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  • Aids Virus
    1,664 words
    AIDS: US Made? In an article in the Summer-Autumn 1990 issue of 'Top Secret', Prof. J. Segal and Dr. L. Segal illustrate their theory that AIDS is a man-made disease, originating at Pentagon bacteriological warfare labs at Fort Detrick, Maryland. ' Top Secret' is the international edition of the German magazine Geheimb and is a sister publication to the American Covert Action Information Bulletin (CAIB). Top Secret carries the Naming Names column, which CAIB is prevented from doing by the Americ...
  • Effect For Carriers Of The Aids Virus
    537 words
    Against the Mandatory Registration of Known AIDS Carriers As it is, finding out that you have a terminal disease is a seriously disheartening circumstance. It is a hard hit of realizations that you will be losing your distant future, your personal goals, life becomes frail and subordinate. If you can imagine learning the simple statement that your life is ending much sooner than you had expected due to a disease that will slowly materialize throughout your body and stop the production of everyth...
  • Aids The Aids Virus
    6,669 words
    Aids Conspricay - Is AIDS Biological Warfare The following is a complete verbatim transcription from a recent broadcast of "Network 23, a program shown on a local Los Angeles Public Access Cable Channel. Good evening, I m Michel Kas sett. This is Network 23. A couple of weeks ago we had a program on the subject of AIDS, addressing the question of whether AIDS the AIDS virus was created by the government; and I m sure that some people were quite shocked by what they heard. We spent that entire pr...
  • Known As The Early Hiv Infection Stage
    2,410 words
    Introduction The fate of a person who has contracted the virus, which causes AIDS, HIV (Human Immuno-deficiency Virus) is undeniably grim. However when diagnosed with aids it should not be taken as an immediate death sentence. AIDS sufferers can fight off most of the symptoms and live a fairly productive life for many years after diagnosis. The following will be entailed in the body of this AIDS analysis; a description as to what AIDS is, and the difference between AIDS and HIV. The cause of AID...
  • Hiv 1 Virus
    1,540 words
    In 1918 the United States experienced one of the worst epidemics in its history. With 500,000 dead in a matter of 6 months, the Spanish influenza left its mark. With approximately 11.7 million dead worldwide, Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS) is still leaving its mark. It is a pandemic the likes of which the world has always feared to see. The HIV virus comes in several varieties, yet they kill basically the same. Our understanding of this virus and how it works is essential to finding ...
  • Aids Virus
    1,526 words
    For my choice book, I chose to read 'Sleep With the Angels'; . This was a book that dealt with a mother who was HIV positive. Her name was Mary Fischer. I found this to be very inspirational, in many senses. I did however find the book to be somewhat monotonous, as the entire book was centered on Mary and all of her public speeches that she gave, and where she gave them. I personally, would much rather had the book been about her life, her children, how she contracted the disease and dealt with ...
  • Information About Hiv Infection And Aids
    3,136 words
    AIDS Acquired immune deficiency syndrome, or AIDS, is a recently recognized disease entity. It is caused by infection with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), which attacks selected cells in the immune system (see IMMUNITY) and produces defects in function. These defects may not be apparent for years. They lead ina relentless fashion, however, to a severe suppression of the immune system's ability to resist harmful organisms. This leaves the body open to an invasion by various infections, wh...
  • Mother With The Hiv Aids Virus
    2,526 words
    Michelle Lee Pelletier & Sarah Smith December, 16, 1998 Mr. Marquis Honors Chemistry Aids. I.D. S is an epidemic of the nineties. There are over one million people infected with the HIV in the United States, and over 250,000 cases of Aids. The World Health Organization estimates that there are between five and ten million infected with the H.I. V virus. This number is rising steadily. A.I.D. S is the end result of H.I. V, and to this day there is no cure. H.I. V was discovered in 1981, but not u...
  • Aids Virus
    854 words
    The movie, And the Band Played On, discusses the origin of the AIDS virus and how it spontaneously spread across the world. It used the Ebola disease to foreshadow the forth coming of another serious disease. The world was not prepared to handle such a contagious plague. Doctors around the world assumed that the first cases of the HIV virus to be just an abnormality of a certain disease, their carelessness of this matter was the start to the spread of this disease. Throughout this movie, it illu...
  • Cure For Aids And Hiv 1
    1,596 words
    AIDS is the acronym used for Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome. It is a disease transmitted through the blood. It is transmitted from person to person through sexual intercourse, blood transfusions, I.V. drug users, and from mothers to babies during birth. AIDS is a disease which breaks down the human immune system causing the body to become very susceptible to infection. The disease is brought about by the HIV-1 virus. HIV-1 (Human Immunodeficiency Virus) can remain dormant for years and then...
  • Aids And The Hiv Virus
    660 words
    CURRENT EVENTS: HIV ROOTS TRACED TO 1930 Summary Scientists have concluded, based on mathematical research, that the virus that lead to the epidemic of AIDS can be traced all the way back to 1930, somewhere around Central Africa. Bette Korber, of the Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico, presented this conclusion at the Conference of Retroviruses. The notion that HIV was introduced in contaminated oral polio vaccines in Africa between the years of 1957 and 1961 has been often debated and...
  • Hiv Infection And Aids
    1,885 words
    Immunity and Infection: AIDS Awareness Is Critical Every eleven minutes, someone in this country dies of AIDS-related complications. (Silverman, 1995) By the time you finish this paper, HIV will have ended another human life, adding to the 250,000+ already dead in the United States from infection by the virus. It is estimated that up to 1.5 million Americans now have the virus, and as the number grows, the risk to everyone grows. You must know the lifesaving facts about AIDS. AIDS awareness invo...
  • Hiv And Aids Victims
    2,213 words
    Any society, or group within society establishes norms of behavior to which its members are expected to conform. When people violate these norms, others express disapproval; deviants are shun, and if the violation is serious enough they may be treated with much less dignity or respect than justice dictates. This type of behavior has been going on for many years and this idea is particularly relevant to those who have HIV (Human Immunodeficiency Virus) and AIDS (Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome...
  • Important Role In Hiv Infection And Aids
    3,415 words
    Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome Essay, Research Paper Acquired immune deficiency syndrome, or AIDS, is a recently recognized disease. It is caused by infection with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), which attacks selected cells in the IMMUNE SYSTEM and produces defects in function. These defects may not be apparent for years. They lead, however, to a severe suppression of the immune system's ability to resist harmful organisms. This leaves the body o...
  • Aids Virus Htlv Lav
    3,041 words
    Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome Acquired Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome Essay, Research Paper Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome – AIDS – has stimulated more interest in history than any other disease of modern times. Since the epidemic was first identified in 1981, scientists, physicians, public officials, and journalists have frequently raised historical questions. Most often these questions have been about contemporary social and epidemio...
  • Investigate The Concept Of Social Darwinism
    1,706 words
    Evolution and Genetic Engineering Activity 1: Why is AIDS so difficult to cure? How does the AIDS virus attack the body?? In 1979, the first reported AIDS case occurred in New York, and by mid-June 1981, unusual immune system failure among gay men was surfacing in the United States. The Centers for Disease Control (CDC) initially name the disease GRID, or gay-related immune deficiency, because it was prominently found among homosexuals. It appeared to be a lifestyle-associated illness, linked to...

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