1 / 16

HIV/AIDS

Learn about HIV/AIDS, its impact on the immune system, and how to manage living with the virus. Discover the importance of a healthy diet, exercise, and a positive attitude. Address myths, prevention methods, and caring for those with HIV/AIDS.

gmandell
Télécharger la présentation

HIV/AIDS

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. HIV/AIDS Informed, responsible decision making about health and safety

  2. Statistics • HIV is a virus (a small living thing that can make you ill) • AIDS is a syndrome (a group of signs or changes in the body that are typical of an illness or condition) • Estimated HIV prevalence among South Africans (2008):

  3. Managing living with HIV/AIDS • HIV attacks the body’s immune system • It damages and destroys the T-cells in the body which are the cells that fight illness • Fewer T-cells = body cannot defend itself against infection • Checking the level of T-cells in the blood can monitor the disease

  4. HIV/AIDS and medication • No cure • Antiretroviral drugs slow the progress of the HIV virus and help keep the T-cell count relatively high • This means that people who are infected can live longer • Combinationtherapy: taking more than one drug at a time (more effective)

  5. BUT… • Anti-HIV drugs are expensive • Symptoms: nausea, diarrhea, rashes and headaches • More serious side effects: high blood pressure, increased cholesterol levels or psychiatric symptoms • Antiretroviral drugs must be taken every day

  6. HIV/AIDS and diet • A healthy diet keeps the immune system strong and protects the body from disease • Food like peanut butter, eggs, cheeses, legumes and vegetables makes it easier for the body to process all the medication • No alcohol

  7. Why is diet important? • HIV-positive people burn more energy which means they need to eat more • May be too weak to work because of a lack of nutrition • Taking ARVs without food or the right nutrition can cause pain

  8. HIV/AIDS and healthy living • Reducing stress is important • Stress can have a negative effect on appetite and sleep patterns • Exercising 3 times a week can slow the progress of HIV to AIDS • The fitter you are, the more you will be able to keep the level of the virus in your body down (and reduce negative side effects)

  9. A positive attitude • HIV-positive people often have to deal with stigma • “Bad or unfair feelings that people have about an illness or a way of behaving” • The stigma surrounding HIV-positive people may prevent people from getting tested, getting treatment, or searching for support • Finding out you are HIV-positive will result in a range of emotions- anger, denial, depression, guilt

  10. You can help an HIV person by adopting a positive attitude yourself

  11. If you are HIV-positive… • Be informed • Be open about it • Surround yourself with understanding people • Go for counseling • Believe that you have a future

  12. Myths about HIV/AIDS • I can get HIV from being around people who are HIV positive • I don’t need to worry about becoming HIV positive- new drugs will keep me well • I can get HIV from mosquitoes • I’m HIV positive- my life is over • AIDS is genocide • If I’m receiving treatment, I cant spread the HIV virus • My partner and I are both HIV positive- there’s no reason for us to practice safe sex • I could tell if my partner was HIV positive • You cant get HIV from oral sex

  13. Prevention and safety issues • Most common way to get infected: sexual contact • The virus lives in the bloodstream as well as in other bodily fluids of infected people including semen, vaginal fluids and breast milk • While abstinence or no sexual contact is the surest way to not get infected, you can prevent infection by practicing safe sex • Always use a condom during sexual intercourse • Oral sex does carry some risk of infection although it’s very scarce

  14. Caring for people living with HIV & AIDS • Finding out that someone in your family or someone you know is HIV-positive is a terrible shock • With the proper care and support, people with HIV/AIDS can live long healthy lives

  15. What is important: • Make sure HIV positive people have a healthy diet • Help them achieve a healthy body weight • Deal with symptoms and complications • Educating people about HIV and AIDS to reduce the stigma around the disease

  16. Reduce the stigma • HIV/AIDS victims are often treated with a lot of discrimination, prejudice and negative feelings • What do they experience? • Rejection from their families and communities • Don’t receive adequate healthcare treatment • Human rights are abused • Stigma and discrimination can result in infected people losing their jobs

More Related