Tag Archive | "AIDS"

Volunteer in Uganda Opportunities That Make a Difference

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wilderness first aid


Uganda is one of the most beautiful bastions of the African wilderness and has everything for a global tourist or even a backpacker. From trekking opportunities in the volcanic Great Rift Valley to exploring the Gorilla hideouts deep in the mountains; from sunbathing at the isolated and magnificent beaches on the Ssese Islands that seem to be floating in Lake Victoria to being captivated by the mystic Jinja, the source point for the great river Nile, Uganda has just about anything.

Why Volunteer In Uganda

Uganda has a wealth of natural resources but at the same time, it is also a poverty stricken country that has been through civil wars, a cannibalistic dictator and also comes under the AIDS/HIV radar. Volunteering in Uganda will not only open you mind to different cultures and a society that has existed since the early civilizations but also to the depravation that people in Africa have learnt to carry in their stride for too long.

Types Of Projects Available.

As a part of volunteering in Uganda, you will get to choose the kind of project you are interested in. The different types if projects available include:

Working with Ugandan orphanages: You will get to work with the hundreds and thousands of orphans who have either lost their parents in a war or who have been left homeless by famines. These orphaned children would probably die due to malnutrition but with a little care can grow up to be the future of the country.

Teaching: There are different languages that you can teach in Uganda but the most prominent being English. There are projects for teaching English to elementary school children and even orphans in a small village called Niyakasiru.

Community Development: In Uganda, there are no communities but groups of villages get together to support each other through all the strife and disasters that have struck the country in the recent past. As a part of the community development project, you can contribute a lot towards creating health awareness, take care of various problems being faced in the day-to-day life by Ugandans and work at temporary teachers in their schools, which are not even sub-standard.

HIV/AIDS Project: Africa is believed to have the maximum number of HIV/AIDS affected people. Hence this is the first place to start. In a world where scientists are trying every method possible to develop a miracle medicine for AIDS, the only way to fight it right now is by making people aware of the consequences.

As a part of the AIDS/HIV program, you will get to take care of people who are already suffering from it and also at the same time, work with community programs to offer more information on how to prevent it in the first place.

Community Work with the tribal: There are different types of tribes in Uganda and as a volunteer in Uganda, you will get to concentrate your efforts towards helping the tribal children and women.

Health Projects: There are several health projects that you can contribute to. The medical infrastructure in Uganda is not strong enough and you assistance in developing one can do a lot of good to the country’s future.

- Conservation Projects: There are different types of conservation projects in Uganda that vary from water conservation to Gorilla and Chimpanzee conservations. These are interesting projects and will help in keeping the African Wilderness alive

Volunteer Requirements

Age: The minimum age for volunteering in Uganda should be 16 or older. Experience: There is no experience required for most of the programs.

But if you are volunteering for specialized programs in clinical operation or in HIV/AIDS programs then you will need to have some amount of experience or certification to assist in medical treatments etc.

Application process: You will need to provide a resume to start with. All volunteer programs in Uganda are open to participants from all over the world and to individuals, families and couples.

Fee and Other details

There is a fee attached to each of the projects that you volunteer for. The fee is charged in advance and is charged for the following:

1. Housing

2. Food/meals

3. In-country training

4. Transportation within the region

5. Staff support

Conclusion

There is so much that you can contribute to in Uganda and to its people. Africa is considered to be the cradle of civilization and it’s high time everyone started looking at it as one and treating the people out there with equal respect.



Aids: a Psychological Roller-coaster at a Crossroad

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First aid


The recent XVII International AIDS Conference in Mexico City covered many interesting topics, including up-to-date medical treatments and the impressive increases in programs to address the AIDS calamity in Africa.  Conspicuously absent was any discussion about the psychological vicissitudes experienced by AIDS victims, and their loved ones, in the developed world. In the last twenty-five years, Americans have struggled with the disease both medically and psychologically as AIDS patients have transited from shame through acceptance and on to self-respect. Currently, we stand at a crossroads which will determine if the psychological road ahead will be healthy.

The Early Shame: During the early years of the AIDS pandemic in America, the victims had to endure the humiliation of their illness called “the gay plague.” Even the scientific community initially used the degrading nomenclature of “GRID” for gay related immunodeficiency disease. Well-known figures like Reverend Jerry Falwell said we “needed to return to moral sanity” and not to “favor homosexuals” in medical research. President Ronald Reagan refused to mention the disease for the first six years of his eight-year presidency. The late Senator Jesse Helms passed what is known as “the Helms Amendment” — a law that imposes a travel-ban on people with HIV whether they are tourists or proposed immigrants from coming into the United States. This combined battering was successful in establishing a feeling in many parts of America that “homos got what they deserved” even though there were adequate statistics (and logic) to prove that the virus had no sexual preference. Prior to 1987 it was almost impossible for an AIDS patient not to experience shame.

Acceptance: The Third International AIDS Conference held in June, 1987 in Washington, DC was a psychological turning point for AIDS patients and their families. Over 6,000 policymakers, medical researchers and professionals from fifty countries heard then Vice-President George Bush deliver a non-judgmental opening speech. Keynote speaker and United States Surgeon General C. Everett Koop’s remarks finally emphasized education and acceptance.

Because AIDS had decimated the art world including Hollywood, numerous celebrities began speaking out. Elizabeth Taylor, for example, was clear about her support for friends struggling with AIDS. At the AIDS Conference in Washington, DC, she displayed genuine emotion as she presented Surgeon General Koop with an award for his efforts to promote acceptance of AIDS patients.

By 1989 well-organized protests were erupting. In March, several thousand angry demonstrators organized by Act-Up picketed New York’s City Hall in protest of Mayor Koch’s lack of progress in providing assistance to AIDS patients. Shortly thereafter, Act-Up continued their effective protests at strategic locations, including the New York Stock Exchange and AZT manufacturer Burroughs Wellcome corporate headquarters. This particular demonstration resulted in the pharmaceutical giant’s reduction of AZT’s price by twenty percent. Other protests took place in Montreal, Canada and at San Francisco’s Golden Gate Bridge to commemorate “a day without art” due to the huge numbers of stricken artists.  The result was that the average American saw an angry yet human face on HIV/AIDS as major news networks covered marchers waving banners saying “silence = death.”

AIDS patients watched in awe as HIV positive Mary Fisher spoke at the Republican National Convention in 1992. It seemed unimaginable that the daughter of billionaire, philanthropist Max Fisher and advisor to several presidents would become a vocal and open Republican AIDS activist. Her emotional speech emphasized tolerance and rebuked some members of her party who claimed that HIV/AIDS was a “self-inflicted plague” caused by immoral behavior. A clear feeling of AIDS acceptance had been established.

Self-respect: By 1995, anger and acceptance began to turn into self-respect in the gay community. Gone were the days when actor Rock Hudson hid his illness until the very end. AIDS was no longer thought of as a “gay curse,” and the illness was rapidly spreading to the heterosexual community, mainly poor inner-city neighborhoods. Numerous well-known gay celebrities’ disclosure of their positive HIV status fueled a sense of pride. Four-time Olympic gold medalist, Greg Louganis, considered to be the greatest competitive diver of all time, admitted that he had been “diagnosed” (with HIV) prior to the 1988 Olympic Games in Seoul, Korea.

Concurrently, HIV researchers and infectious disease physicians who had previously been observed with considerable contempt were becoming highly respected.  The transition was complete when AIDS scientist and protease inhibitor pioneer, David Ho, was named Time Magazine’s 1996 “Man of the Year”, which added to a new sense of prideful identity in the HIV world.

The Crossroads: Toward the end of last century, the majority of Americans knew, or knew of, someone who had been stricken with AIDS, and they increasingly exhibited compassion in much the same way as they understood the tragedy of cancer. Fear and hatred began to turn into empathy and a thirst for information gradually replaced discrimination.

Even so, curious and alarming trends began to emerge in the AIDS community. One condition is known as “the Lazarus Syndrome,” named after the biblical figure who returned from the dead. The term, first coined in 1996, referred to relatively young, ill patients who are living longer than they had anticipated. One of the resulting problems is inadequate resources given that they had planned for a shortened life followed by a premature death. Many found themselves financially and emotionally challenged by aborted careers. Newly formed AIDS assistance programs scrambled to address both the financial and psychological repercussions of the changing times. The New York Times Sunday Magazine offered the first insights to the phenomenon on November 10, 1996 in an article titled “When AIDS Ends,” by Andrew Sullivan. It addressed the unprecedented experience in modern times of the end of a plague, during which victims would have contemplated their deaths and adjusted their lives accordingly only to reassess and handle their possible survival. Sixty years ago the father of Existentialism, Albert Camus, described a population’s mindset as it faces death in his book, La Peste (The Plague). Sullivan studied the psychological problems encountered when that condition is at least partially reversed.

In his book, Dry Bones Breathe, the late Eric Rofes analyses a similar condition in a chapter titled “The Protease Moment takes Hold.” He points out how, starting in the late 1990s, national marketing campaigns for new HIV medications showed very healthy, smiling faces atop buffed bodies boasting which medicine they were using. Many AIDS patients were facing a life “beyond AIDS” — a life that no longer would be solely defined by having AIDS. Rofes talks about a “new language” to deal with this condition to which we must add new behaviors. The challenge now is how to ascertain that these new behaviors are as healthy as possible.

Almost every American city has at least one non-profit AIDS assistance program which deals with the vast majority of local AIDS patients. Nowhere is the need to shape this new behavior more important than in these organizations. The programs are more-or-less well funded by a combination of federal and state grants supplemented by private donations from concerned local citizens. Their efforts allow the “clients” (a term which emphasizes self-esteem) to fight housing discrimination, attend support groups and be seen by local health professionals of many disciplines. Most programs also offer some free meals, financial subsidies and, importantly, assistance in obtaining the clients’ monthly supply of very expensive medicines. 

Some agencies encourage clients to become self-sufficient and, when energy levels allow, go back to work. This presents a serious dilemma, however. As clients re-enter the work-force, parts or all of the complex mix of local and federal assistance evaporate. When earned income rises the individual may become largely independent but not prosperous enough to afford the vitally important, hugely expensive medications.

Yet without becoming financially independent, a sense of entitlement is likely to develop. The resulting effect is often diminished self-esteem and restricted mental freedom. Equally dangerous is hiding behind a “disability” and avoiding responsibilities. Even the most mentally and physically healthy people have to force themselves to persevere in times of setbacks.  The most self-assured of us will, on occasion, doubt their convictions but then force themselves to move forward. These people end up growing and become stronger — demonstrating a trait called “resilience”. However, if one is allowed, indeed sometimes encouraged, to “give into” a bad day or piece of problematic news, one runs the risk of killing the survival instinct.

The challenge for AIDS assistance programs is to address these paradoxes on a person-by-person level. Those who can be encouraged to push themselves may well transit from “AIDS victims” to “taking responsibility” for an ailment.  It is critical for mental health counselors to not only explore their clients’ fears and psychological goblins but also to emphasize the individual’s potential in order to promote resilience.

Today’s youth has largely forgotten the devastation of AIDS because they do not face it with nearly the same frequency as did the generation that preceded them. Gay Americans in their twenties and thirties have not lost huge numbers of friends and do not make regular visits to hospitals followed by attending memorial services as the previous generation did. This fortunate condition presents challenges, however. Many youths believe that AIDS is a “manageable disease,” and, consequently, safe sex is no longer an absolute priority. The result is a renewed incidence of HIV transmission in teens as well as seniors. This tragic condition may exist because fewer churches, schools and television commercials address the risks of HIV transmission, and many community organizations no longer encourage open discussions on safe sex.

In a way, we have come full circle. The new American challenge is to enjoy the progress we have made while not losing our focus on how to remain both medically and psychologically healthy. AIDS assistance programs need to sort out their clients various abilities and to encourage them to offer those talents to the community — and to be remunerated for them. Community programs, in turn, urgently need to re-prioritize the importance of educating their constituents in HIV prevention.  If for no other reason, we owe that to the estimated five hundred thousand Americans who died horrible deaths caused by AIDS during the period when many so-called leaders humiliated them.

©2008 Richard René Silvin

Author Bio

Born in New York, from the ages of seven through eighteen, Silvin grew to adulthood within the confines of strict and homophobic Swiss boarding schools. After earning his bachelor’s degree from Georgetown University (1970) and an MBA from Cornell (1972), where he also later lectured and was voted one of the most successful graduates. He spent twenty-five years as a senior executive in a New York Stock Exchange hospital company. There Silvin rose to the head of the international division of American Medical International, Inc., which owned and operated one hundred hospitals in ten countries. René lives with his beloved canine companion, T-Cell, in Atlanta, Georgia, and Palm Beach, Florida. His awards include being a Chevalier (Knight) of the Franco-Britanic Order. He has written numerous articles on hospital management and is listed in Who’s Who in the World (1988), Who’s Who in Finance and Industry, and Who’s Who in Health Care. His book, Walking the Rainbow, is available now from Whitmore Publishing Co.



Whats the Difference Between Digital Hearing Aids and Analog Hearing Aids?

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First aid


If you are like the many millions of people who have bought digital hearing aids, you probably did not fully understand all of the mechanisms at play inside of that new hearing aid. You had your hearing tested and were told which hearing aids would work best for your hearing loss. So, just what are digital hearing aids and what makes them different?

Digital hearing aids use computer technology. The comfort and sound level that you hear can be custom-tailored to your unique hearing loss. This is accomplished by connecting the digital hearing aids to a computer and programming them to your loss. But, there are non-digital / analog hearing aids that can be programmed this way too. So, what are the differences between digital hearing aids and analog?

Hearing aids receive sound through the microphone. Distortion and noise are added to the sound from the microphone. This is because microphones make noise. Analog hearing aids pass the sound on to you with the noise and distortion. Digital hearing instruments clean sounds as they come into the hearing aids so that there is less noise and distortion. The sound is then sent to the amplifier, where your digital hearing aids measure the sound and decide how much power to add in order for you to hear.

After being amplified the sound is sent to the receiver ( the speaker ) and is then cleaned up again before being sent to your ear. This is also where digital hearing aids look for feedback ( whistling ) and work to cancel it before the feedback happens. Digital hearing aids actually perform millions of complex calculations in less than the blink of an eye, so fast you cannot even tell it has happened. The entire process is extremely complicated. Digital hearing aids are able to be set more precisely to your hearing loss. Digital hearing aids also have a wide array of circuitry inside them that control the comfort of the sound and make speech easier to hear in noise.

Why Do Some People Have Difficulty Changing from Analog to Digital Hearing Aids?

Some people who have worn analog hearing aids for a long period of time have been unsucessful when they first tried digital hearing aids. If digital is so much better, why do these people not like them? Over time we are conditions to like or dislike certain things. Many people did not like some kind of food when they were young, but later they learn to like it. We call this developing a taste for it. The same is true with switching from analog to digital hearing aids, especially if you were happy with your analog hearing aids.

Your brain becomes accustomed to hearing sounds a certain way, particularly if you felt positive about the way it sounded with your analog hearing aid. The sound is a whole lot more crisp and full when you first put on your new digital hearing aids. This can be overpowering to some and the immediate reaction is to not like it. That’s when many people make one of two mistakes. They try to tough it out and get used to their digital hearing aids, or they just give up. The problem with “toughing it out” is that it can be extremely painful to hear all of these new sounds when you are not used to hearing them. Then your new digital hearing aids becomes your enemy! Giving up doesn’t help anything either.

When this is the case, the best way for you to adapt to your digital hearing aids is gradually. Your professional can tone them down so that the sound is comfortable, and then gradually introduce more sound over time as you adjust. It may take several visits to the office for adjustments until you get the maximum benefit from your digital hearing aids. But if you persevere, your digital hearing aids will reward you with much better hearing.



Aids: a Cause of Unprotected Sex

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First aid


Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome is known as AIDS in the short form. AIDS is in fact the collection of certain symptoms and infections in the human organism which permanently leads to the damage of the human immune system. AIDS is in other ways considered as the body’s defence system which hampers the normal functioning of the body organs to a great extent. The basic cause of AIDS is the two types of viruses, namely the HIV 1 and the HIV 2. Basically these two types of viruses are thus responsible in the performance of the defence mechanism system of the body.

The most common cause of AIDS is considered to be the unprotected sex. Sex without taking proper precaution like condom is very much responsible for AIDS. AIDS is generally transmitted through the semen. It is estimated that more than three million people round the globe had died through AIDS. During the prenatal stage also it is found that the mother will transmit the disease to the fetus before it is born. AIDS is transferred to the blood through the means of transfusion of blood into another’s body cell. Besides these, AIDS can also be caused through the use of injections which are not properly sterilized in the process of taking drugs or blood into the veins.

Symptoms of AIDS are not visible at the early stage. But at least after a period of 3 to 6 weeks the symptoms of AIDS can be noticed through certain flu like sickness. Besides these, symptoms like headache, nausea, fever, fatigue, diarrhea, etc. are also considered as other AIDS symptoms. But it can be mentioned out here though these symptoms occur in an AIDS patient, it lasts for only a temporary period of time after which it disappears. Sometimes acute AIDS symptoms also cannot be considered as the symptoms of AIDS, as they may also be found to be very much common to other forms of diseases. Thus symptoms either mild or severe cannot be considered as solely the symptoms of AIDS as other forms of sickness or diseases also witness the similar symptoms. But however, when the disease reaches its critical stage, the symptoms become very much acute thus leading to loss of weight, recurrent fever and also occurrence of certain fatal diseases. AIDS thus totally destroys the immune system of the body totally. AIDS is thus a deadly disease which is the result of unprotected sex, hence to prevent it is to avoid unprotected sex.



Volunteering in Uganda

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wilderness first aid


Uganda is one of the most beautiful bastions of the African wilderness and has everything for a global tourist or even a backpacker. From trekking opportunities in the volcanic Great Rift Valley to exploring the Gorilla hideouts deep in the mountains; from sunbathing at the isolated and magnificent beaches on the Ssese Islands that seem to be floating in Lake Victoria to being captivated by the mystic Jinja, the source point

for the great river Nile, Uganda has just about anything.

Why Volunteer In Uganda

Uganda has a wealth of natural resources but at the same time, it is also a poverty stricken country that has been through civil wars, a cannibalistic dictator and also comes under the AIDS/HIV radar. Volunteering in Uganda will not only open you mind to different cultures and a society that has existed since the early civilizations but also to the depravation that people in Africa have learnt to carry in their stride for too long.

Types Of Projects Available

As a part of volunteering in Uganda, you will get to choose the kind of project you are interested in. The different types if projects available include:

• Working with Ugandan orphanages: You will get to work with the hundreds and thousands of orphans who have either lost their parents in a war or who have been left homeless by famines. These orphaned children would probably die due to malnutrition but with a little care can grow up to be the future of the country.

• Teaching: There are different languages that you can teach in Uganda but the most prominent being English. There are projects for teaching English to elementary school children and even orphans in a small village called Niyakasiru.

• Community Development: In Uganda, there are no communities but groups of villages get together to support each other through all the strife and disasters that have struck the country in the recent past. As a part of the community development project, you can contribute a lot towards creating health awareness, take care of various problems being faced in the day-to-day life by Ugandans and work at temporary teachers in their schools, which are not even sub-standard.

• HIV/AIDS Project: Africa is believed to have the maximum number of HIV/AIDS affected people. Hence this is the first place to start. In a world where scientists are trying every method possible to develop a miracle medicine for AIDS, the only way to fight it right now is by making people aware of the consequences. As a part of the AIDS/HIV program, you will get to take care of people who are already suffering from it and also at the same time, work with community programs to offer more information on how to prevent it in the first place.

• Community Work with the tribal: There are different types of tribes in Thailand and as a volunteer in Thailand, you will get to concentrate your efforts towards helping the tribal children and women.

• Health Projects: There are several health projects that you can contribute to. The medical infrastructure in Uganda is not strong enough and you assistance in developing one can do a lot of good to the country’s future.

• Conservation Projects: There are different types of conservation projects in Uganda that vary from water conservation to Gorilla and Chimpanzee conservations. These are interesting projects and will help in keeping the African Wilderness alive

Volunteer Requirements

Age: The minimum age for volunteering in Uganda should be 16 or older.

Experience: There is no experience required for most of the programs. But if you are volunteering for specialized programs in clinical operation or in HIV/AIDS programs then you will need to have some amount of experience or certification to assist in medical treatments etc.

Application process: You will need to provide a resume to start with

All volunteer programs in Thailand are open to participants from all over the world and to individuals, families and couples.

Fee and Other details

There is a fee attached to each of the projects that you volunteer for. The fee is charged in advance and is charged for the following:

1. Housing

2. Food/meals

3. In-country training

4. Transportation within the region

5. Staff support

Conclusion

There is so much that you can contribute to in Uganda and to its people. Africa is considered to be the cradle of civilization and it’s high time everyone started looking at it as one and treating the people out there with equal respect.



Choice Of Best Affordable Hearing Aids

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First aid


Hearing Aids are quite costly equipments. You would be quit aware of this fact if you have ever visited some hearing aids selling shops. According to Medicare hearing aids information there is very small portion of the population which can afford hearing aid equipments due to their extremely high prices. Many health insurance organizations do not cover hearing aids as the prices incurred upon hearing aids are extremely high.

If someone requires affordable hearing aids some time will be needed to study it in order to have the knowledge about its certain qualities so that hearing could be accessible against affordable price. Compromise on quality for cheap rates does not look better for the important article as hearing aids especially at the time when affordable hearing aids is required of a good quality. As a principle the hearing aid must be of a good quality so that there may be no difficulty in hearing otherwise it will cause a sense of deprivation.

Your Affordable Choice

Amongst different available options, the selection of one of the affordable hearing aids is laborious task. In fact there are only some choices to have affordable hearing aids. As an example there is a digital hearing aid namely the Digi-Ear D1. This hearing aid is made of such a shape that it conveniently fits neatly into the ear canal. It comprises of a unique rotating nozzle that will accommodate both left and right ear fitting. All that you have to do is to insert the hearing aid and afterward it is adjustable by yourself. You can operate it very easily according to your requirements. It’s such operations & features make it one amongst the other affordable hearing aids.

Qualities Of affordable hearing aids:

Another of the most affordable hearing aids is the Digi-Ear GS. It has multifarious qualities. Its echo control system is factually the most superior in the hearing aid industry. It is because of echo elimination technology that comes with a multi-layer noise reduction process. It helps to reduce static and noise. It bears all digital four channels, echo suppression with toggle button, universal fit adjustable on and off volume control having a 312 battery and a removal string. It is result-oriented and durable device with one-year warranty. These features make it superb amongst the affordable hearing aids.

This hearing aid has matchless revolving nozzle in order to fit it into either of ears by rotating it. It is provided with three size soft-tip alternatives, which facilitate you to opt for the soft-tip with the best adjustment and slide it onto the nozzle. This is provided for adjustment of hearing aid comfortably. Furthermore the latest digital wide dynamic range compression allows quick processing of the sounds that enter the ear culminating into instant and precise relay to the ear drum. It is the latest device than other affordable hearing aids.

Furthermore the sensitive feedback reduction feature greatly reduces feedback and whistle in the device that is caused by a loose hearing aid. Thus one can understand the conversation more easily. In addition, the quiet speech amplifier picks up the quietest whisper without accompanying extraneous noise. It results in clear listening. For more info see http://www.firsthearingaids.com/hearingloss/signs_of_hearing_loss.html on signs of hearing.

Selection Of Affordable Hearing Aids:

Among these affordable hearing aids, there are many others available on market that you can select; yet those mentioned therein are literally the best as per their price and quality. As such you definitely desire to give priority to these top choices when you are looking for inexpensive affordable hearing aids.



Aids: a History of Treatment Modalities

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first aid canine


The recent XVII International AIDS Conference, which ended on August 8 in Mexico City, addressed new medications that fortunate Americans have at their disposal. Indeed, medicine and pharmacology have come a long way since 1983 when concerned representatives from thirty nations met at the World Health Organization headquarters in Genera, Switzerland. That meeting was the precursor to what would eventually become the International AIDS Conferences, the first of which took place two years later in Atlanta, Georgia. In 1983, the discussions centered on questions regarding how to isolate the virus and ultimately, how to make an HIV antibody test so that “at risk individuals” could determine if they had been “exposed” to it.

When a virus enters the human body, our brilliant immune system attempts to contain it by making “antibodies”. In the majority of cases, these antibodies are successful in their counter-attack and the virus is destroyed without the subject being aware that this miraculous, mini, internal war even took place. In relatively rare cases, however, the virus can out-smart the immune system which still, albeit futilely, produces antibodies. One can use an analogy of a soldier shooting at an unarmed enemy in successful cases of a destroyed virus, versus a soldier firing at an armored tank when a virus cannot be contained.  In such instances, a vaccine is the only long-term, truly effective method to protect the subject by immunization.

In 1983, the medical world was eagerly awaiting the discovery of the virus and the subsequent HIV antibody test. HIV was finally isolated in 1984 as an international fury erupted over who had been the real discoverer: The National Cancer Institute in Washington, DC, or the Pasteur Institute in Paris, France. This unfortunate legal dispute delayed the development of the first antibody test until 1985 when the HIV ELIZA (enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay) test was released to the public. The controversy over who actually isolated HIV was “settled” by President Reagan who declared that both researchers had miraculously discovered it at precisely the same moment. However, most authorities maintain HIV was first isolated by the French.

During this nascent phase of understanding HIV, the first 36,000 American victims had no treatments at their disposal. As a result, there were 20,000 American deaths before there was a tool to even determine if an individual had been exposed to the virus. Terrified people afflicted with the illness, as well as their friends and family, pooled resources and raced off to Mexico, France and other countries following reports of miracle drugs and bizarre treatments. One such weird “cure” was the injection of ozone into the anus. Others attempted to kill the virus by heating the patient’s blood and re-introducing it into the body, while still others went to Israel for an ineffective drug made from egg yolks. It was not until late 1987, six years after the first patients started dying, when the beginning of scientific yet primitive treatments became available in the form of an old antiviral medication: AZT (Azidothymidine), which was eventually renamed Retrovir. The first desperate infectious disease physicians had no alternative but to prescribe it in highly toxic doses to their frantic patients.

In 1988, as the number of reported AIDS cases in America reached 86,000, public demonstrations managed to put pressure on the FDA to accelerate new drug approvals. Consequently, early treatments for the often fatal illnesses caused by HIV were discovered, notably for Pneumocystis Carinii pneumonia and CMV (cytomegalovirus), the cause of blindness and severe intestinal distress in AIDS patients. Other than AZT, no medication to actually contain the virus was available much less a vaccine.

By mid-1989, the FDA created the “AIDS Clinical Trial Information Service” so that AIDS victims and their physicians could be informed of HIV drug trials. This encouraged many patients to “take control” of their health and to seek admission into clinical trials or question their doctors about new medications. Concurrently, scientists were developing what would eventually become a major diagnostic tool to measure the virus’ activity through “viral load testing” which determined how many “copies” of the virus were present in the afflicted individual’s blood.

Although the ensuing years saw the development of some prophylactic medications, it was not until 1996 for important new, break-through HIV medicines to appear on the market. The FDA approved a new category of anti-retroviral (ARV) medications called “protease inhibitors” as Glaxo Wellcome’s Epivir became widely prescribed. Clinical trials had demonstrated the drug’s ability to reduce the “viral load” in HIV patients. Numerous pharmaceutical companies, seeing huge profit potential, accelerated research and development of similar, expensive medications. Within months, four other large companies, Roche, Roxane Labs, Abbott Labs and Merck came out with their own protease inhibitors. As a result, “a sea change” emerged in the HIV/AIDS community that had far reaching implications. The newly prescribed combination of drugs, known as “the cocktail,” prolonged life. Many severely ill patients began to improve as symptoms lessened and they returned to some sort of normal existence. This development was not without great cost, however, both literally and figuratively. The new cocktails typically cost in excess of twelve hundred dollars a month. As one can imagine, many patients could not afford these expensive regimens while still others found the drug cocktails’ side effects very hard, or impossible, to tolerate. 

By the end of last century, AIDS had killed an estimated twenty million people worldwide. In America, the face of AIDS had changed from the so-called “gay plague” to become largely an inner city catastrophe. As patients who were able to access physicians and obtain medications were living longer, infectious disease physicians were becoming experts in many medical disciplines. Given the broad spectrum of illnesses their patients were exhibiting, the partially contained virus had more time to gradually weaken its victims. A new sub-group of HIV patients called “long term survivors” had emerged.

The optimism regarding the efficacy of anti-retroviral therapy that took hold during the mid-nineteen nineties was short lived. At the International AIDS Conference in Geneva, Switzerland in 1998, the focus of the discussion centered on an alarming observation that infectious disease physicians had begun to observe called “anti-retroviral drug resistance.” Drug resistance occurs when a virus begins to “mutate”. Clever viruses figure out how to get around antiviral medications by transforming themselves. In the case of HIV, the mutated virus engages in a renewed attack and finds ways to enter, and destroy, the main building block of the immune system: the T-Cell. Physicians know an HIV mutation has occurred when they see a patient’s viral load climbing. A complicated and expensive new diagnostic tool called “genotypic assays” or “genotyping” allows physicians to specifically determine which medication has failed and, therefore, which parts of the individual patient’s drug cocktail need to be replaced.

The result has been a plethora of new, effective medications. The few available drugs of the early 1990’s have grown to dozens of medications distributed into six different “classes.” For now, the new drugs are very effective and the Department of Health and Human Services’ has issued new and ambitious guidelines. All treating physicians are urged to make their patients reach an “undetectable viral load” which, in turn, will keep the virus from further destroying the immune system and, hopefully, from mutating. Prior to these new classes of medications, the “undetectable” target was reached in relatively few cases.

The combined treatment called “HAART” (highly active antiretroviral therapy) is effective but complicated, costly and not without side-effects. Long term HIV survivors run risks of developing diabetes as well as cardiac, renal and hepatic problems. The official list of side effects contains fifty-one disorders, the six most common being abdominal pain, headaches, insomnia, rash, nausea and lipodystrophy (fat redistribution). 

Given the current efficacy of the new medications, there is renewed optimism.  However, constant viral level monitoring and an absolutely strict adherence to each patient’s program are essential. Only a few missed doses can create a circumstance where the virus may mutate, the patient runs the risk of developing serious illnesses and some, or all, of the medications have to be replaced.

The current advances have been achieved through successful research and focus on anti-retroviral therapies. In so doing HIV is — for now — under control if the subjects are very disciplined and seen regularly by competent infectious disease physicians.  It is important to remember, however, that in the history of virology, no completely successful anti-viral treatments have been effective in the long run. Only a vaccine which changes the host and renders the virus irrelevant is the real, long-term hope to eradicate AIDS.

While numerous groups around the world are researching an HIV vaccine, none have been successful. Many problems stand in the way of a vaccine including the complexities posed by HIV mutations and the ethical issues surrounding the safety of HIV vaccine trials. For the second time in as many years, and as recently as last month, one of the leading hopes for a therapeutic vaccine was, at the very least, severely delayed. A large, proposed human clinical trial to be conducted by a division of NIH (The National Institute of Health) was cancelled for security reasons.  Researchers behind the previously cancelled trial had also become concerned about heightened risks. Clearly, even one highly publicized transmission of the virus during trials will severely reduce the pool of potential, HIV negative trial volunteers forever.

Unless and until a successful vaccine is discovered, the best AIDS patients and infectious disease physicians can hope for is continued containment of a deadly and clever virus through costly, complex regimes rife with side-effects both short and long term.

©2008 Richard René Silvin

Author Bio

Born in New York, from the ages of seven through eighteen, Silvin grew to adulthood within the confines of strict and homophobic Swiss boarding schools. After earning his bachelor’s degree from Georgetown University (1970) and an MBA from Cornell (1972), where he also later lectured and was voted one of the most successful graduates. He spent twenty-five years as a senior executive in a New York Stock Exchange investor owned hospital company. There Silvin rose to the head of the international division of American Medical International, Inc., which owned and operated one hundred hospitals in ten countries. René lives with his beloved canine companion, T-Cell, in Atlanta, Georgia, and Palm Beach, Florida. His awards include being a Chevalier (Knight) of the Franco-Britanic Order. He has written numerous articles on hospital management and is listed in Who’s Who in the World (1988), Who’s Who in Finance and Industry, and Who’s Who in Health Care. His book, Walking the Rainbow, is available now from Whitmore Publishing Co.



Cheap Hearing Aids – Where Can you Source Them?

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First aid


While hearing aids cannot restore a person’s hearing they are extremely useful in assisting the person to improve the quality of their hearing. With the correct amplification a person can hear things that may otherwise be inaudible. Many people who suffer from hearing problems do so in silence as they are unsure as to what hearing aid device would best suit their needs. Often the person is ashamed of their condition or are unable to afford a suitable hearing aid. So if you suffer hearing problems here is some advice on how you can find cheap hearing aids that you can afford and which are stylish and perform up to expectations.

Take The Time To Compare

Many health insurance companies do not offer coverage for the cost of purchasing hearing aids. Additionally there are many uninsured people that cannot afford one of the many ‘top of the shelf’ hearing aids and accordingly need access to cheap hearing aids to solve their hearing problems. So if you find yourself in this situation it is vitally important that you undertake extensive research and do comparisons of the various models and makes available. When you undertake these comparisons you should draw up a listing which compares the different hearing aids feature by feature. This is the only real way that you can reasonably assess the options available to you based on their quality and price.

Another option for you, when you are searching for cheap hearing aids, is to contact the major hearing aid manufacturers or retailers who often have old models that they wish to dispose of and maybe will do so at a heavily discounted price.

The next time you see a newly released hearing aid device model being advertised by one of the big hearing aid companies, it would be an excellent opportunity to check with them through their customer service area or their website to see if they have any superseded models that are being offloaded at sale prices. As you can imagine most of these special promotions are generally not advertised so you will need to take the initiative and make inquiries on your own.

Another way of getting a cheap hearing aid is by electing to purchase the base model of a major manufacturer’s product line of hearing aids which may not give you all of the advanced features, however you will still be receiving a quality product which is supported by a guarantee.

Sometimes surfing the internet is another great way of finding cheap hearing aids as many companies sell good quality but surplus stocks of hearing aids at low prices over the Internet. It is, however, important for you to research the brands and models being offered via the web to ensure it meets with your particular requirements.

Another option open to you in finding cheap hearing aids is to settle for an unknown or less regarded manufacturer who may make reasonable hearing aids but do not offer after sales service.

As you can see there are a number of different options to consider when you are searching for cheap hearing aids, but a word of caution, you will often get what you pay for so be careful before outlaying your money. Do your research thoroughly and ask yourself the questions – Does the product meet my requirements? Does the manufacturer or retailer offer a guarantee and after sales service? Is there a better option at a lower price?



Which Hearing Aid Is Right For Me?

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Hearing aids have come a long way since they were first introduced as a technology many years ago. There are many different types of hearing aids because not everyone has the same amount or type of hearing loss. Every hearing aid has different functions and features that cater to the needs of the person wearing them. These days you can even purchase hearing aids that can be programmed to change depending on how the sound is changing in your immediate environment.

There are two main categories of hearing aids: digital hearing aids and analogue hearing aids. Modern hearing aids make use of new digital technology, and work very well. Digital hearing aids take the sound, convert it into bits, and make necessary changes before amplifying the signal so that you can hear it better.

Digital hearing aids are available from a wide range of companies, such as Miracle Ear. The great thing about digital hearing aids is that they can be programmed and adjusted according to each person to work optimally depending on the circumstances. A small computer contained in digital hearing aids is what controls the device and makes it work so well.

Miracle ear harnesses the power of this type of digital technology to help people hear better – it’s a high quality brand many people trust with their hearing.

Analogue hearing aids are an older type of technology that amplifies sounds through a microphone and convert them into tiny electrical signals. These same signals are then transmitted into the ear as they are picked up by the device, and can be changed to suit the needs of each person, as far as analogue technology allows.

More advanced analogue hearing aids can be programmed to some degree, so the type of hearing aid you choose will depend on personal factors – analogue hearing aids don’t necessarily leave you in the dust when it comes to personalization and making choices.

For the hearing impaired hearing aids, such as those sold by Miracle Ear, provide a life changing experience that improves every aspect of daily living. Hearing aids improve speech perception and make hearing a more pleasant experience, although normal hearing can’t be restored entirely.

If you don’t have a lot of money to spend on hearing aids, there are many discount hearing aids on the market that work just as well as their more expensive counterparts. You can find hearing aids for sale online as well as in traditional stores, so start shopping if you want to save money, even on brands such as Miracle Ear.

Discount hearing aids are not hard to find online, so don’t be afraid to do some research before paying for something more expensive. Hearing aids for sale, such as those from Miracle Ear, don’t have to cost an arm and a leg. In fact, there are many online stores that sell these devices for a discounted price, so you can buy direct and have the hearing aids shipped straight to your door. Nothing could be easier, or faster.



How Visual Aids Undermine Presentations – 3 Ways you May Be Boring your Audience to Tears

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How do you know you have a presentation? I posed this question to a sales team I was working with recently. One gentleman said, “If I win the business, I know I have a presentation.” To that excellent response I replied, “That’s how you know you have a good presentation. How do you know, before you even arrive at the prospect’s site, that you have a presentation?” Another gentleman offered, “Well if I have some PowerPoint slides that I can talk from, then I have a presentation.”

The belief that visual aids equal a presentation is a very common misconception. Visual aids are aids. They are not even necessary, usually. A presentation is the information, stories, statistics, quotes, and opinions that the presenter shares. Visual aids, if used, enhance the presenter’s message, not the other way around. Anytime visual aids become the presentation and the presenter becomes the aid, you will probably be boring your audience to tears. Below are three specific examples of how this happens.

Words, Words, Words- The visual aids are nothing but the presenter’s notes, which the presenter proceeds to read from the screen to the audience. Imagine you are sitting in an audience waiting for a presentation to begin. The presentation is scheduled for one hour. The presenter walks to the front of the room, clicks their clicker, and a large blue screen fills with a yellow, bulleted, run-on sentence that flies in from the left. For me, this is when dread sets in. Glaze is starting to form over my eyes. Fog is rolling in on my brain. The battle to stay alert and appear interested has begun and it intensifies with every bullet that appears.

When visual aids say as much or more than the presenter does, one of them is not necessary. Reading from wordy slides is not only boring, but also insulting to an intelligent audience. Many presentations I have suffered through would be more economical, less stressful, and better received as memos, special reports, or CDs that the audience could read individually on their own time. Unless the audience is taking notes, as in a training situation, wordy visual aids undermine a presentation. The point of a visual aid is to make the presentation more interesting not boring.

Tired Graphics- If your audience is thinking, “This is the 762nd time I’ve seen that piece of clipart.”, your visual aids are undermining your presentation. Similarly, if your audience recognizes your visual aid background as one of the popular software templates, your visual aids are undermining your presentation. Graphics are the solution to the wordy visual aid problem discussed previously. However, freshness now becomes the issue. Ideally, all visual aids would consist of simple, powerful, interesting graphics. In reality, time and money may be constraints.

Let the nature of the presentation dictate how far you will go to secure fresh looking graphics. For high profile or high opportunity presentations, more time, money, and effort should be placed on creating visual aid graphics. My recommendation would be to have a graphic artist assist if talent is not available internally. Examples of high profile, high opportunity presentations include the unveiling of a new product or service and sales presentations.

Just Like Everybody Else- If your visual aids fall into either of the previous two categories, Wordy or Tired Graphics, present without them unless the audience needs to take notes. Because most presenters use wordy or tired visual aids, audiences are conditioned to become bored at the first sight of a bullet. A bulleted list is like a timepiece on a chain that sways in front of the eyes chanting, “Sleep…sleep…sleep” I have discovered that being contrarian and forgoing visual aids can actually make a presentation a huge success.

I was presenting to 120 salespeople at an annual conference. I was the only non-industry, soft-topic presenter on the multi-day program. I arrived early and attended the presentation before mine. There were two presenters standing on an elevated stage behind podiums with a huge screen centered between them. The room was darkened as the PowerPoint slides clicked by. I surveyed the salespeople. No one was jumping out of his or her seat with excitement.

My host asked if I had any visual aids. I had PowerPoint slides but claimed that I had none and that I would work from my handout. I asked them to turn all of the lights up and requested a wireless microphone. Just turning the lights on had a huge impact on the audience. I moved around freely and referred to the handout periodically so the salespeople would feel anchored and take notes. When the conference was finished, I was the highest rated presenter. They invited me to come back immediately for the next year.

Summing Up-Visual aids are powerful. They can be the icing on your cake or the rain on your parade. To ensure visual aids are not undermining your presentation, use words sparingly and find fresh graphics. Even have the courage to present without, if your visual aids are not truly aiding you.