Aids

Aids

...virus was discovered in France in

1983 and in the United States in

1984. In the United States, it was

initially identified in 1981. In

1986, a second virus, now called

HIV-2, was also discovered in

Africa.(Bookshelves)" Female

prostitutes in Africa probably

spread it very quickly. AIDS became

a huge crisis of major proportions

in parts of Africa. It is my own

strongly held opinion, and that of

most medical and research community

world wide, that the AIDS epidemic

is a serious problem. It has become

the worst plague this species has

ever known. Vastly greater sums

should be spent on searching for

treatments and vaccines. The United

States government needs to do more

intensive tests and research to

help curb this virus instead of

waiting for other countries to do

so.



AIDS is transmitted in one of three

ways: From intimate sexual contact

without protection, from the mixing

of a person's blood with infected

blood, and from an infected

pregnant woman to her fetus.

Infection can occur from blood

transfusions of infected blood, or

sharing unclean needles. (Needles

already used, in this case, by an

HIV positive person and not

sterilized.) The HIV-2 virus also

causes AIDS.



AIDS was first seen as a disease

limited gay males in the United

States. "This was a result that gay

males in this culture before AIDS

had an average of 200 to 400 new

sexual contacts per year. This

figure was much greater than the

new sexual encounters among

heterosexual (straight) men or

women. (Strack,5)" In addition, it

turned out that rectal sex was a

particularly effective way to

transmit the disease. Rectal sex is

a common practice among gay males.

For these reasons, the disease

spread in the gay male population

of the United States more quickly

than in other populations. It

became to be thought of as a "gay

disease". As the AIDS...

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