POPULARITY
#HIV #러브포원 #꿀잠HIV 감염인의 사망 원인 1위는 병이 아닙니다.HIV에 대한 잘못된 인식과 낙인, 차별이 감염인을 절벽으로 몰고 있습니다.최근 1년 동안 스스로 목숨을 끊으려고 시도한 적이 있다고 응답한 감염인의 비율은비감염인에 비해 40배나 높아 심각한 수준입니다.1999년부터 HIV 감염인의 지원군이 되어주신 HIV 감염인 단체 '러브포원' 박광서 대표와 전화 연결을 통해,감염인들이 겪는 정서적 어려움에 대한 이야기를 들어보았습니다.또한 순천향대학교 천안병원 감염내과 박정완 교수님, 연세마운틴 정신건강의학과 의원 이산 원장님과 함께 감염인들이 마주한 현실과 수면 장애, 우울증에 대해 알아봅니다.
#HIV #불면증 #꿀잠"잘 주무시나요?"한 마디만 물어봤어도..치료제의 발전으로 HIV 감염인의 기대수명은 비감염인과 유사한 수준에 이르렀습니다. 이제 의료계의 시선은 생존을 넘어 삶의 질로 이동해야 할 때입니다.나는의사다는 HIV 감염인 단체 러브포원과 함께 설문조사를 실시해 감염인의 수면 장애 실태를 조사했습니다.결과는 어땠을까요?비감염인보다 HIV 감염인이 불면증에 시달리는 이유와어떻게 하면 규칙적으로 숙면하게 되고 좋은 수면 습관을 들일 수 있는지순천향대학교 천안병원 감염내과의 박정완 교수님과연세마운틴 정신건강의학과 의원 이산 원장님과 함께HIV 감염인들의 삶의 질, 특히 수면에 대해 알아보겠습니다.
တစ်စုံတစ်ယောက်မှာ HIV ပိုးရှိနေတာကို သိခဲ့ရင် သင်က သူတို့ကို ခွဲခြားဆက်ဆံမှာလား။ လွန်ခဲ့တဲ့နှစ်များစွာကတည်းက အသိပညာပေးလှုပ်ရှားမှုတွေကို ပြုလုပ်နေပေမယ့်လည်း လုံလောက်တဲ့ဗဟုသုတမရှိမှုတွေကြောင့် HIV ပိုးရှိသူတွေကို ခွဲခြားဆက်ဆံတာမျိုးတွေရှိနေဆဲဖြစ်ပါတယ်။ အဲဒီလို အဖြစ်မျိုးကို ကလေးငယ်တွေပါကြုံတွေ့နေရတာပါ။ ဒီတစ်ပတ်ဆောင်းပါးကို ဒို့အသံအလွတ်တန်းသတင်းထောက်ကဆက်လက်တင်ဆက်ပေးမှာပါ။ ဆောင်းပါးအပြည့်အစုံကိုနားဆင်နိုင်ပါပြီ။
Não esteve no HIV Drug Therapy Glasgow 2022? Nós estivemos por si. Dos refugiados à PrEP, passando pela tuberculose e novos dados do novo inibidor da translocação de nucleósidos da transcriptase reversa, a Drª. Diva Trigo e o Dr. Miguel Araújo Abreu, abordam o essencial do que de novo se conheceu em Glasgow. Acompanhe-nos em mais um 'Olho Clínico'.Drª Diva TrigoMédica Infeciologista do Hospital Fernando FonsecaDr. Miguel Araújo AbreuMédico Infeciologista do CHUPortoOlho Clínico é um Podcast da MSD de atualização científica, direcionado exclusivamente a Profissionais de Saúde. O conteúdo do mesmo não tem por objetivo induzir qualquer alteração de comportamento na prescrição ou toma de medicamentos. PT-NON-02143 11/2022
In this thoroughly engaging episode, we hear from Dr.Steven Watiti who works for Mildmay Uganda, a leading HIV and AIDS service organisation, about living and aging with HIV and AIDS. Steven shares his story of family life, courage, loss, survival, learning, and advocacy. He speaks about the importance of mental health support and social capital when living with a lifelong health condition and calls for others to respond. Dr Steven Watiti Patient representative on Respond-Africa Partnership After studying Medicine at Makerere University, Kampala, Uganda, Dr. Watiti, was a medical officer, Rubaga Hospital, Kampala from 1985-1988. He practiced medicine privately from 1988-2004 at Entebbe Road clinic and JOY Medical Centre Ndeeba, Kampala. From 2004, he has been working at Mildmay Uganda, a leading HIV and AIDS service organisation. An HIV activist and ardent advocate for improved and sustainable health for all, Dr. Watiti believes with hindsight that he acquired HIV between 1985 and 1986 while working as a junior medical officer. In 2000, he began ARVs after contracting tuberculosis, cancer (Kaposi's sarcoma), and meningitis. In 2006, he started his weekly column on HIV in New Vision, Uganda's leading daily newspaper. His column appears Mondays under the heading: “Towards zero: with Doctor Watiti”. He has published two books on HIV: “HIV and AIDS: 100 Commonly Asked Questions” and “Conquering HIV and AIDS: My personal experience of living with HIV”. Dr Waititi works with the Respond Africa partnership as an expert patient ensuring that patient needs, views and voices are heard and considered and addressed when designing and implementing research projects. Twitter: @WatitiStephen https://inteafrica.org/ (https://inteafrica.org/) Dr. Rhona Mijumbi-Deve Dr. Rhona Mijumbi-Deve is a senior lecturer of public policy at the Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine (LSTM) and heads the Policy Unit at the Malawi Liverpool Wellcome Clinical Research Programme in Blantyre, Malawi. Rhona trained as a medical doctor and later as a Clinical Epidemiologist and Biostatistician, and health policy analyst. She has spent the past decade doing health systems and policy research. Her special interest is in exploring the nexus of evidence, and policy and decision-making processes, especially in low- and middle-income countries. She especially is interested in understanding this in the contexts of emergencies, health security and health diplomacy.
In this week's episode, we will be talking about the economic impact of non-communicable diseases or NCDs on east African communities. Guests include Dr. Steven Waititi, a Patient representative on Respond-Africa Partnership and author of “Conquering HIV and AIDS: My personal experience of living with HIV” and Josephine Birungi, a Senior Research Scientist based at Medical Research Council/Uganda Virus Research Institute (MRC/UVRI) in Entebbe. They discuss: Financial/economic barriers for patients and communities affected by NCDs What having an NCD means for patient finances How integrated care addresses these problems Dr Josephine Birungi Senior Research Scientist, MRC +UVRI& LSHTM Uganda Research Unit Dr Josephine Birungi is a Senior Research Scientist based at Medical Research Council/Uganda Virus Research Institute (MRC/UVRI) in Entebbe. She is currently working on a number of research project within the Respond Africa Partnership, as study lead in Uganda. Projects include INTEAFRICA which is evaluating a novel approach of integrated clinical management of HIV-infection, diabetes, and hypertension in Tanzania and Uganda and INTECOMM which is evaluating community based integrated care for people living with HIV, Diabetes and Hypertension. https://inteafrica.org/ (https://inteafrica.org/) @josephinebirun1 Dr Steven Watiti Patient representative on Respond-Africa Partnership After studying Medicine at Makerere University, Kampala, Uganda, Dr. Watiti, was a medical officer, Rubaga Hospital, Kampala from 1985-1988. He practiced medicine privately from 1988-2004 at Entebbe Road clinic and JOY Medical Centre Ndeeba, Kampala. From 2004, he has been working at Mildmay Uganda, a leading HIV and AIDS service organisation. An HIV activist and ardent advocate for improved and sustainable health for all, Dr. Watiti believes with hindsight that he acquired HIV between 1985 and 1986 while working as a junior medical officer. In 2000, he began ARVs after contracting tuberculosis, cancer (Kaposi's sarcoma), and meningitis. In 2006, he started his weekly column on HIV in New Vision, Uganda's leading daily newspaper. His column appears Mondays under the heading: “Towards zero: with Doctor Watiti”. He has published two books on HIV: “HIV and AIDS: 100 Commonly Asked Questions” and “Conquering HIV and AIDS: My personal experience of living with HIV”. Dr Waititi works with the Respond Africa partnership as an expert patient ensuring that patient needs, views and voices are heard and considered and addressed when designing and implementing research projects. https://inteafrica.org/ (https://inteafrica.org/) @WatitiStephen
在许多污名和传闻中,HIV阳性者在印度受到了极大的歧视。感染爱滋病的儿童被自己的家人遗弃。所罗门-拉吉通过收养HIV阳性儿童,给他们提供住所、食物和教育以及莫大的爱,自己也找到了人生的坚实目标。
Aging with HIV: Discrimination, Treatment, Hope The Not Old Better Show, Art or Living Interview Series Welcome to The Not Old Better Show. I'm Paul Vogelzang, and today's show is brought to you by Chess.com and Faherty Brand Clothes. Please support our sponsors and check out today's show notes for special offers from Chess.com and Faherty Brand. Our guest today, Dennis Fleming, age 62, is a social work consultant based in Sacramento, California. Diagnosed with HIV in the early 1990s, Dennis has struggled to find an effective treatment regimen for decades, until Dennis learned about Rucobia – an HIV Therapy for heavily treatment experienced (HTE) adults living with HIV. Following his initial diagnosis, treatments were not yet available, and he had a hard time coping with his status. Nearly five years later, he began treatment with an antiretroviral therapy, but with limited success. The experience led him to stop treatment for a year, resulting in a severe case of toxoplasmosis. After recovering from this life-threatening experience, Dennis Fleming became determined to prioritize his health. Older HIV-infected gay men may experience multiple forms of stigma related to sexual orientation (homonegativity), HIV (HIV stigma), and age (ageism), all of which can negatively impact quality of life (QOL). We're going to be talking about what Dennis Fleming has witnessed in 30 years with aging and HIV, his unique perspective on how HIV has changed during the last four decades and Dennis Fleming will share what this milestone means for long-term survivors, including how treatments have evolved? Fewer pills, prevention? Hope. Be part of society. What are friendships and family life like? Stigma… Please join me in welcoming to The Not Old Better Show via internet phone, Dennis Fleming. Please support our sponsors: Chess.com https://fahertybrand.com and enter NotOldBetter at checkout
Struggling to keep up with all the recent developments in HIV? You're ears are in the right place: We chat with Dr. Tristan Barber, HIV consultant at the Royal Free Hospital, London. He helps us go through some exciting and important developments in HIV medicine including:- Back to the basics of HIV management- Two drug regimens- Injectable drugs- Chronic inflammation and chronic disease risk- Vaccines for HIV- Cure of HIV- HIV and COVID- any lessons to learn? A big thank you to Tristan and if you'd like to check out more head to journalspotting.c
Among a wide variety of other pursuits, Dr. MarkAlain Dery is an HIV doctor. Amid the staggeringly bad news about the rate of HIV infection in New Orleans second in the nation behind Miami is the good news that if you have to contract a serious illness say, diabetes, cancer, or HIV HIV is the one to pick. According to MarkAlain, you can get a simple and free HIV test called an "instie" and if you test positive for HIV your life expectancy is the same as a regular person who does not have HIV, if you regularly take one pill. And you re not going to infect anyone else, even your sex partners. Just for the record, MarkAlain also, runs a radio station called WHIV, plays bass in a number of bands, and hosts a podcast about social justice. John Paul Carmody and Jackson Purvis are two thirds of the New Orleans rock trio, South Jones. The third member of the band is any one of a number of rotating bass players. John Paul is from Omaha Nebraska and Jackson is from South Mississippi. They met via a Craig s List post and soon discovered their musical similarities and fondness for the same drugs, in that descending order. If all goes well, their soon to be released record, Breathing Room, is possibly going to be a game changer. If you take a listen to the song they play on this Happy Hour you ll no doubt agree. These guys are not just on something, they re onto something. Andrew Duhon says he has a bunch of songs that just aren t good enough to make it onto a record. He plays one here. The general consensus is that for anyone else this would be their standout best song they d ever written. Photos at Wayfare by Jill Lafleur.
Ask, Answer And Get The Facts About Herpes Life With Herpes Welcome to today’s episode on Life With Herpes. As always, thank you for joining me and spending your time watching/listening/and or reading. I take some time to let you know what is going on in my life. I actually have moved to Las Vegas so if you are watching this you get to see my new kitchen. Thanks for baring with me as I figure out the acoustics, angels and the best location for recording Today I go a little off track and talk about HIV and the link between HIV and herpes. I do want you to know that I am not an expert when it comes to talking about HIV but I want to make sure you are educated on this to prevent yourself from becoming infected or from infecting a partner. What is HIV? HIV stands for human immunodeficiency virus and it weakens the infected person's immune system and eventually killing them. When the HIV scare first came out it was an automatic death sentence but now has technology has progressed and we have more knowledge regarding the virus there is a treatment for this. I mean look at Magic Johnson! HIV is spread through bodily fluids such as; blood, semen, pre-seminal fluids, rectal fluids, vaginal fluids, and breast milk. In other words, having unprotected sex with an HIV + partner can infect you with the virus. Here is the link between HIV and herpes and why I wanted to bring it to your attention. As you and I know, genital herpes can cause sores or papercuts like breaks in the skin or on mouth, vagina, and rectum. The genital sores caused by herpes can bleed easily as well as they are open areas for other viruses or bacteria to get in. When the sores come into contact with the mouth, vagina, or rectum during sex, they increase the risk of giving or getting HIV if you or your partner has HIV. So in other words having a herpes outbreak can make you more susceptible to contracting other viruses such as HIV. Make sure you use protection such as a latex condom as well has have a conversation with your partner when it comes to your sexual health. For more information on HIV please visit these websites: Center of Disease Control (CDC) Planned Parenthood Keep in touch with Alexandra Harbushka www.lifewithherpes.com www.instagram.com/alexandraharbushka www.facebook.com/lifewithherpespodcast www.pinterest.com/lifewithherpes Join the community If you are ready to join a community of people who are living with herpes also then you will want to join our slack group. It is FREE and it is a great way to find the support and comfort that you are looking for. Head on over to www.lifewithherpes.com and join our community. You will receive a slack invitation as soon as you sign up. See you in there. Ways you can support the Life With Herpes show And if you enjoyed listening to this episode as much as we enjoyed making it for you, please give the Life With Herpes show a review. It is a way to pay it forward to fellow friends who are living with herpes. You can Subscribe, Rate and Review the show through your iTunes app or on the desktop. Seriously, it helps out a lot more than it is a hassle for you. You see, iTunes has an algorithm that organically promotes the show, so the more ratings and reviews the Life With Herpes Show receives then the higher it gets ranked. This is your way of paying it forward and helping someone find the show who really needs it. Oh, and you can totally use a fake name, so don’t worry about a friend finding you in the iTunes review. Talking about herpes needs to be spread as far and wide as possible. You are totally a part of this movement so THANK YOU! Subscribe, Rate and Review More Episode Resources How can I help you? Tell me in a free 15 minute chat! The Herpes Outbreak Toolkit (use the promo code PODCAST) Join The Life With Herpes Community Life With Herpes YouTube channel DoTerra’s essential oils herpes medication, herpes, herpes on lip, herpes zoster, herpes virus, herpes ulcer, herpes symptoms, herpes rash, herpes blisters, herpes treatment, herpes research, herpes outbreak, herpes kissing, herpes genital, genital herpes, herpes blood test,
This is Part 1 of an interview on the Unauthorized Health Report with Michael Ellner and Adam Fox, featuring Celia Farber, recorded on June 20, 2006. Farber discusses the HIV HIV tests, her article in the March 2006 issue of Harper's Magazine, and more. For more information, please go to www.progressiveradionetwork.com.
This is Part 2 of an interview on the Unauthorized Health Report with Michael Ellner and Adam Fox, featuring Celia Farber, recorded on June 20, 2006. Farber discusses the HIV HIV tests, her article in the March 2006 issue of Harper's Magazine, and more. For more information, please go to www.progressiveradionetwork.com.