
World AIDS Day 2016: Is an End to The HIV/AIDS Pandemic in Sight?
In honor of World AIDS day, the National Institutes of Health reflected on advancements made in the fight against HIV and address future goals designed to end the HIV/AIDS pandemic.
A total 36.7 million individuals around the globe are living with HIV/AIDS and the disease has caused over 35 million deaths. Today (December 1, 2016) marks the 35th anniversary of the first reports that were published on HIV/AIDS and it is on this, World AIDS Day, that researchers come together to reflect on all of the advancements that have been made in the fight against the disease and identify what needs to be done next. The goal? To put an end to the HIV/AIDS epidemic.
In honor of World AIDS Day, the National Institutes of Health (NIH) released a
According to the NIH, “Antiretroviral has been transformational for both individuals and communities. Large studies conducted in diverse settings, from US cities to African villages, have demonstrated the power of treatment to preserve the health of those living with HIV.”
By taking a prescribed daily ART regimen, or combination of HIV-fighting medicines, the therapy works to cut down the amount of the virus that is inhabiting an infected individual’s body. With less virus in the body, the individual’s immune system has more of an opportunity to regroup and continue to fight off different infections and cancers that HIV-infected individuals are more susceptible to contracting as a result of their infection, according to the US Department of Health and Human Services.
The NIH notes that research has shown that the more testing that is done for HIV, the more people learn about opportunities for treatment and support in fighting the virus if they are infected or become infected. According to the NIH, “The power of treatment as prevention cannot be underestimated in helping to achieve global targets to dramatically reduce new infections and improve the health of those already living with HIV.” Testing and treatment are especially important for those who are at higher risk of infection, such as men who have sex with men (MSM). In a past Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), researchers
Although an arsenal of preventive tools have already proven to be effective in the fight against the virus thus far—antiretroviral therapy, condoms, lubricants, voluntary male circumcision, pre-exposure prophylaxis—researchers are constantly working towards the development of new, innovative ways of infection prevention. The first new HIV vaccine efficacy study in seven years, dubbed
Another prevention effort, titled the
Research efforts continue to be aimed at helping those populations at highest risk of infection. One such population is the population of women. A total of 16.1 million women worldwide are estimated to be HIV-positive and millions more are at risk of infection. When it comes to targeting the needs of women worldwide, the NIH has made strides through testing of the dapivirine-infused
Efforts are also being made to address underserved populations and those not routinely studied, such as
Another issue being addressed is the fact that those who are living with HIV are developing more chronic infections than those who are not infected by the virus. In the
Researchers have also put their efforts into preventing viral rebound after infected individuals finish antiretroviral therapy. According to the NIH, researchers made headway in this goal with an animal
All of these efforts have made researchers around the world optimistic that the HIV pandemic can be brought to an end. With researchers making a number of different advancements every day, they are learning more and more about a virus that has claimed an overwhelming number of lives. Equipped with an arsenal of knowledge, researchers may finally be able to put a end to it.
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