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Review
. 1987 Mar 13;257(10):1357-66.

The prevention of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome in the United States. An objective strategy for medicine, public health, business, and the community

  • PMID: 3546744
Review

The prevention of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome in the United States. An objective strategy for medicine, public health, business, and the community

D P Francis et al. JAMA. .

Abstract

Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) is one of the most virulent infectious agents ever encountered. This virus, estimated to kill up to a half of those infected, has spread to more than 1 million Americans. There is no safe and effective treatment. Nor is there a vaccine. From our understanding of HIV transmission, further spread of the virus can be stopped by the use of various techniques. The combined use of education-motivation-skill building, serologic screening, and contact tracing/notification could eliminate or substantially reduce transmission. To accomplish this reduction an immense concerted effort by physicians, public health practitioners, business, and community organizations is required to get across the simple prevention messages. Those messages are: Any sexual intercourse (outside of mutually monogamous or HIV antibody-negative relationships) must be protected with a condom. Do not share unsterile needles or syringes. All women who may have been exposed should seek HIV-antibody testing before becoming pregnant and, if positive, avoid pregnancy. Only through a concerted, vigorous, and sustained prevention program that deals frankly with this problem will those individuals at risk be reached and motivated to take personal responsibility to protect themselves. Without such an effort, acquired immunodeficiency syndrome will continue to kill ever-increasing numbers of Americans.

KIE: The authors review current knowledge regarding the pathogenesis and transmission of the AIDS virus in the United States, outline a prevention plan based on that knowledge, and describe the major problems confronting effective prevention and control. They argue that the combined use of education and counseling, serologic screening, and contact tracing and notification could eliminate or substantially reduce transmission of AIDS.

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