Advocates for people with HIV are concerned the Biden administration will not fully implement a ruling that allows enlistment by healthy HIV-positive Americans, leaving the matter to Trump.
Scientists discovered that repetitive HIV vaccinations can lead the body to produce antibodies targeting the immune complexes already bound to the virus — knowledge that could lead to better vaccines.
Many vaccines work by introducing a protein to the body that resembles part of a virus. Ideally, the immune system will produce long-lasting antibodies recognizing that specific virus, thereby providing protection.
Scientists have unveiled insights into how HIV-1, the virus responsible for AIDS, skillfully hijacks cellular machinery for its own survival. By dissecting the molecular interplay between the virus and its host,
Repetitive HIV vaccinations can lead the body to produce antibodies targeting the immune complexes already bound to the virus.
The next chapter of the right-wing war on the Affordable Care Act involves a case that targets the preventative care that millions living with the disease rely on to live healthy lives.
But just seven years ago, and despite living with HIV for nearly half his life, Duffy was remarkably healthy, working in Boston as a respiratory therapist, ambitious, and always moving. “Foot loose and fancy free,” is how he describes it.
Discover the latest advancements in HIV prevention and how they offer hope for reducing infections, especially in the Black community.
Women who are using heroin and were recently incarcerated had increased stimulant use, which is associated with adverse outcomes in HIV.
Here are some of the findings from UNAIDS' new report on HIV and human rights, and what they could mean for the fight against AIDS.
(Reuters) - Gilead Sciences and the U.S. government have settled a billion-dollar patent dispute over Gilead's HIV prevention drugs Truvada and Descovy, according to a Wednesday filing in Delaware federal court. The settlement follows a victory for Gilead in a 2023 jury trial on the government's patent infringement allegations.
The government provides HIV medicines free of charge. Yet in one Indigenous territory, cases and deaths are increasing at an alarming rate.