"WE
SUPPORT BECAUSE WE UNDERSTAND"
HIV
and AIDS
HIV
is one of the biggest social, economic and health challenges in
the world. It is a global emergency claiming over 8,000 lives
every day. In fact 5 people die of AIDS every minute.
HIV
stands for Human Immunodeficiency Virus. This is the virus known
to cause AIDS (Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome). If someone
is HIV-positive, it means they have been infected with the virus.
A
person infected with HIV does not have AIDS until the virus seriously
damages their immune system, making them vulnerable to a range
of infections, some of which can lead to death.
HIV
is transmitted through body fluids in particular blood, semen,
vaginal secretions and breast milk, in fact there are only four
ways you can become HIV positive.
In
2003, almost 5 million people acquired HIV, which means there
are now almost 38 million people living with HIV and AIDS. Despite
best efforts from governments, non-profit organisations and healthcare
practitioners around the world, HIV and AIDS is still having huge
global impact.
In
India, there are fewer people are dying of AIDS but incidences
of HIV in the India than ever before. With testing and proper
treatment, through anti-HIV drugs, many people in the UK are now
able to halt or delay the damage caused by HIV.
Contracting HIV
You
can get HIV in four ways:
unprotected
sexual intercourse with an infected partner (the most common);
sharing needles or other contaminated injection or skin-piercing
equipment;
blood and blood products through, for example, infected transfusions
and organ or tissue transplants;
transmission
from infected mother to child in the womb or at birth and breastfeeding.
HIV is not transmitted by casual physical contact, coughing, sneezing
and kissing, by sharing toilet and washing facilities, by using
eating utensils or consuming food and beverages handled by someone
who has HIV; it is not spread by mosquitoes or other insect bites.
Currently,
the two groups most affected by HIV in the India are gay men and
heterosexual people who have lived in Africa. Although HIV infection
is most common in these groups in the UK, anybody can be infected
with HIV through unprotected sex or needle sharing.
Blood
transfusions and the use of other blood products are safe in the
India, and mother to baby transmission can be prevented by proper
treatment and care.