PSY 100 - Activity # 5
PSY 100 - Activity # 5
PSY 100 - Activity # 5
Alcuas
1st Year BSA
Since this virus doesn’t spread through the air like cold and flu viruses. HIV and
AIDS lives in the blood and in some body fluids. To get HIV, these fluids from someone
with HIV has to get into your blood. Body fluids like: semen, vaginal fluids (also
menstrual blood), breast milk, blood, and lining inside anus.
Other body fluids, like saliva, sweat or urine, do not contain enough of the virus
to infect another person. Taking note that it is not passed through by spit, kissing,
contact with unbroken healthy skin, being sneezed, sharing stuffs, and contact with
animals.A person can have HIV without developing AIDS, but it is not possible to
have AIDS without first having HIV.
In Symptomatic HIV infection the virus keeps on multiplying destroying cells. The
development of mild chronic signs such as: fever, fatigue, swollen nyph nodes, diarrhea,
wight loss, oral yeast infection, herpes zoster, pneumonia.
Thankfully with the advances in modern technology and science, doctors were able to
find something that will help people with HIV and AIDS. According to a site called “Mayoclinic”
that there is no cure for HIV/AIDS, but there are medications that can slow the further progress
of the disease. Those drugs have been confirmed to reduce death from AIDS in many
developed countries. Everyone diagnosed with HIV should start getting antiretroviral therapy
(ART). ART is a combination of three or more medications from different drug classes. This is
what they considfer as the best approach in chances of lowering HIV in the blood.
The classes of HIV drugs include: Non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NNRTIs) turn off
a protein needed by HIV to make copies of itself, Nucleoside or nucleotide reverse transcriptase
inhibitors (NRTIs) are faulty versions of the building blocks that HIV needs to make copies of
itself, Protease inhibitors (PIs) inactivate HIV protease, another protein that HIV needs to
make copies of itself, Integrase inhibitors work by disabling a protein called integrase,
which HIV uses to insert its genetic material into CD4 T cells, Entry or fusion
inhibitors block HIV's entry into CD4 T cells. (Mayo Clinic Staff, 2020)
5. How to prevent HIV & AIDS?
To prevent such virus to infect us we must to our part to prevent them. Some prevention
methods are: Getting tested for HIV or Getting tested and treated for STD’s, Choosing less risky
sexual behaviors like sex without a condom or without medicines to treat HIV, Use of condoms
everytime you have sex, Limiting your sexual partners, Talking to your health care provider
about pre-exposure prophlaxis (PrEP), and Do not encourage injecting drugs ( but if needed,
use only sterile injection equipments and never ever share with others) (Basics of HIV
Prevention, 2020).
References used:
Causes HIV and AIDS. (2018, Apri 3). Retrieved from NHS: https://www.nhs.uk/conditions/hiv-and-
aids/causes/
Ellis, M. E. (2014, Januray 13). HIV vs. AIDS: What’s the Difference? Retrieved from Healthline:
https://www.healthline.com/health/hiv-aids/hiv-vs-aids
Mayo Clinic Staff. (2020, February 13). Retrieved from Mayoclinic: https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-
conditions/hiv-aids/symptoms-causes/syc-20373524
The Basics of HIV Prevention. (2020, September 16). Retrieved from HIV Info:
https://hivinfo.nih.gov/understanding-hiv/fact-sheets/basics-hiv-prevention