Today, Dec 1st, is World AIDS Day
4 New Scientific Breakthroughs To Celebrate This World AIDS Day
Theres a lot to be thankful for this year.
There is still no cure or vaccine for HIV/AIDS, which affects approximately 37 million people around the world. But there is reason to hope that the global response to this pandemic is improving.
Fewer people died of HIV in 2015 than at any point in almost 20 years, while new HIV infections are at the lowest point since 1991, the World Health Organization noted in its 2016 progress report. That may be, in part, because at least two million new people began taking antiretroviral therapy in 2015, the largest annual increase ever in the history of the disease.
For World AIDS Day, we asked researchers and experts to weigh in on any other significant scientific discoveries and treatment strides worth celebrating this year.
Read on to learn about the strides in vaccine development, functional cures and historical understanding that 2016 brought:
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/hiv-aids-breakthroughs-2016_us_583e110be4b04fcaa4d59920http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/hiv-aids-breakthroughs-2016_us_583e110be4b04fcaa4d59920