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World AIDS Vaccine Awareness Day: Raising awareness and hope for a vaccine against HIV/AIDS

May 18th is World AIDS Vaccine Awareness Day. An important international event, despite the fact that a vaccine for this disease has not yet been discovered.

Objective of World AIDS Vaccine Awareness Day:

  • Raising awareness of the need to develop an effective vaccine against the HIV virus that causes AIDS.
  • Educate the community about ways to prevent infection with this virus.
  • HIV remains a significant global public health problem.
  • The transmission of infection continues in all countries of the world.

AIDS has claimed the lives of 40 million people worldwide:

  • In 2021, 650,000 people will die from HIV-related causes.
  • People with AIDS are now able to live long lives thanks to treatment.
  • Global strategies to end HIV by 2030.
  • 95% of all people living with HIV need to be diagnosed.
  • 95% of patients should take antiretroviral therapy.
  • The need to suppress the viral load in 95% of the patients undergoing treatment.

Earlier this year, researchers announced the failure of the HIV vaccine, the only one that scientists were working on developing, at a late stage of trials, which constituted a major blow to efforts to control the disease. But hope for practical progress is always there.

Professor of Immunology and Fellow of the American Academy, Dr. Abdel-Hadi Mesbah, explains in an interview with Sabah, “Sky News Arabia”:

  • The AIDS virus appeared nearly 44 years ago, and vaccine trials began in 1989, so it is not a new need.
  • Vaccine trials have begun in India, Korea and the United States, but there have always been obstacles to producing such a safe and working vaccine without the virus being inside the body at all.
  • The developments that took place during access to a vaccine against Covid 19 gave us great hope, because the two viruses are of the “RNE” type, which belongs to the group, like “C” and other viruses.
  • The problem with AIDS is not in the development of technology, but in how the immune system deals with new mutations that occur.
  • The current status of the vaccine is to inhibit the viral carrier only, and not to get rid of the virus itself.

2023-05-18 09:35:24

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