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The Health Crisis in Developing + Developed Countries
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A pandemic is an epidemic (usually a disease) that occurs over a great area of land - worldwide. The virus that we know as HIV/AIDS is a pandemic.
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HIV/AIDS is thought to have spread from chimpanzees to humans in west equatorial Africa in the 1930’s. Test were being developed for a polio vaccine and blood from chimps - who were unknowingly diseased with a strain of HIV/AIDS – was taken to created the vaccine.
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Some assert that the African people became test subjects and the infected vaccine entered the human population. Others state that infected chimp meat was eaten and the disease spread that way into the human population.
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In the 1980s, HIV/AIDS was detected in the LGBTQ community attacking mostly gay men = but not a disease the discriminates; it affects everyone.
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The Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) is the virus that causes Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS). HIV attacks the immune system, resulting in a chronic, progressive illness and leaving infected people vulnerable to opportunistic infections and cancers.
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The median time from infection to AIDS diagnosis now exceeds 10+ years with anti- viral drugs. AIDS is fatal. There is no known cure.
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HIV is spread through contact with the certain body fluids from a person infected with HIV: Blood Semen Pre-seminal fluids Rectal fluids Vaginal fluids
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Unprotected sexual intercourse (vaginal, anal, oral). Shared needles or equipment for legal or illegal injecting drugs. Unsterilized needles for tattooing, skin piercing, or acupuncture.
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Pregnancy, delivery, and breast feeding (from an HIV-infected mother to her infant) Occupational exposure in health care/first responder settings. Transmission through blood (i.e. blood transfusions).
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Casual everyday contact Shaking hands, hugging, kissing Coughing, sneezing Giving blood Swimming pools, toilet seats, baths/showers Sharing eating utensils, water fountains Mosquitoes, other insects, or animals
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Anybody can get HIV, but you can take steps to protect yourself from HIV infection: Get tested and know your partner’s HIV status. Have less risky sex. Use condoms. Limit your number of sexual partners. Talk to your health care provider about HIV prevention. Refrain from injecting drugs.
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Even with the most expensive and effective treatments/anti-viral drugs, death is a certainty. 34+ million people in the world are affected.
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16,000 people every day become infected world wide. 7, 000 die of Aids each day = 2 million per year. Of the 14 million who have died of AIDS, 11 million have been Africans.
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Sub-Saharan Africa has the most serious HIV and AIDS epidemic in the world.
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Number of new infections in Sub-Saharan Africa: ▪ Estimated at 1.6+ million for 2012. ▪ About 70 per cent of the world total. ▪ 1.2+ million AIDS-related deaths.
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Number of children living with HIV in 2013: ▪ 3.2+ million. ▪ 91 per cent of whom live in sub-Saharan Africa.
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Number of children living with HIV as orphans in Sub-Saharan Africa (2012): ▪ There are more than 34 million orphans in the region today and some 11 million of them are orphaned by AIDS. ▪ 8 out of every 10 children in the world whose parents have died of AIDS live in sub- Saharan Africa.
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▪ During the last decade, the proportion of children who are orphaned as a result of AIDS rose from 3.5% to 32% and will continue to increase exponentially as the disease spreads unchecked.
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▪ As a result, the disease is in effect making orphans of a whole generation of children, jeopardizing their health, their rights, their well-being and sometimes their very survival, not to mention the overall development prospects of their countries.
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Throughout the developing nations, AIDS has exploded mainly because of: ▪ The problems associated with EDUCATING people about prevention.
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Get educated + ask questions. Abstain from sex or delay first sex. Have one partner or have fewer partners. Use male condoms or female condoms consistently and correctly. Use a needle exchange/clean needles of injecting drugs + do not share needles. Take anti-viral drugs during pregnancy + have a Caesarean section.
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Condoms in the Congo (4:17 mins) http://www.ted.com/talks/lang/en/amy_lockwood_s elling_condoms_in_the_congo.html http://www.ted.com/talks/lang/en/amy_lockwood_s elling_condoms_in_the_congo.html HIV is a serious problem in the DR Congo, and aid agencies have flooded the country with free and cheap condoms. But few people are using them. Why? “Reformed marketer” Amy Lockwood offers a surprising answer that upends a traditional model of philanthropy.
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The following countries have been experiencing an increase in the cases of HIV/AIDS: ▪ China ▪ India ▪ Eastern European Countries (i.e. Russia + Ukraine)
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There are 1.4 million people living with HIV/AIDS in North America (2011). 21,000 people die from AIDS related deaths. Number of new infections in North America: ▪ Estimated at 51,000 in 2011.
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International support is required. Canada has been one of the leaders in the establishment of the Joint UN Programme on HIV/AIDS. HIV/AIDS drugs have dropped over 75% in price, yet remain too costly for many people in developing countries.
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People in developed world should be worried about health conditions in developing world because: We are a global village. Everyone deserves a good life. Diseases can spread and affect developed countries.
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An estimated 71,300+ people have HIV/AIDS (2012). Every three hours, someone in the country becomes infected with HIV. Over 25% of infected people don't know they have HIV.
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Women now account for about one-forth of people with HIV/AIDS (2011). 16,600 living with HIV/AIDS. 23% of all people living with HIV/AIDS were female. However, males are three times more likely to get HIV/AIDS than females.
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The HIV-positive population continues to increase in Canada, with the greatest increases amongst Aboriginals in Canada. It is estimated that in 2011, Aboriginal people made up 12.2% of new HIV infections and 8.9% of those living with HIV/AIDS in Canada.
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HIV/AIDS has a significant impact on Aboriginal females. Between 1998 and 2012, nearly half (47.3%) of all positive HIV test reports among Aboriginal people were females, compared with 20.1% of reports for people of other ethnicities.
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Age at the time of HIV diagnosis for Aboriginal people tends to be younger than for people of other ethnicities. Almost one-third (31.6%) of the positive HIV test reports from 1998 to 2012 among Aboriginal people were youth aged 15 to 29 years old, compared with 22.2% among those of other ethnicities.
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HIV risk among Aboriginal people is closely linked to a variety of determinants of health that influence vulnerability to infection, including poverty, unstable housing and homelessness, mental health and addictions, traumatic childhood experiences, racism and the multi-generational effects of colonialism and the residential school system.
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AIDS-related stigma and discrimination refers to prejudice, negative attitudes, abuse and maltreatment directed at people living with HIV and AIDS worldwide.
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The consequences of stigma and discrimination are wide-ranging: being shunned by family, peers and the wider community, poor treatment in healthcare and education settings, an erosion of rights, psychological damage, and a negative effect on the success of HIV testing and treatment.
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The stigma of HIV - four places, four people (4:42 mins) From India to Kenya, and Tajikistan to Bolivia - the daily difficulties that face people with HIV are often the same no matter what country they live in, and no matter how many thousands of miles they are apart. http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-15872550 http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-15872550 http://www.aidsvideos.org/ (info only) http://www.aidsvideos.org/
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A Great Film: A Closer Walk
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(RED): http://www.red.org/en/http://www.red.org/en/ HIV Equal: http://www.hivequal.org/http://www.hivequal.org/ It’s Different Now and Change HIVstory: A Social Marketing Campaign: http://www.catie.ca/en/pc/program/its-different- now http://www.catie.ca/en/pc/program/its-different- now World Aids Campaign: http://www.worldaidscampaign.org/ http://www.worldaidscampaign.org/
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1. Why does HIV/AIDS continue to spread around the world? 2. How can we stop HIV from spreading? 3. What countries are most affected by HIV/AIDS? Why? 4. Why is there a stigma around HIV/AIDS? How can we stop the stigma?
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