Is there a cure for HIV or can it be treated?

Unfortunately, there is no known cure for HIV or AIDS. Researchers are constantly seeking a cure and there have been great improvements made in the way that the virus that causes AIDS, HIV, is treated. People live so much longer today than they did a decade ago.In fact, the onset of AIDS is often put off for many, many years when a person infected with HIV has proper treatment.

In 1994, the average life span after a person was diagnosed with HIV was less than seven years. Today, that number has more than tripled to 24 years as an average. Many variables come into play when one tries to predict how long someone might live after diagnosis of HIV.

How long they were infected before being diagnosed, the infected person’s lifestyle and other illnesses the person might have, overall health, their mentality and whether the best treatment has been administered early on are all major factors. Once HIV has infected a person, it’s always there. Currently there’s no way to rid the body of it for certain.

However, with the right treatment a sort of remission can keep HIV from taking over the body full force. A man in Berlin, Germany made headlines a while back when it appeared he was cured of AIDS. Later, it was said the Berlin man was not “cured�

, but rather his HIV was in remission. You can read more about him here: http://www.thebody.com/content/art13581.html.

Unfortunately, there is no known cure for HIV or AIDS. Researchers are constantly seeking a cure and there have been great improvements made in the way that the virus that causes AIDS, HIV, is treated. People live so much longer today than they did a decade ago.

In fact, the onset of AIDS is often put off for many, many years when a person infected with HIV has proper treatment. In 1994, the average life span after a person was diagnosed with HIV was less than seven years. Today, that number has more than tripled to 24 years as an average.

Many variables come into play when one tries to predict how long someone might live after diagnosis of HIV. How long they were infected before being diagnosed, the infected person’s lifestyle and other illnesses the person might have, overall health, their mentality and whether the best treatment has been administered early on are all major factors. Once HIV has infected a person, it’s always there.

Currently there’s no way to rid the body of it for certain. However, with the right treatment a sort of remission can keep HIV from taking over the body full force. A man in Berlin, Germany made headlines a while back when it appeared he was cured of AIDS.

Later, it was said the Berlin man was not “cured”, but rather his HIV was in remission. You can read more about him here: thebody.com/content/art13581.html.

I cant really gove you an answer,but what I can give you is a way to a solution, that is you have to find the anglde that you relate to or peaks your interest. A good paper is one that people get drawn into because it reaches them ln some way.As for me WW11 to me, I think of the holocaust and the effect it had on the survivors, their families and those who stood by and did nothing until it was too late.

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