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Receiving treatment within the first month of life could protect children for at least three years, a study suggests.
The government has reduced new HIV infections by 82 percent and AIDS-related deaths by 86 percent, achieving the UNAIDS 95-95-95 targets before the 2030 global deadline. ALSO READ: Rwanda’s bold path ...
Chemsex is a practice involving sexual activity under the influence of stimulants. While it has been studied in several parts ...
Almost two decades ago, I stood at the frontlines of Malaysia’s HIV epidemic — a time when fear, stigma and silence ruled the ...
Two city-approved “safe” drug injection sites could be forced to close under a new executive order issued by President Trump, ...
Antiretroviral drug residues were monitored in breastmilk samples using ultrahigh-performance liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry (UHPLC–MS/MS).
Scientists used a mRNA-based vaccine to reliably trigger antibodies that block HIV infection in people and monkeys ...
We may be a step closer to a highly effective mRNA vaccine against HIV, but tests so far reveal that the approach can cause ...
About 20 million Americans have macular degeneration – a condition that damages vision and can cause blindness. Now, a doctor ...
A new study in Nature shows that delivering a single injection of gene therapy at birth may offer years-long protection ...