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Instructions for using this template. Remember this is Jeopardy, so where I have written “Answer” this is the prompt the students will see, and where I have “Question” should be the student’s response. To enter your questions and answers, click once on the text on the slide, then highlight and just type over what’s there to replace it. If you hit Delete or Backspace, it sometimes makes the text box disappear. When clicking on the slide to move to the next appropriate slide, be sure you see the hand, not the arrow. (If you put your cursor over a text box, it will be an arrow and WILL NOT take you to the right location.)
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Choose a category. You will be given the answer. You must give the correct question. Click to begin.
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Click here for Final Jeopardy
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Is that your final answer? Street Smarts Category E 10 Point 20 Points 30 Points 40 Points 50 Points 10 Point 20 Points 30 Points 40 Points 50 Points 30 Points 40 Points 50 Points Fact or Fiction? The Number Game
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What is the change of mother to child transmission without any therapy? 100% 75% 0% 35%
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What is the length of time it takes HIV antibodies to show up in the blood? I.e. give a positive result in a blood test? 1-3 weeks 1 hour 3-6 months 1 year
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3-6 months
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How many Canadians are infected with HIV/AIDS?
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2005 est. 58,000 with 27% of them not knowing their status.
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How many people around the world are living with HIV/AIDS?
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2007 est. 33.2 million.
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How many versions of HIV are there? 1, HIV 2, HIV and AIDS 2, HIV-1 and HIV-2 3, HIV-a HIV-b and HIV-c
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2, HIV-1 and HIV-2
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Which is the right order of HIV/AIDS? Infection, seroconversion, clinical latency, symptomatic HIV, AIDS HIV, AIDS, seroconversion, symptomatic HIV AIDS, infection, clinical latency, HIV Seroconversion, infection, HIV, AIDS, clinical latency, Symptomatic disease
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Infection, seroconversion, clinical latency, symptomatic HIV, AIDS
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What factors is least important to the success of HAART? Adherence Resistance Proper nutrition Physical activity
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You can become infected with HIV by sleeping around.
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Sleeping around is not in itself risky, but having unprotected sex with an infected person is. By using condoms properly and by avoiding sex with penetration, you can substantially reduce the risk of infection.
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Injecting drugs will give you HIV.
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Only if the needle or syringe previously has been contaminated with HIV.
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You can get HIV from toilet seats.
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There are no known cases of HIV infection via toilet seats.
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If you are fit and healthy you won't become infected with HIV.
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It does not matter how healthy or unhealthy you are, if you engage in risky activities you stand a chance of being infected.
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If you stick with one partner you won't become infected with HIV.
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This depends on the partners involved, what they did before they met, whether either has unprotected sex outside of the marriage or injects drugs using contaminated equipment. Marriage by itself offers no guarantees of safety.
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Women are safe from HIV as long as they use a contraceptive.
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Only condoms offer women protection against HIV, and even condoms cannot offer complete safety. Other forms of contraception do not offer protection from HIV.
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What factors are not instrumental in an AIDS diagnosis? Onset of an opportunistic infection Low CD4, and high viral load Time, 5-10 years of HIV positive status Resistance to drugs
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Low CD4, and high viral load
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What does ARV stand for? Acute respiratory virus Anti resistance American Retroviral version Anti retroviral
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Anal sex between two men is more risky than anal sex between a man and a woman.
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Anal sex is equally risky regardless of whether it takes place between two men or a man and a woman.
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You can become infected with HIV from kissing.
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There is no evidence of transmission in this way, although kissing when there are sores or cuts in the mouth may pose some risk.
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What is the most common killer of people with HIV/AIDS?
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Tuberculosis. People with HIV/AIDS generally die from opportunistic infections, not AIDS itself.
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Is there a vaccine for HIV/AIDS?
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No. There is no cure for HIV/AIDS. There are treatments, known as antiretroviral drug therapy (ARV therapy) which helps to keep a HIV+ person healthy.
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Where can I get tested in Vancouver for HIV?
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HIV testing is FREE at community health clinics, UBC student health, sexual health clinics and with your family doctor.
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Answer 1e
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Question 1e
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Answer 2e
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Question 2e
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Answer 3e
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Question 3e
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Answer 4e
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Question 4e
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Answer 5e
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Question 5e
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Make your wager
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Final Answer
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Final Question
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