Friday, November 29, 2019
Aids And Your Essays - Sexually Transmitted Diseases And Infections
  Aids and Your    AIDS and YOU (May 1987)                By Martin H. Goodman MD                (this essay is in the public domain)            Introduction:           AIDS is a life and death issue. To have the AIDS disease     is at present a sentence of slow but inevitable death.  I've     already lost one friend to AIDS. I may soon lose others. My own     sexual behavior and that of many of my friends has been     profoundly altered by it. In my part of the country, one man in     10 may already be carrying the AIDS virus. While the figures may     currently be less in much of the rest of the country,  this is     changing rapidly. There currently is neither a cure, nor even an     effective treatment, and no vaccine either. But there are things     that have been PROVEN immensely effective in slowing the spread     of this hideously lethal disease.  In this essay I hope to     present this information. History and Overview:           AIDS stands for Acquired Immune Defficiency Disease. It is     caused by a virus.           The disease originated somewhere in Africa about 20 years     ago. There it first appeared as a mysterious ailment afflicting     primarily heterosexuals of both sexes. It probably was spread     especially fast by primarily female prostitutes there. AIDS has     already become a crisis of STAGGERING proportions in parts of     Africa. In Zaire, it is estimated that over twenty percent of     the adults currently carry the virus. That figure is increasing.     And what occurred there will, if no cure is found, most likely     occur here among heterosexual folks.           AIDS was first seen as a disease of gay males in this     country. This was a result of the fact that gay males in this     culture in the days before AIDS had an average of 200 to 400 new     sexual contacts per year.  This figure was much higher than     common practice among heterosexual (straight) men or women.  In     addition, it turned out that rectal sex was a particularly     effective way to transmit the disease,  and rectal sex is a     common practice among gay males. For these reasons, the disease     spread in the gay male population of this country immensely more     quickly than in other populations. It became to be thought of as     a "gay disease". Because the disease is spread primarily by     exposure of ones blood to infected blood or semen, I.V. drug     addicts who shared needles also soon were identified as an     affected group.  As the AIDS  epidemic  began  to  affect     increasingly large fractions of those two populations (gay males     and IV drug abusers), many of the rest of this society looked on     smugly, for both populations tended to be despised by the     "mainstream" of society here.           But AIDS is also spread by heterosexual sex. In addition,     it is spread by blood transfusions. New born babies can acquire     the disease from infected mothers during pregnancy.  Gradually     more and more "mainstream" folks got the disease. Most recently,     a member of congress died of the disease.  Finally,  even the     national news media began to join in the task of educating the     public to the notion that AIDS can affect everyone.           Basic medical research began to provide a few bits of     information, and some help. The virus causing the disease was     isolated and identified. The AIDS virus turned out to be a very     unusual sort of virus. Its genetic material was not DNA,  but     RNA. When it infected human cells, it had its RNA direct the     synthesis of viral DNA. While RNA viruses are not that uncommon,     very few RNA viruses reproduce by setting up the flow of     information from RNA to DNA. Such reverse or "retro" flow of     information does not occur at all in any DNA virus or any other     living things. Hence, the virus was said to belong to the rare     group of virues called "Retro Viruses".  Research provided the     means to test donated blood for the presence of the antibodies     to the virus, astronomically reducing the chance of ones getting     AIDS from a blood transfusion. This was one of the first real     breakthroughs. The same discoveries that allowed us to make our     blood bank blood supply far safer also allowed us to be able to     tell (in most cases) whether one has been exposed to the AIDS     virus    
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