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Key Takeaways A single gene therapy shot protected newborn monkeys from HIV for 3+ yearsEarly delivery of the treatment was ...
If one member of a household is infected, others are at risk, especially if they share utensils like spoons, cups, or buckets ...
A transnational crime expert says New Zealand and Australia's status as the "cash cows" of the Pacific methamphetamine market ...
Receiving treatment within the first month of life could protect children for at least three years, a study suggests.
The temporary loss of key HIV grants forced organizations to cut hours, furlough workers and delay critical public health initiatives.
The government has reduced new HIV infections by 82 percent and AIDS-related deaths by 86 percent, achieving the UNAIDS 95-95-95 targets before the 2030 global deadline. ALSO READ: Rwanda’s bold path ...
Scientists reported administering an HIV gene therapy once to primates of different ages through simple injections into ...
Several vaccines for HIV have been tested in animal studies and an early safety trial in people, showing promising results in ...
Antiretroviral drug residues were monitored in breastmilk samples using ultrahigh-performance liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry (UHPLC–MS/MS).
This month, the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) announced a $100 million pilot program ...
A new study in Nature shows that delivering a single injection of gene therapy at birth may offer years-long protection ...
Scientists used a mRNA-based vaccine to reliably trigger antibodies that block HIV infection in people and monkeys ...