The United States’ shutdown of HIV/Aids funding may harm global Aids programmes irreparably, jeopardising millions of lives ...
The surprising emergence of such cases in the 1980s is what tipped off health experts to what became known as the AIDS epidemic. Years of intense advocacy and shocking sights of children, young adults ...
In the 1980s, when HIV/AIDS swept the nation, there was no Operation Warp Speed, no news coverage, and no acknowledgement from the president about the disease at all. Unlike the coronavirus ...
We can now prevent HIV transmissions and deaths — progress impossible without investments from the U.S. government ...
Debates over tuberculosis reporting began in the late 19th century, when the bacterial infection was reframed not as a disease of the elite but of the urban poor. New York City was the first in the ...
French writer Anthony Passeron’s debut novel, Sleeping Children, is a supremely skilful account of Aids, drugs and 1980s ...
"Interference” — a poignant psychological horror of a teenage boy's struggle with paranoia and identity against the backdrop of the early 1980s AIDS epidemic. “I grew up watching tons of ...
The first cases of AIDS were reported in 1981 ... The end of the HIV epidemic – something that we could not even imagine in the 1980s and 1990s – is in sight. The health care infrastructure ...