What happened to curing viral infections via sound frequencies that collapse the viral envelope? It must have worked but realized there was no money to make off it.
“The end of AIDS is no longer a dream, it’s in sight,” Mitchell Warren, executive director of the New York-based AIDS Vaccine Advocacy Coalition, said in an interview. “We have tools that when combined are going to allow us to break the back of the epidemic.”
Interesting that after being on these HIV Drugs for many years that I have developed Type 2 Diabetes. But the alternative is not something I would vote for. I have been HIV+ since 1991, and very glad to still be alive because of the various drugs that have developed since then.
Diabetes and HIV are not impossible to manage, if one stops and thinks logically about how to manage it instead of whining about "what-ifs".
Now, at the age of 60 yo I am looking forward to living a long and healthy life thanks to the HIV medications that I am taking and may be taking in the future, and with a sharp look at how to manage my Type 2 Diabetes and my HIV intelligently.
What happened to curing viral infections via sound frequencies that collapse the viral envelope? It must have worked but realized there was no money to make off it.
More than 25 million people have died of AIDS since 1981. More than the TOTAL amount of deaths due to WWI.
The average person infected with AIDS in the USA is dead by the time they are 45.
Over 20% of the homosexuals in NYC & SF are infected with HIV/AIDS.
They never cured malaria, they CONTROLLED the carriers.
“The end of AIDS is no longer a dream, it’s in sight,” Mitchell Warren, executive director of the New York-based AIDS Vaccine Advocacy Coalition, said in an interview. “We have tools that when combined are going to allow us to break the back of the epidemic.”
see: http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2010-11-23/gilead-pill-taken-daily-helps-protect-against-hiv-in-breakthrough-study.html?cmpid=yhoo
Interesting that after being on these HIV Drugs for many years that I have developed Type 2 Diabetes. But the alternative is not something I would vote for. I have been HIV+ since 1991, and very glad to still be alive because of the various drugs that have developed since then.
Diabetes and HIV are not impossible to manage, if one stops and thinks logically about how to manage it instead of whining about "what-ifs".
Now, at the age of 60 yo I am looking forward to living a long and healthy life thanks to the HIV medications that I am taking and may be taking in the future, and with a sharp look at how to manage my Type 2 Diabetes and my HIV intelligently.