called HAART, for Highly-Active Anti-Retroviral Therapy. Unfortunately, taking HAART therapy isn’t easy. These drugs must be taken at the right time, every single day in order to be effective. Also, a range of side effects may occur, including: diarrhea, nausea, GI side effects, or abnormal distribution of body fat. And, especially if medications are taken incorrectly or inconsistently, the virus can mutate, or change, into a strain resistant to treatment.