Aids And Drug Abuse
Saturday, September 10, 2011
, Posted by Immel at 3:39 AM
The two groups
at greatest risk for AIDS are homosexual or bisexual men and people who shoot
drugs. People who use needles to inject
drugs (including mainliners and skin poppers) get the virus by sharing their
works with other users who already have the AIDS virus in their blood.
You can't
always tell who is infected with the AIDS virus. Most people actually carrying the virus don't
look any different than anybody else, they look and feel well, but they can
still spread the disease. Symptoms of
AIDS may not show up for many years and some remain without symptoms even
then. Thousands of IV drug abusers
already have AIDS, and many thousands more are carriers of the virus.
Acquired Immune
Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS) is a serious condition that affects the body's
ability to fight off infection. A
diagnosis of AIDS is made when a person develops some form of life-threatening
illness not usually found in a person with a normal ability to fight
infection. To date more that fifty
percent of all the persons with AIDS have died.
Shooting drugs
has now been determined to be one of the biggest problems facing America
today. While the homosexual community
has put on a media campaign alerting and educating the public about the dangers
of AIDS, nothing is being done to stop the widespread sharing of needles among
drug users.
Remember, if
you shoot drugs, you are in danger of catching AIDS. The best advice for protecting yourself and
people you love is to stop shooting drugs.
It is also important to note that women who shoot drugs or who live with
men who shoot drugs sometimes gives AIDS to their babies, either before or
shortly after birth. Babies born with
AIDS become ill very quickly.
Most
individuals infected with the AIDS virus have no symptoms and feel well for a
long time before eventually developing such symptoms as fever and night sweats,
weight loss, swollen lymph glands in the neck, the underarms and groin area,
sever fatigue or tiredness, diarrhea, white spots or unusual blemishes in the
mouth. These symptoms are also symptoms
of a number of other illnesses and that should be taken into
consideration. Anyone with any of these
symptoms for more than two weeks should not panic buy should consult their
doctor.
The AIDS virus
is not spread through normal daily contact at work, school or home. There have been no cases found where the
virus has been transmitted by casual contact with AIDS patients in the home,
workplace, or health care setting.