AIDS:Is There a Cure? Are There Preventions?
What is AIDS? How do you cure it? Find out by reading this report on cures and
preventions for the AIDS virus. In this report some of the topics covered will be a
small report on AIDS, preventions, and possible cures. This report was written to prove
if there is a cure for the AIDS virus, and if there are any ways to prevent contracting
AIDS. I mean who does AIDS think it is just killing people?
AIDS is a virus that kills your immune system. The letters in AIDS stand for Acquired,
Immune, Deficiency, Syndrome. (Madaras,185-6)
There are four ways the AIDS virus can be spread. The first is by having sexual
intercourse with someone infected with the virus. AIDS is transmitted this way by way of
the semen. This is also the way most people get AIDS. (Madaras,187) The second most
common way people get AIDS is by dirty intravenous needles. It is transmitted by the
blood or other body fluids on the needle, and when someone else then uses the same
needle, they have a high risk of catching the virus. The third most common way AIDS is
spread is by blood transfusions. This is done almost the same way as by IV needle but it
is always by the blood.(Madaras,187) The most rare way the AIDS virus is spread is by
a mother passing it to fetus inside her.(Madaras,188)
AIDS is a very rapidly-spreading disease although it is only spread four ways. Ten years
ago only two cases of AIDS were known. Nine years ago only seven cases were known. In
1983 over 3,000 cases were recorded, and by 1989, there were more than 100,000 cases.
(Samuel,26)
Many people think you can get AIDS by what scientists call "casual contact." Casual
contact is by such means as swimming pools, kissing, toilet seats, etc. "...it's
important to remember that the AIDS virus doesn't live in the air or on things we touch,
the way cold or flu viruses do. (Madaras,186) There have been no cases recorded where the
infection was caused by casual contact.
The part of your body that the AIDS virus kills is your immune system as mentioned
before, but what it really kills is your white blood cells. White blood cells usually
attack a virus when it enters the body.
"It is a relatively new disease. The first cases in this country were discovered in
1981." (Madaras,185-6) Still, in all this time, scientists have not figured out a cure or
vaccine for the virus because they do not even know how the AIDS virus cripples your
white blood cells.
A common symptom AIDS patients get is developing rare types of skin cancer.
(Aids:Everything you should know,movie,AIMS,1989) Really AIDS doesn't kill you--other
germs or viruses do because when they enter the body there is no immune system to
protect your body so they can live freely. (Samuel,27)
There is no 100% sure way to prevent AIDS, and there is always a possibility that you
may contract the AIDS virus. (Aids:Everything you should know,movie,AIMS,1989) The only
true 100% sure prevention from getting AIDS is called abstinence which means not having
sex. (Madaras,166) The other way to protect yourself from AIDS when you have sex is by
using condoms. Although condoms are not a 100% sure way to protect yourself from AIDS,
it's still better than doing nothing. (Madaras,166) A condom is a thin piece of rubber
that fits over the erect penis that traps the semen at the end. (Madaras,166) "Clearly it
would be helpful and self protective if a person who has a high risk sexual life-style
could at least modify it to make it less risky." (Nourse,128)
The only really sure way to protect yourself from getting AIDS by needles is not to use
them, but if you do, there are ways to prevent contracting AIDS. The first is not to use
needles that someone else has used before you. Today doctors use different needles for
each patient. (Madaras,187)
The hardest way to prevent getting AIDS is when you are going to have a blood
transfusion. A blood transfusion is when you're going to have surgery and you need
somebody's blood to replace the blood that you lost during the operation. One way to
protect yourself from AIDS when you're going to have a blood transfusion is by checking
out the person that donated the blood and to see if he/she has contracted AIDS or has
AIDS symptoms. The other way is to try to donate your own blood ahead of time. As I said
before, since 1985 all blood must be scanned for the AIDS virus before it is used.
(Aids:Everything you should know,movie, AIMS,1989)
Many scientists today dedicate their whole lives to finding cures for some kind of
disease and many of them are trying to find a cure for AIDS. Such drugs as AZT, DDL and
Pyridinone have been used in attempting to retard the development of the AIDS symptoms.
(Cowley,51) Although none of the above drugs actually cure AIDS, they do slow it down. In
Michigan, a hospital has combined all three of the drugs in a test tube and the mixture
killed the virus. They did this because the virus mutates so fast that one drug alone
will not do it, but if you send AIDS three drugs, it can't fight them all at one time so
it dies. (Cowley,51) These are all chemical cures but other scientists are also working
on genetic cures. Wong Follie has dedicated almost her whole life to finding a cure for
AIDS and other diseases. One of the possible cures she is working on works by making a
semi-copy of the AIDS virus. The part that actually kills your immune system has been
crippled. When the drone enters the body the immune systems fights it. So basically what
it is doing is teaching the immune system how to kill the real AIDS virus when it comes.
This has not actually been tested because of the time it takes to make the drone.
So basically, in this report, you have found out that AIDS is a killer and that anyone
is vulnerable to the disease. There is no 100% percent sure way to prevent the AIDS
virus, so you better be very careful what you do. And finally, you learned that there is
no 100% test-proven cure, so once you get it you're stuck with it forever.
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