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1. The harm of AIDS to individuals.
Biologically speaking, once a person living with HIV develops into an AIDS patient, his health condition deteriorates rapidly, and the patient suffers great physical pain and eventually loses his life.
Psychologically and socially, once a person living with HIV knows that he or she is infected with HIV, he or she will be under tremendous psychological stress. In addition, people living with HIV are vulnerable to social discrimination and find it difficult to receive care and care from their relatives and friends.
2. The harm of AIDS to the family.
Discriminatory attitudes towards people living with HIV/AIDS and those living with HIV/AIDS in society can affect their families, who, like them, have to bear a heavy psychological burden. This can easily lead to family discord and even family breakdown.
Because most AIDS patients and those infected are at the age of providing for their families, they are often the main breadwinners. When they themselves can no longer work and have to pay high medical bills, their families' financial situation can quickly deteriorate. Families with AIDS patients are generally left orphaned and left unsupported, or their parents are left without support for them.
3. The harm of AIDS to society.
AIDS mainly affects adults aged 20-45 who are the producers of society, the breadwinners of their families and the defenders of their country. AIDS has weakened social productive forces, slowed down economic growth, lowered life expectancy at birth, lowered national quality, and weakened national strength. Social discrimination and unfair treatment have pushed many people living with HIV/AIDS and infected people into society, causing social instability, increasing the crime rate, and undermining social order and social stability.
4. The impact of AIDS on children.
AIDS has orphaned millions of children and forced millions of innocent children to endure the loss of loved ones, often suffering from discrimination, school neglect, malnutrition and excessive labour burdens.
AIDS is the common enemy of mankind, and the eradication of AIDS requires the joint efforts of the whole society, the cultivation of a sense of social responsibility for the prevention of AIDS, and the need to take action"Me"It starts.
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Someone talks about the impact on life and society, then I talk about the impact on individuals and families.
First of all, your immune system will be destroyed, and many people will be fine for the first two years, but only if there are antibiotics in the conditions of modern society, and it will gradually become impossible to suppress over time. In addition, even if it can be suppressed in the first two years, there will be a chance of ** infection, and it may be completely white.
No matter how late it is, a lot of things will happen about two years to make you back the diagnosis. Then you take your medication. It is recommended to do a drug resistance test before taking the drug.
This is not the end, if you fall or have a car accident at the same time as your family in life, and your mother's hand bleeds, and you just touch your blood, it will be transmitted. Injuries from fights and car accidents can be transmitted on their own, even if there are no wounds, so don't come into contact with the blood of an infected person in large quantities. I said all this for fear of causing social panic, so I won't say it.
Amitabha.
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You're asking about AIDS, right?
AIDS is a devastating infectious disease caused by infection with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). HIV is a virus that attacks the body's immune system. It takes the most important T lymphocytes in the human immune system as the main target, destroys a large number of cells, and makes the human body lose its immune function, therefore, the human body is susceptible to various diseases, and malignant tumors can occur, and the mortality rate is high.
The incubation period of HIV in the human body is 8 to 9 years on average, and before AIDS, it is possible to live and work without symptoms for many years.
Many people infected with HIV do not have any symptoms during the incubation period, but some people can develop fever, dizziness, weakness, sore throat, joint pain, rash, generalized superficial lymphadenopathy and other "cold" symptoms in the early stage of infection, and some people can also develop diarrhea. This symptom usually lasts for 1-2 weeks and then disappears, after which the patient enters an asymptomatic incubation period. A person who has HIV in his blood during the incubation period and has a positive serum HIV antibody test is called an HIV-infected person, or a person with HIV, or a person with HIV, or a person with the virus.
People living with HIV are highly contagious and are the most important source of transmission of AIDS.
During the long incubation period, although the infected person has no self-conscious symptoms and looks like an ordinary person, the immune system of the whole body continues to be damaged by the AIDS virus, and when the immune system function can no longer maintain the minimum defense ability, a variety of pathogenic microorganisms that do not cause disease to normal people will cause the patient to be infected with conditions, causing lesions and symptoms in the brain, lungs, gastrointestinal tract and other parts. Some malignancies also arise because the patient's resistance is extremely low. The symptoms of AIDS patients are varied depending on the conditions under which the disease occurs, the internal organs of infection, and the location of the tumor.
Common symptoms are as follows:
1. General symptoms.
Persistent fever, weakness, night sweats, generalized superficial lymphadenopathy, weight loss can reach more than 10% within three months, and can be reduced by up to 40%, and the patient is particularly marked by weight loss.
2. Respiratory symptoms.
Long-term cough, chest pain, dyspnea, and in severe cases, blood in the sputum.
3. Gastrointestinal symptoms.
Decreased appetite, anorexia, nausea, vomiting, diarrhoea, and, in severe cases, blood in the stool. Medications that are commonly used for digestive tract infections are not effective against this type of diarrhea.
4. Neurological symptoms.
Dizziness, headache, unresponsiveness, mental retardation, mental abnormalities, convulsions, hemiplegia, dementia, etc.
5. ** and mucosal lesions.
Diffuse papules, shingles, inflammation and ulceration of the oral and pharyngeal mucosa.
6. Tumors. A variety of malignancies may occur, with Kaposi's sarcoma on the surface of the body showing red or purplish-red macules, papules, and invasive masses.
It is transmitted in three specific ways: blood-to-blood, sexually, and mother-to-child.
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AIDS ài zī bìng (Caption: HIV AIDS Virus Model) English Name: AIDS [this paragraph] Definition of AIDS AIDS, that is, acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (also translated:
Acquired immune deficiency syndrome), a transliteration of the English abbreviation AIDS (acquired immune deficiency syndrome). It was first injected and confirmed in the United States in 1981. It has been translated as "AIDS" and "love to death".
There are two types: HIV-1 and HIV-2, which are infectious diseases caused by human injection infection with "human immunodeficiency virus" (HIV) (also known as AIDS virus).
HIV is a virus that attacks the internal organs of the human body. It targets the most important T4 lymphoid tissue in the human immune system, destroys a large number of T4 lymphoid tissue, and produces highly lethal internal failure. This virus is transmitted throughout the region, disrupting the immune balance of the human body and making the human body a vector of various diseases.
HIV itself does not cause any disease, but when the immune system is destroyed by HIV, the human body loses the opportunity to replicate immune cells due to its low resistance ability, and thus infects other diseases and causes various compound infections and death. The incubation period of HIV in the human body is 12 to 13 years on average, and before developing AIDS, patients appear normal and can live and work without symptoms for many years.
AIDS has been called the "plague of the post-historic century", also known as the "super cancer" and the "killer of the century".
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It is the former translation of AIDS.
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I've heard of AIDS, but I've never heard of Esaceia.
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Although there is much controversy about the origins of AIDS, it is internationally recognized that the disease, which is still incurable to this day, was first discovered in Africa. There are many theories as to how AIDS spread to humans, but the most common belief is that around the 18th and 19th centuries, the HIV virus appeared in primates in the tropical rainforests of Central Africa. The emergence and persistence of the pathogen of AIDS in parts of Africa is due to a species of monkey in Central Africa, the African green monkey.
According to scientists' samples, 70% of the 200 green monkeys carry AIDS-like pathogens. Because green monkeys have a sound immune system and strong immunity, they can carry the virus and remain unharmed.
It is said that local Africans have a habit of eating monkey meat. It is likely that when they killed the monkeys, they were infected by contact with monkey blood, or they were bitten or scratched when raising and catching monkeys, which caused ** injuries, so that this pathogen took the opportunity to burrow into the human body. Later, in the 60s of the 20th century, this HIV gradually spread through the Caribbean to the eastern and southeastern United States, and then to Europe and Asia, and spread widely throughout the world.
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