英语写作高手请进!What should we do to prevent AIDS ...150~200words 就好 辛苦你们了,我把我全部的分都给你们!不要太露眼的单词啊!不 要翻译器 THX 作文··

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英语写作高手请进!What should we do to prevent AIDS ...150~200words 就好 辛苦你们了,我把我全部的分都给你们!不要太露眼的单词啊!不 要翻译器 THX 作文··

英语写作高手请进!What should we do to prevent AIDS ...150~200words 就好 辛苦你们了,我把我全部的分都给你们!不要太露眼的单词啊!不 要翻译器 THX 作文··
英语写作高手请进!
What should we do to prevent AIDS ...
150~200words 就好
辛苦你们了,我把我全部的分都给你们!
不要太露眼的单词啊!
不 要翻译器 THX
作文··

英语写作高手请进!What should we do to prevent AIDS ...150~200words 就好 辛苦你们了,我把我全部的分都给你们!不要太露眼的单词啊!不 要翻译器 THX 作文··
what should we do to prevent AIDS
1 带套
2 daitao
3 always wear a condom before having affairs
4 不要吸毒 don't using drugs
6 不要非法卖血 don't selling your blood illegally
7 宣传这些给周围的人 let everybody around you know these
这点东西都写不好 哎...

http://library.thinkquest.org/5422/aidsprevent.html
So you have thought you will contact aids because you have shaken hand with an AIDS patient! Or are you afraid because you have come to know tha...

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http://library.thinkquest.org/5422/aidsprevent.html
So you have thought you will contact aids because you have shaken hand with an AIDS patient! Or are you afraid because you have come to know that you have shared the bathroom and swam in the same swimming pool with the person infected with AIDS.
Are you skeptical about the food that has been cooked by an AIDS patient or do you stay away from the blood drives for the same fear of contacting AIDS? Or do you have the impression that you have the risk of catching AIDS through sweat, cough or sneeze of the infected person? Do you really believe that you can get AIDS if bitten by the same mosquito that bit an AIDS patient? Well, if these are your ideas regarding the transmission about HIV, then I must say you are grossly under informed. It's high time that you start doing some meaningful researches to know the real causes of HIV transmission in the human body.
Here are some instances where you have the chances of contacting this deadly disease.
Suppose you have undergone a blood transfusion following an accident. There are chances of HIV virus entering your body through the donated blood. Suppose the carrying mother contacted AIDS, then the child will be born with AIDS viruses in his blood. Do you have this dangerous habit of changing your sex-partner every alternate day? Then you are at a high risk of being infected with AIDS, as unprotected sex with a partner having AIDS is the most potent cause of AIDS.
Then another way AIDS virus can enter your body and that is by using a needle with the remains of AIDS infected blood in it. You can also get AIDS if the blood from the wounds of an infected patient gets into yours by an open wound.
So you can see, AIDS is hard to contact and it is not a contagious disease in the sense flu is. AIDS causing HIV virus is spread through the blood; it does not survive in the sweat, tears or air.
Here are some tips to help you prevent this disease.
-Avoid having unprotected sex with multiple partners. Never reuse condoms.
-Be careful to take only HIV free blood, if you ever need to take blood at all.
-Never pick up any needle from the ground and never let it enter your body.
-Always use disposable needles and syringes.
-Be careful not to share needle at the time of body piercing or tattooing.
-In the salon, never share razor.
-You can kiss an AIDS patient in the cheek, but do not go for deeper kiss, as AIDS virus can be sometimes found in the saliva.
1. Male Circumcision
A trial of over 3,000 young men showed that those who are circumcised are about 60% less likely to be infected with HIV, compared with those who are not circumcised, says Gita Ramjee, PhD, of the HIV Prevention Research Unit of the South Africa Medical Research Unit.
And another study predicted that widespread implementation of male circumcision could avert 2 million new infections in sub-Saharan Africa alone.
But circumcisions must be safely performed by trained health providers -- something that is lacking in many developing countries, the report notes.
2. Microbicides
Gels and creams applied to the vagina or rectum to reduce HIV transmission, microbicides are a hot area of research, Ramjee says.
They can combat HIV on a variety of fronts: disabling the virus, interfering with the process by which the virus enters and takes hold in cells, and even strengthening the body's defenses against infection.
As of mid-2006, there were over 25 products in various stages of development, with five in late-stage studies of effectiveness. Results could be available by late 2007, Ramjee says.
Blocking the AIDS Virus
3. Diaphragms and Other Cervical Barriers
"Diaphragms physically block the virus from reaching the cervix, where there is good reason to believe most infections occur," says Nancy Padion, PhD, professor of obstetrics and gynecology at the University of California, San Francisco.
Results of a trial of over 5,000 women comparing use of the diaphragm plus condoms with condoms alone are expected in 2007.
Future research will look at using the diaphragm in conjunction with a microbicide for dual protection, Ramjee says.
4. HIV 'Prevention Pills'
Testing of an AIDS "prevention pill" on about 860 high-risk women in Cameroon, Ghana, and Nigeria suggest that the approach is safe and feasible, according to research presented at the conference.
While the numbers were too small to prove effectiveness, the research is encouraging enough to "suggest it is good for HIV prevention," Ramjee says. "Now we need further study to figure out how it should be given."
5. Herpes Treatment
Genital herpes increases the risk of HIV infection threefold, and herpes can be treated with drugs. "The hope is that by decreasing herpes infections, we can reduce the risk of HIV transmissions," Ramjee says.
Two clinical trials evaluating the strategy are underway.
6. HIV Vaccines
There is renewed hope for a vaccine, thanks to 16 grants totaling $287 million from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.
But a vaccine, widely considered to be the best way to control the epidemic, is probably still years away.
"We are fully confident we have a vaccine, but we've stopped predicting when: It could be five years, 10 years, or more," Gayle says.
Beyond the ABCs of HIV Prevention
The bottom line "is that we have to go beyond the ABCs of prevention," Ramjee says, referring to the widely used acronym for abstinence, being faithful to one sexual partner, and using condoms.
"I have described a new acronym that goes right up to I," she says.
"We have an additional C for circumcision, D for diaphragm for HIV prevention, E for exposure prophylaxis -- both pre and post, F for female-controlled microbicides, G for genital tract infection, H for HSV-2 (herpes) suppressive therapy, and I for immunization through vaccine."

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