What Is HIV?
HIV stands for: Human Immunodeficiency Virus
HIV is the virus that causes AIDS, but not everyone who is living with HIV has AIDS, or will ever have AIDS. www.thewellproject.org
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HIV is the virus that causes AIDS, but not everyone who is living with HIV has AIDS, or will ever have AIDS. www.thewellproject.org
• Your immune system is your body's defense system
• HIV infects the same immune system cells that protect us
– White blood cells called CD4 cells, a type of T cells
• Without medication, HIV turns CD4 cells into factories that produce millions of copies of the virus
• During copying, HIV damages or kills the CD4 cells
– This weakens the immune system
• This is how HIV causes AIDS
• Different HIV strains, grouped into HIV-1, HIV-2
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A person can have several strains at once
In the official definition, AIDS is the most advanced stage of HIV
• Too many lost CD4 cells: body is less able to fight off infections
• Can develop serious infections (opportunistic infections or OIs)
• “AIDS” refers to the weakened state of the body’s immune system.
• Today people can have an AIDS diagnosis but be very healthy and at low risk of OIs
• Death from AIDS is due to OIs and weakened immune system
• You do not have AIDS as soon as you acquire HIV
• You can live with HIV for many years with no signs of disease, or only mild-to-moderate symptoms
• Without treatment, HIV will eventually wear down the immune system: CD4 levels will fall and OIs will develop –
At that point, the person is considered to have AIDS
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Treatment can still improve their health and lower their risk for illness
• AIDS diagnosis may remain despite treated OI or higher CD4 count
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Doesn’t mean person is sick or will get sick
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Just public health system’s way of counting
Definition of AIDS was established before there was effective treatment for HIV. Indicated that a person was at higher risk of illness or death but no longer as relevant in some countries:
– If available, effective treatment means people can stay healthier with low CD4 counts
– Someone’s immune system may have recovered after an AIDS diagnosis years ago, but their diagnosis may remain
Someone has AIDS if (s)he is living with HIV and has: –
At least one “AIDS-defining condition” (from specific list) and/or
– A CD4 cell count of 200 cells or fewer (normal CD4 count = 500 -1,500)
• People can't tell they've acquired HIV
• Symptoms may show up within 2-4 weeks after acquiring HIV
– Fever, swollen glands, sore throat night sweats, muscle aches, headache, fatigue, rash
• HIV antibodies develop within 1-3 months (“window period”)
• May not have symptoms or think you have the flu
• The only way for someone to know for sure if they’ve acquired HIV is to have an HIV test
– Get tested for antigens (pieces of virus) during window period
– Get tested for antibodies after window period
Everyone age 13-64 in US should be screened for HIV at least once
• Virus does not discriminate by age, gender, race, ethnicity, sexual orientation, social group or economic class!
If you answer “yes” to any of these questions, get tested:
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Have you ever had a penis inserted into your vagina or anus ("butt"), or oral sex without a condom or other latex barrier (e.g., dental dam)? Note: oral sex is a low-risk activity. Vaginal and anal sex are much higher risk.
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Do you not know your partner’s HIV status or is your partner living with HIV?
– Are you pregnant or considering becoming pregnant?
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Have you ever had a sexually transmitted infection or disease (STI or STD)?
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Do you have hepatitis C (HCV)?
– Have you ever shared needles, syringes, or other equipment to inject drugs (including steroids or hormones)?
• If HIV negative, you can stop worrying about exposure
– Consider taking PrEP or PEP to prevent HIV acquisition
• If HIV+, take effective medications to stay healthy.
– If on effective meds, can’t transmit HIV sexually (U=U)
• If you plan to become pregnant, HIV testing very important
– Certain HIV drugs can lower the chance of passing the virus to the baby
• US testing site resources: – National HIV, STD and Hepatitis Testing website
• https://gettested.cdc.gov/
– HIV.gov website
• https://www.hiv.gov/hiv-basics/hiv-testing/learn-about-hivtesting/where-to-get-tested/
– CDC information line
• 800-CDC-INFO (800-232-4636); TTY: 888-232-6348
– State HIV/AIDS hotline
• List at https://ryanwhite.hrsa.gov/hiv-care/hotlines
• More information in HIV Testing factsheet www.thewellproject.org
• HIV is spread through contact with these body fluids:
– Blood (including menstrual blood)
– Semen (“cum”) and other male sexual fluids ("pre-cum”)
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Vaginal fluids
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Breast milk
• Most commonly spread from person to person through unprotected sex, sharing needles and from pregnant person to their child
• Not passed on during sex by a person on treatment with undetectable viral load for more than six months
• HIV is not spread through contact with these body fluids:
–
Sweat –
Tears
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Saliva (spit)
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Feces (poop)
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Urine (pee)
• You CANNOT acquire HIV by:
– touching or hugging someone who is living with HIV
– kissing someone living with HIV
– using a toilet also used by someone living with HIV
a vaccine nor a cure for HIV
To prevent HIV, use consistent prevention methods:
• Safer sex: choose low- or no-risk activities, use condoms, take HIV drugs (if living with HIV) or PrEP (if HIV-negative)
• Sterile needles (for drugs, hormones, or tattoos)
• For more information, Well Project fact sheets on: – HIV Vaccines – Finding a Cure
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Well Project fact sheets:
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HIV Testing
Did You Just Test HIV-Positive?
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Considerations Before Starting HIV Treatment
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HIV Transmission
∙ Safer Sex
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Undetectable Equals Untransmittable: Building Hope and Ending HIV Stigma
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Pregnancy, Birth and HIV
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Women and HIV
– www.thewellproject.org