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Showing posts with label Hiv. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hiv. Show all posts

Life inside a dingy brothel in Lagos where most of the sex workers are HIV positive (Photos)

A photo documentary of the life of prostitutes living in very poor conditions in Badia, a Lagos slum, shows a surge in the number of women who have now taken to the sex trade in order to combat the worsening economic situation in the country.
The photos which were taken by photographer Ton Koene show most of the prostitutes in their abode, a few of them applying makeup as they prepared for their clients. 


Some of the sex workers are as young as 14-years-old Reports from Koene as told by Dailymail reveals that the sex workers entertain up to 5 clients on a daily basis.
Sadly, most of the sex workers do not insist on safe sex and as such, nearly a quarter of them are living with HIV. To explain how severe the situation is, Koene revealed that his driver made a comment about how "If you arrive by car, you can smell the HIV virus outside."
Over 1.2 million people are reportedly living with HIV in Lagos alone and this is believed to be so because of the cultural barrier keeping women from getting access to prevention tools and also due to women being shamed if a condom is found with them.
According to a study carried out by Iranian Journal of Public Health with regards to HIV prevalence in Lagos, a father of three revealed that he thinks it improper for a woman to carry a condom.
He said:
"Any woman, including my wife who tells her husband about it or gets it for them to use needs to be questioned. In short, she should be seriously sanctioned."
Reactions following this documentary posted on Dailymail is quite embarrassing for Nigeria with some of them noting that it was only a matter of time before those women began trooping into their country to seek refuge. Billboy from Newscastle, United Kingdom, wrote;
"Watch out for female (so called) singers and wannabe actors out on the streets soon with placards demanding they be allowed to come and live here."
More photos below;















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Help Me! I am in Love with an HIV+ Man...But I am Confused

A girl has fallen deeply in love with an HIV+ positive man and doesn't know what right step to take.
*Photo used for illustrative purpose*
 
A girl is in a dilemma as she cannot make up her mind concerning her relationship with an HIV+ man she loves dearly. She's afraid he isn't committing. The story was shared by Adejoro Olumofin, a relationship expert.
 
****
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Unbelievable! The Number of New HIV Cases Recorded in Borno IDP Camps will Shock You

A new revelation has been made about the shocking number of HIV/AIDS recorded across IDP camps in Borno State,
IDPs
 
The Executive Secretary, Borno Agency for the Control of HIV/AIDS, BOSACA, Barkindo Saidu, says 512 new cases of HIV infections have been recorded in Internally Displaced Persons, IDPs, camps in the state.
 
He spoke on Sunday in Maiduguri while briefing journalists.
 
Mr. Saidu said that the cases were recorded after voluntary screening in some IDP camps in the state.
 
He pointed out that two out of the 512 persons were children.
 
“We are currently conducting voluntary screening on HIV/AIDS in IDPs’ camps across the state to determine the status of the people, especially those rescued from the Boko Haram terrorists.

“As at last week, we have recorded 512 positive cases, among which two are children,” Mr. Saidu said.
 
Officials had earlier said no fewer than 5,000 Internally Displaced Persons, IDPs, in 27 camps in the state are currently living with the virus.
 
Mr. Saidu said that the state had witnessed rising cases of the disease due largely to the Boko Haram terrorism.
 
“Currently, 2.4 per cent of the population of the state are living with HIVand AIDS, which translates to 108,000 persons, going by the record of the National Population Commission.

“But only a tiny portion of these people can access treatment because most anti retroviral centres have closed,”Mr. Saidu said.
 
He explained that only 32 out of the 90 anti retroviral centres were still operational in the state.
 
“Before the Boko Haram terrorism, we had 90 treatment centres across the state, but only 32 are still functional today.

“The rest have been closed down due to the Boko Haram terrorism,” Mr. Saidu said.
 
He called on the Federal Government and donor agencies to intervene in the HIV and AIDS control in the state.
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How I Was Infected With HIV - Mother of Two Tells Shocking True Life Story

A mother of two who has been infected with the deadly HIV/AIDS scourge, has told the heartbreaking tale of how she got infected.
File photo used only for illustrative purpose
 
The womanm identified only as Roselyn, shared her story on The Punch.
 
According to her, she was in love with a man who had HIV but was not aware of it.
 
She only became aware long into the relationship when she had already become pregnant.
 
Read her story below:
 
***********************
 
I did not know that the man I was going out with was HIV-positive, though I knew that he had haemophilia — a genetic disorder that prevents the blood from clotting when someone is injured.
 
I only got to know that my partner had HIV after I became pregnant and started attending antenatal. That was in March 1992 when I was already eight months pregnant. No news could be more devastating for any expectant mother!
 
But I kept the information to myself, as I was only concerned about having the baby and moving on with my life.
 
That was 24 years ago. As at that time, not much was known about the effects of HIV on a pregnant woman. But I got to know the seriousness of my challenge when all the medical staff that attended to me during delivery treated me with disdain: they all wore masks and other paraphernalia. It was as if they were attending to Ebola patient!
 
The attitude then was, ‘Keep quiet and don’t tell anyone else’. Indeed, it was a period of intense confusion and regrets, because I did not have any information about my syndrome, while the doctors were as scared as I also was!
 
After the birth of my child, I felt like killing myself. By that time, I had packed up the relationship with the man that infected me, so I was a single mother.
 
Somehow, my friends got to know about my condition and many of them forsook me. In fact, many thought I became HIV-positive because I was a prostitute!
 
In any case, I got the courage to enroll in the hospital, where I was receiving drugs, despite the long stares that trailed me whenever I entered the hospital.
 
When I wanted to have my second baby, I opted for artificial insemination, to prevent him from becoming HIV-positive. My new partner was HIV-negative, though.
 
And because HIV was relatively new then, my doctors told me I had just about 10 years to live. So, I was conscious of death all the time, which was very scary.
 
Mercifully, by the early 2000s, HIV treatment had changed. Medications are n, and I was healthy. Better still, people have become more aware that the infection is no longer a death sentence.
 
So, if you are HIV-positive, don’t lose hope. Take the right steps by visiting the nearest hospital. No one should die of AIDS this time around.
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So Shocking! 5,000 IDPs Infected with HIV/AIDS

Thousands of despondent Nigerians living in IDP camps - North-eastern part of Nigeria have been discovered to be living with the deadly HIV/AIDS virus.
 
File Photo
 
No fewer than 5, 000 Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) in 27 camps in embattled Borno state in northeast Nigeria are currently living with HIV/AIDS, according to the Vanguard.
 
Mr Hassan Mustapha, the Coordinator on HIV/AIDS in Borno, said on Thursday that most of the patients were women who were rescued from captivity in Boko Haram camps.
 
The coordinator, however, said that some of those affected were not effectively accessing anti retroviral therapy because of stigmatisation. He lamented that many of them had died of the scourge because they were not properly counselled and sensitised on the need to enrol under the HIV/AIDS control programme.
 
“We have more than 1, 000 patients in Bama camp and 3, 000 in Gwoza camp while over 1, 000 others are taking refuge in the host communities.
 
“We have heard of many supporting NGOs in Borno but none of them has approached us to offer assistance to the IDPs living with the virus.
 
“The IDPs living with such ailment are constantly challenged; they do not go out to access drugs.
 
“Most of them are shy while some are afraid to be identified by others as carriers.
 
“They sometimes complain to us that they are not allowed to go out of the camp to access drugs in other centres.
 
“The honest truth is that government is not paying priority attention to the plight of such persons,” said Mustapha.
 
Menawhile, a movie production company has concluded plans to feature Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) in its forthcoming Television Reality Show.
 
Mr Emmanuel Eyaba, the Executive Producer of Virtues and Noble Touch Nigeria (VNT), who visited some IDPs camps in Abuja on Wednesday for audition, said that the aim was to give them a new identity. The audition was done in collaboration with the African Union (AU).
 
The talent programme tagged; “Unleash Your Creativity’’ also known as “UUC Nigeria’’, is aimed at creating a platform for young adults interested in the movie industry to showcase their abilities.
 
The zonal auditions had been successfully held in Kano, Kaduna, Adamawa, Port Harcourt, Enugu and Lagos.
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How Boko Haram Commanders Set Me Free Due to My HIV Status - Woman Shares Horrific Experience

A woman who escaped from the horrific jaws of the deadly Boko Haram sect, has opened up on how she was freed.
Boko Haram
 
Aishat Maiangu Ali, a 30-year-old mother-of-six, has recalled how she lied to five commanders of the Boko Haram sect who came to pay her dowry after they killed her children and her husband in a raid on Gwoza town two years ago.
 
According to DailyPost, she revealed that she told them she was HIV positive.
 
“On that fateful Friday when they captured Gwoza, many people were killed, including my husband. Many women hid their husbands under their roofs, but when the insurgents got to know, they started shooting sporadically and many were killed. Hundreds of men voluntarily joined the sect when they discovered that they could not escape the onslaught,” Aishat told DailyTrust.
 
She continued, “I have six children, but four were killed, along with my husband. The insurgents thereafter named Gwoza their caliphate. I suffered unexplainable depression in the hands of Boko Haram insurgents. I can’t remember everything, but I know that many young women suffered as sex slaves. At a point, they took us to Mubi and Michika towns. They also moved us to a border village between Cameroon and Nigeria for several months before that Thursday when the army recaptured Gwoza. We never knew that we would see people again.

“After a month, things got worse as there was no food to eat. They told people that they would give them food and beautiful houses if they were ready to marry them. It was then that women and girls started marrying them in exchange for food.

“One Amir Abu came to my house and requested to marry me, but I refused because he was amongst those who killed my husband. I also felt that I didn’t need their food, house and other things because I did not know where they came from. Also, for them to be killing innocent people simply didn’t follow the rule of their so-called Sharia law, so I hated them. It was scarcity of food that led many young girls and women to marry them. I used to grind maize and millet for them because I had a grinding machine.

“When they kept coming to me for marriage, I lied that I was HIV positive. After a week, another Amir came, insisting that I marry him, but I lied to him again. So they arrested and put me in a separate room in their prison. After three days without water and food, they allowed me to go back home. So many women wondered why I didn’t marry them. I always told everyone that came to me that I knew I was HIV positive and didn’t want to destroy people’s lives.

“The pressure was too much for me as another Amir came. Again, I was arrested and kept in a room when the fifth Amir Isma’il requested I should marry him, but I refused and told him the same story. He started beating me. Despite this, I didn’t change my stance. They insisted that I should tell them the truth, but I said that was my health status,’’ she said.
 
The widow, who said she was shocked when they told her to take them to her father, explained: “I took them to my father and he told them that I had been sick before my husband and children were killed. He said he was aware of my health status. That was how I escaped the marriage proposals of the five Boko Haram Amirs in Gwoza.”
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Don't Ignore! These are 16 Signs You May Have HIV...Check Yourself Now


HIV/AIDS is a widespread disease in the world today and victims may live with it without even knowing. These are some signs you should not joke with.
 
Within a month or two of HIV entering the body, 40% to 90% of people experience flulike symptoms known as acute retroviral syndrome (ARS).
 
But sometimes HIV symptoms don’t appear for years—sometimes even a decade—after infection.
 
“In the early stages of HIV infection, the most common symptoms are none,” says Michael Horberg, MD, director of HIV/AIDS for Kaiser Permanente, in Oakland, Calif. One in five people in the United States with HIV doesn’t know they have it, which is why it’s so important to get tested, especially if you have unprotected sex with more than one partner or use intravenous drugs.
 
Here are some signs that you may be HIV-positive.
 
1. Fever
 
One of the first signs of ARS can be a mild fever, up to about 102 degrees F.
 
The fever, if it occurs at all, is often accompanied by other usually mild symptoms, such as fatigue, swollen lymph glands, and a sore throat.
 
“At this point the virus is moving into the blood stream and starting to replicate in large numbers,” says Carlos Malvestutto, MD, instructor of infectious diseases and immunology in the department of medicine at NYU School of Medicine in New York City. “As that happens, there is an inflammatory reaction by the immune system.”
 
2. Fatigue
 
The inflammatory response generated by your besieged immune system also can cause you to feel tired and lethargic. Fatigue can be both an early and later sign of HIV.
 
Ron, 54, a public relations executive in the Midwest, started to worry about his health when he suddenly got winded just walking. “Everything I did, I got out of breath,” he says. “Before that I had been walking three miles a day.”
 
Ron had tested HIV positive 25 years before feeling so tired; fatigue during acute, or newly contracted, HIV might not be so obvious.
 
3. Achy muscles, joint pain, swollen lymph nodes
 
ARS is often mistaken for the flu, mononucleosis, or another viral infection, even syphilis or hepatitis.
 
That’s not surprising: Many of the symptoms are the same, including pain in the joints and muscles and swollen lymph glands.
 
Lymph nodes are part of your body’s immune system and tend to get inflamed when there’s an infection. Many of them are located in your armpit, groin, and neck.
 
4. Sore throat and headache
 
As with other symptoms, sore throat and headache can often be recognized as ARS only in context, Dr. Horberg says.
 
If you’ve engaged recently in high-risk behavior, an HIV test is a good idea. Get tested for your own sake and for others: HIV is most infectious in the earliest stage.
 
Keep in mind that the body hasn’t produced antibodies to HIV yet so an antibody test may not pick it up. (It can take a few weeks to a few months for HIV antibodies to show in a blood test). Investigate other test options such as one that detects viral RNA, typically within nine days of infection.
 
5. Skin rash
 
Skin rashes can occur early or late in the course of HIV/AIDS.
 
For Ron, this was another sign that he might not have run-of-the-mill allergies or a cold.
 
“They were like boils, with some itchy pink areas on my arms,” Ron says. The rashes can also appear on the trunk of the body. “If [the rashes] aren’t easily explained or easily treated, you should think about having an HIV test,” Dr. Horberg says.
 
6. Nausea, vomiting, diarrhea
 
Anywhere from 30% to 60% of people have short-term nausea, vomiting, or diarrhea in the early stages of HIV, Dr. Malvestutto says.
 
These symptoms can also appear as a result of antiretroviral therapy and later in the infection, usually as the result of an opportunistic infection.
 
“Diarrhea that is unremitting and not responding at all to usual therapy might be an indication,” Dr. Horberg says. Or symptoms may be caused by an organism not usually seen in people with healthy immune systems, he adds.
 
7. Weight loss
 
Once called “AIDS wasting,” weight loss is a sign of more advanced illness and could be due in part to severe diarrhea.
 
“If you’re already losing weight, that means the immune system is usually fairly depleted,” Dr. Malvestutto says. “This is the patient who has lost a lot of weight even if they continue to eat as much as possible. This is late presentation. We still see a lot of these.” It has become less common, however, thanks to antiretroviral therapy.
 
A person is considered to have wasting syndrome if they lose 10% or more of their body weight and have had diarrhea or weakness and fever for more than 30 days, according to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
 
8. Dry cough
 
A dry cough was the first sign Ron had that something was wrong. He at first dismissed it as bad allergies.
 
But it went on for a year and a half—and kept getting worse. Benadryl, antibiotics, and inhalers didn’t fix the problem. Neither did allergists.
 
This symptom—an “insidious cough that could be going on for weeks that doesn’t seem to resolve,” Dr. Malvestutto says—is typical in very ill HIV patients.
 
9. Pneumonia
 
The cough and the weight loss may also presage a serious infection caused by a germ that wouldn’t bother you if your immune system was working properly.
 
“There are many different opportunistic infections and each one can present differently,” Dr. Malvestutto says. In Ron’s case, it was Pneumocystis pneumonia (PCP), aka “AIDS pneumonia,” which eventually landed him in the hospital.
 
Other opportunistic infections include toxoplasmosis, a parasitic infection that affects the brain; a type of herpes virus called cytomegalovirus; and yeast infections such as thrush.
 
10. Night sweats
 
About half of people get night sweats during the early stages of HIV infection, Dr. Malvestutto says.
 
These can be even more common later in infection and aren’t related to exercise or the temperature of the room.
 
Similar to the hot flashes that menopausal women suffer, they’re also hard to dismiss, given that they soak your bedclothes and sheets.
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Hope For HIV Positive; An HIV Positive Treated And Turned Negative

Just as was stated in an earlier post about improvement on HIV treatment. Here is a detail information about the tested case of a man who was once an HIV positive but after being treated is now an HIV negative.



A 44-year-old British man may have become the first person in the world to be cured of HIV. Tests showed the virus had become undetectable in the blood of the previously HIV-positive man, after he was treated with a pioneering new therapy designed to eradicate the virus. Researchers have cautioned that it is too early to tell if the treatment has really worked but said the man, a social worker, had made “remarkable progress”. The patient was the first of 50 people to complete a trial of the ambitious treatment which launches a two-stage “kick and kill” attack on the virus. The new therapy is unique in that it tracks down and destroy HIV in every part of the body —including in the dormant cells that evade current treatments.

Read detail about the new research on HIV treatment that has great effect with one new testimony
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Resaerchers On HIV cure Are Making Remarkable Effort

international-1
HIV cure

Just as every one is hoping for a cure good institution, doctors and reseachers are putting effort towards looking for a cure to HIV.

Just like Malaria and other similar ailment, the fear of HIV is coming to an end… UK scientists and clinicians working on a groundbreaking trial to test a cure for the HIV infection say they have made remarkable progress after a test patient showed no sign of the virus following treatment.
The research, being carried out by five of Britain’s top universities with NHS support, is combining standard anti-retroviral drugs with a drug that reactivates dormant HIV and a vaccine that induces the immune system to destroy the infected cells.
Antiretoviral drugs alone are highly effective at stopping the virus from reproducing but do not eradicate the disease, so must be taken for life.
Fifty patients are taking part in the trial and early tests on the first person to complete the treatment show no signs of the virus in his blood, the Sunday Times reported.
There is still a long way to go before the treatment can be deemed a success as the virus has previously re-emerged in people thought to have been “cured” and the use of antiretroviral drugs means the researchers cannot be sure the HIV has gone. Nevertheless there is optimism over the findings.
Mark Samuels, the managing director of the National Institute for Health Research Office for Clinical Research Infra­structure, told the Sunday Times: “This is one of the first serious attempts at a full cure for HIV. We are exploring the real possibility of curing HIV. This is a huge challenge and it’s still early days but the progress has been remarkable.”
HIV is able to hide itself from the immune system in dormant cells where highly sophisticated modern testing cannot find it and therefore resist therapy. The treatment endeavours to trick the virus into emerging from its hiding places and then trigger the body’s immune system to recognise it and attack it, an approach that has been called “kick and kill”.
There are approximately 37 million people living with HIV worldwide and about 35 million people have died from the virus.
The difficulty of declaring a patient clear of HIV was illustrated by the case of a girl in Mississippi, who was put on a strong course of antiretroviral drugs within 30 hours of her birth in 2010 after her mother was found to be HIV positive.
Treatment continued until the hospital lost contact with the mother 18 months later. When mother and child reappeared five months later the baby had no detectable virus in her blood, raising hopes that early intervention had cured her, but two years the virus had re-emerged.
The only person believed to have been cured was Timothy Ray Brown, an American treated in Germany. He needed a bone marrow transplant to replace his own cancerous cells with stem cells that would remake his immune system and his doctor found him a donor who was naturally resistant to HIV infection due to a genetic mutation that blocks HIV from entering the cells in the human body.
However, stem cell transplants are difficult and potentially dangerous for the recipient and only undertaken where they can save a life.
Source: The Guardian
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