What is the care, prevention, and treatment for AIDS? The vaccines and serums in the prevention of this disease?
Ans) A preventive HIV vaccine is given to people who do not have HIV, with the goal of preventing HIV infection in the future. The vaccine teaches the person's immune system to recognize and effectively fight HIV in case the person is ever exposed to HIV.
- The most common and serious vaccine-preventable diseases tracked by the World Health Organization (WHO) are: diphtheria, Haemophilus influenzae serotype b infection, hepatitis B, measles, meningitis, mumps, pertussis, poliomyelitis, rubella, tetanus, tuberculosis, and yellow fever.
- Improving Health Outcomes, Preventing New Infections
While no cure exists for HIV infection, effective treatment is
available. When used consistently, antiretroviral therapy (ART) can
reduce the amount of virus in the blood and body fluids to very low
or undetectable levels (known as viral suppression).
What is the care, prevention, and treatment for AIDS? The vaccines and serums in the prevention...
1. Justify the national efforts for AIDS research and the development of vaccines and effective treatment strategies. 2. Describe clinical implications for quality of life and treatment options for immunoproliferative disorders. Would you opt for some of these treatments? Why or why not? 3. Explain and justify therapy and treatment for RA. Would you promote different treatments for juvenile RA versus adult RA? Why?
Should the U.S. focus health policies on prevention of health care or the treatment of patients who already have disease? What are the pros and cons of each, of having a policy geared toward prevention versus having one geared toward rescue/treatment?
Describe and discuss transmission, pathogenesis, clinical manifestations, treatment and prevention of HIV/AIDS.
Describe and discuss transmission, pathogenesis, clinical manifestations, treatment and prevention of HIV/AIDS.
Q1. Tonsilitis Explanation Symptoms Diagnosis Epidemiology Treatment Complications Prognosis Prevention The Thymus Gland Explanation Symptoms Diagnosis Epidemiology Treatment Complications Prognosis Prevention Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS) Explanation Symptoms Diagnosis Epidemiology Treatment Complications Prognosis Prevention Q2. Rotavirus Explanation Symptoms Diagnosis Epidemiology Treatment Complications Prognosis Prevention Tuberculosis Explanation Symptoms Diagnosis Epidemiology Treatment Complications Prognosis Prevention The Flu Explanation Symptoms Diagnosis Epidemiology Treatment Complications Prognosis Prevention Rubella Syndrome Explanation Symptoms Diagnosis Epidemiology Treatment Complications Prognosis Prevention Q3. Spina Bifida Explanation Symptoms Diagnosis Epidemiology...
what it is, cause, signs/symptoms, prevention, treatment, nursing care (please type :) thank you) Acute infection respiratory illness: Epiglottitis Safety and infection control: bacterial Meningitis Health promotion and maintenance: Psychosocial issue of infants, children and adolescent
QUESTION 2 Which of the following are true about vaccines. O A. A treatment for diseases once symptoms have show B. Can only be produced against viruses C. Should be able to prevent acquiring a disease witho D. Vaccines need to be boosted every couple of years to O E. All of the above are true.
HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, and malaria are difficult to control since there are no vaccines and most infections occur in poor countries. true falsre
Please type :) Basic care and comfort: Acute infectious gastrointestinal disorder ( s/s, cause, prevention, treatment, nursing care) Psychosocial integrity: death and dying ( what nursing assessment and care needed?) Pharmacological and parenteral therapies: Dornase alfa ( indication, complication, contraindication, nursing intervention, education)
Discuss the authors' treatment of people living with HIV/AIDS, cancer, Alzheimer's disease or other dementia, people waiting for organ transplants, etc. in relation to hospice or palliative care. Do you think there is a time in which hospice or palliative care should be automatically provided for a terminally ill individual? If so, when should that be? Who would be involved in that decision? Make sure to support your answer with proper citations from the textbooks. Mary Roach , Stiff book