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  4. How Antiretroviral Medications (ARVs) Keep Me Healthy

It's important to realize that ARVs are not a cure for HIV/AIDS.

Danny West is a trainer, coach, and leadership consultant, has been living with HIV for the past 24 years, and remains healthy today, having been treated successfully with antiretroviral medications (ARVs) for the last five years. Thanks to effective medical care and the use of ARVs when appropriate, people are now living with HIV long-term on combination therapies (the triple cocktail). HIV is no longer a death sentence. It's important to realize that ARVs are not a cure for HIV/AIDS. They support and maintain your immune system. When they work effectively, the can enable you to live long-term with HIV. Danny West has realized that he may live into his sixties or seventies. This means he has to plan for his future and a retirement period. Coaching has helped him do that.

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title=" About Cass Mann, Founder of Positively Healthy|gray|closed|icon

17 October 1948 – 18 April 2009

From his HIV diagnosis in 1985 until his death from cancer in April of 2009, Cass Mann was one of the world's longest-term HIV-positive diagnosed gay men. He founded the UK's only gay men's HIV/AIDS charity Positively Healthy, which provided HIV services including education, support, and peer counseling. In this series of intervews Cass shared his thoughts on many of the social, cultural, and psychological issues related to HIV/AIDS

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Syphilis |  congenital syphilis prevention | chlamydia | gonorrhea | congenital gonorrhea prevention | STD | STI | sexually transmitted infection | sexually transmitted disease | testing | infant | infection | Medicine | Health | Cure | Pain | Doctor | Antibiotic | symptoms | signs | genitals | mouth | treatment | sore throat | lymph nodes | oral sex | vaginal sex | anal sex | Sexually Transmitted Disease

It's important to use condoms (rubbers, prophylactics) to help reduce the spread of sexually transmitted diseases (STDs). These diseases include the Human Immunodeficiency Virus, or HIV (the virus that causes AIDS), chlamydia, genital herpes, genital warts, gonorrhea, hepatitis B, and syphilis. You can get them through having sex -- vaginal, anal, or oral.

hiv testing

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