Okay... so this is a retrovirus (emphasis on the 'virus'). It is not a living thing unless it has a host. Why are we giving it so much time to evolve? I lived in Africa when I was little, I didn't even know that HIV/AIDS was such an epidemic until I came back.
We fought malaria.
We fought the Bubonic plague
We fought tuberculosis
We are maintaning SARS compared to AIDS.
Have we found our equal? Are we wasting our time giving this disease time to mature? Is HIV/AIDS protecting its own existence? Where is it from anyways? Is it actually man-made (in order to make money by creating a drug for it)? Is this an experiment gone bad?
Why is it so much more prevalent in third world countries. Third world countries I used to think had strict rules on women having sex with someone other than their husband. How is this virus spreading so fast?
2006-12-05
16:12:05
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5 answers
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asked by
Shalltell
3
in
Health
➔ Diseases & Conditions
➔ Infectious Diseases
In response to SUNBURNFROG(?):
Did you know that when medication as an inhibitor to HIV, and it is stopped, the process of replication is actually increased?
The more we fight, the more we fight back... in that sense?
2006-12-05
16:39:49 ·
update #1
In response to SUNBURNFROG(?):
Did you know that when medication as an inhibitor to HIV, and it is stopped, the process of replication is actually increased?
The more we fight, the more it fights back... in that sense?
2006-12-05
16:40:01 ·
update #2
But the diseases mentioned above are well maintained compared to AIDS.
I remember taking chloroquine and quinine, even when I had a common cold in Africa. Of course, Malaria was a huge one, and is still taking lives, but we fought/are fighting that one better than we are fighting AIDS.
2006-12-06
00:33:21 ·
update #3