ZHL Rajasthan - End inequalities. End AIDS
Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) is a
chronic, potentially life-threatening condition caused by the human
immunodeficiency virus (HIV). By damaging the immune system, HIV interferes
with the body’s ability to fight the organisms that cause disease.
Division,
disparity and disregard for human rights are among the failures that allowed
HIV to become and remain a global health crisis. Now, COVID-19 is exacerbating
inequities and disruptions to services, making the lives of many people living
with HIV more challenging.
Ziqitza
Healthcare Limited, as an Emergency Service Provider, we
are at the forefront with the various state government and corporates to ensure
that our services which are so critical are not hampered at all.
The theme of
World AIDS Day 2021 is “End inequalities.
End AIDS”. With a special focus on reaching people
left behind, WHO and its partners are highlighting the growing
inequalities in access to essential HIV services.
On 1
December 2021, WHO is calling on global leaders and citizens to rally to
confront the inequalities that drive AIDS and to reach people who are currently
not receiving essential HIV services.
Key Facts
·
HIV continues to be a major global public health issue,
having claimed 36.3 million [27.2–47.8 million] lives so far.
·
There is no cure for HIV infection. However, with
increasing access to effective HIV prevention, diagnosis, treatment and care,
including for opportunistic infections, HIV infection has become a manageable
chronic health condition, enabling people living with HIV to lead long and
healthy lives.
·
There were an estimated 37.7 million [30.2–45.1 million]
people living with HIV at the end of 2020, over two thirds of whom (25.4
million) are in the WHO African Region.
·
In 2020, 680 000 [480 000–1.0 million] people died from
HIV-related causes and 1.5 million [1.0–2.0 million] people acquired HIV.
HIV
and AIDS are not the same thing, but they are interrelated. HIV is the strand
of virus that causes the disease and AIDS is the fourth and final stage of the
disease that can lead to death. There are also 2 different types of HIV
viruses: HIV I and HIV II. The former is more infectious, while the latter has
a lower infection rate.
The
Sub-Saharan region of Africa has the largest population of HIV infected people,
and is the most common place to be infected with HIV II. The numbers of people
who are HIV positive are estimated to be between 21.6 and 27.4 million people
and of the 2 to 3 million are children under the age of 15. In many countries,
HIV is an epidemic with those who are HIV positive protected by
anti-discrimination laws in the workplace.
The doctors at Ziqitza
in all their discussions emphasizes that HIV is not
transmitted by any and all fluid contact. The fluid has to be produced by the
body, and the virus dies very quickly when outside the body. There is a
lot of misinformation about how HIV is transmitted: HIV
can be transmitted by blood, vaginal fluid, cum and from mother to child during
pregnancy.
Over
the last few years, some people have been found to be immune to HIV and have
been able to fight off the virus. This immunity has been traced to a human
immune cell called the CD8+T. These cells attack and inject poison into any
HIV-infected cells they find. Now that scientists are aware of this, they hope
to understand how this process works and create a usable HIV vaccine.
The
HIV virus itself has a unique structure that makes it easy to attack the bodies
immune system and difficult to kill. HIV is a mutant super virus, as it has a
very fast replication system that helps it mutate faster. This makes it easier
for the virus to become immune to antiretrovirals, which are the drugs used to
keep the condition under control.
Ziqitza
Limited Rajasthan Corporate
Wellness Webinars continuously reinforces that the person when infected with
HIV virus may show initial symptoms of viral infection such as fever, headache,
rash or sore throat. Many may not experience any symptoms at all.
Prevention
Individuals can reduce the risk of HIV infection by limiting
exposure to risk factors. Key approaches for HIV prevention, which are often
used in combination, include:
- male and female condom use;
- testing and counselling for
HIV and STIs;
- testing and counselling for
linkages to tuberculosis (TB) care;
- voluntary medical male
circumcision (VMMC);
- use of antiretroviral drugs
(ARVs) for prevention;
- harm reduction for people
who inject and use drugs; and
- elimination of
mother-to-child transmission (MTCT) of HIV.
Doctors at Ziqitza
Rajasthan also
believes in the spreading awareness regarding HIV& AIDS to ensure timely
prevention of the disease.
About Ziqitza Healthcare
Ltd -
Ziqitza had
been set up with a vision to assist in saving human lives by providing a
leading network of fully equipped Advanced and Basic Life Support Ambulances
across the developing world. Ziqitza Limited
has currently more than 10,000 people working tirelessly, day and night, to
serve people in India. ZHL Rajasthan and Ziqitza
Limited Rajasthan is currently operating more than 3300 ambulances
across 16 states and have served more than 28 million people till date.
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