T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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779.1 | Some facts, some myths | AIMHI::SCHELBERG | | Wed Mar 30 1988 15:38 | 18 |
| Like what you don't know about AIDS but afraid to ask?
Well I know some myths. Mosquitos don't transmit aids....
You can't get it by touching someone who has it or toilet seats.
So far all I know is that you can get it by having sex (either oral
or intercourse), using used needles (for drugs), or by getting blood
transfusions and for EMT's, doctors, nurses etc....it's wise to
use gloves in case you have cuts or sores on your hands, because
if someone is bleeding and has aids you can get it this way -
There was an AIDS Forum at DEC....and I know there is now a person
handling all questions but I forget his name. It was just in the
DECworld magazine I believe.
bobbi
|
779.2 | references | ULTRA::LARU | we are all together | Wed Mar 30 1988 15:44 | 1 |
| see also notes 97 and 334
|
779.3 | an opinion | MCIS2::MORAN | | Wed Mar 30 1988 16:06 | 27 |
| RE: 778.14
I agree with you that God doesn't make bad things happen. He indeed
gave us a free will. Like you said when there are too many deer
there is less food, if they don't eat it makes it easier for them
to get sick, i.e. less deer.
The point that I was trying to make was that, if the practice of
sleeping with more than one person was o.k. then there would be
no reason for disease. If it was natural then the disease would
not exist. If with the free will God gave you, you choose to do
things that are against nature and later find you have contracted
a disease, it is not a bad thing that God made happen, It is the
consequences of your own actions taken with your free will.
AIDS is the "Black Plague" of the 80's. It is serious, and it's
going to take a world wide effort to stop it. If and when they
do find a cure, then we can stop worrying, until then we should
be doing all that we can to at least slow it down. That is why
I didn't agree with Joyce in note 778. Because I feel that alternate
living will not slow it down, only increase it's spreading.
Just an opinion 8~)
kathy
|
779.4 | let's have more of your funny answers! | 3D::CHABOT | That fish, that is not catched thereby, | Wed Mar 30 1988 16:19 | 2 |
| Sure, sure, so what was the reason for the Black Death? The rise
of cities? Cat-killing?
|
779.5 | let's have a little more input... | MCIS2::MORAN | | Wed Mar 30 1988 16:38 | 3 |
| And you think my answers are funny? (Cat-killing?)
kathy
|
779.6 | but... | GNUVAX::BOBBITT | modem butterfly | Wed Mar 30 1988 16:45 | 27 |
|
re: .3
You are stating that if sleeping with many partners weren't "wrong",
then the disease would not exist. But it is not solely a sexual
disease, it is a disease that is spread when contaminated blood
is mixed with healthy blood (however that can be accomplished).
It does not attack the sex organs, it attacks the blood, which does
not prevent the further sexual circulation of the "wrong-doer"...
only serves as an excruciating experience ultimately ending in death.
If its sole purpose were to prevent humans from having multiple
partners, I think it would attack the sex organs themselves (like
venereal diseases), and be blatantly obvious in doing so (rather
than waiting upwards of 7 years to show up in the system).
Do all diseases spring up to battle some "wrong" that humans are
committing...what about cancer, muscular dystrophy, cystic fibrosis,
endometriosis, asthma, alzheimer's....why are they around?
I say the only way to stop the transmission of the disease sexually
(be it heterosexually or homosexually) is to make sure that, if
people are going to live a multi-partnered lifestyle, they take
all the precautions they know...get tested so they can prevent the
disease's spread...and KNOW THEIR PARTNERS.
-Jody
|
779.7 | | MANANA::RAVAN | Tryin' to make it real... | Wed Mar 30 1988 16:45 | 43 |
| Re .3: A favor, please? Don't use the term "alternate living" to
mean "sex with multiple partners"...
I realize that that may often be what it is intended to mean, but
I think it's a more useful phrase if allowed to mean "household
consisting of other than one monogamous heterosexual couple". This
could include Kate and Allie or Bob and Carol and Ted and Alice,
but doesn't mandate either version!
Re AIDS, and "the natural consequences of our actions" - it's a
reasonable-sounding argument, but I'd like to point out that in the
nature of things we get old, our teeth rot, our joints stiffen, and we
die. Doesn't matter *what* we do or do not do, eventually we're worm
food. While it makes sense to avoid eating tainted food or exposing
ones self to disease, that's easier said than done (you do breath,
don't you?).
As has been mentioned before, three (or four, or twenty) AIDS-free
people who have sex exclusively among their own group, and avoid other
potential blood-contaminating activities, are (as far as we know!) just
as safe as two people who behave the same way. The problem now is that
it's so difficult to be certain who has and hasn't been exposed. And,
obviously, when you interact with a larger number of people, the odds
increase that one of them is less than truthful (or less than careful).
There's certainly some truth to the idea that "nature is trying
to tell us something," though. Have you noticed that the better
we get at preventing diseases and avoiding most of the historical
causes of death, new and more interesting forms make their appearance?
They might have been there all along, but unnoticed because nobody
survived long enough to "benefit" from them. Higher populations,
global pollution, stress on the environment - or, at a more personal
level, over-fed people living in over-heated rooms breathing over-dry
air in insufficient natural light *all their lives*...
No wonder people get sick.
[I guess I've always been fatalistic about risk-taking. I figure
that something's got my name on it, and when it shows up I'll find
out what kind of afterlife I'm headed for. That doesn't mean I won't
take precautions, but neither will I lose sleep over the "what-ifs".]
-b
|
779.8 | | MYCRFT::PARODI | John H. Parodi | Wed Mar 30 1988 16:48 | 26 |
|
Kathy, "cat-killing" refers to the fact that the Black Death was transmitted
by rats and the fleas that rode the rats. If you kill cats, the rat
population tends to grow. Anyway, you never answered the question. If
the Black Death was retribution by God, what was the offense that caused
the retribution?
From your 778.15:
> Aids is some sort of "biological coincidence" ???
> It's not a coincidence, Of course there is a reason. The government
> definately needs to educate on this subject. If AIDS had nothing
> to do with what is right and what is wrong. Then explain the reason
> for the government to make oral and anal sex illegal.
Oral/anal sex is illegal in some states, so there is no single government
that enters into it. More importantly, many of these laws were on the
books for a hundred years or more before the first case of Aids.
Anyway, the best argument against this "retribution" stuff has been
pointed out in this file before. If AIDS is retribution by God, and
lesbians have the lowest incidence of AIDS (and from what I read, I
believe this to be the case), then lesbians must clearly be God's chosen
people. Wouldn't you agree?
JP
|
779.9 | | APEHUB::STHILAIRE | 1 step up & 2 steps back | Wed Mar 30 1988 17:47 | 17 |
| Re .3, yes, I do believe it is just coincidental that Aides exists.
I don't think there is a "reason" for everything. I think the
fact that most/many/some people have trouble dealing with this is
one of the reasons that religion exists.
If you want me to explain why I think that oral sex is illegal in
some states, it's probably because a lot of our ancesters were narrow
minded puritans who believed they would go to Hell if they relaxed
and let themselves have a good time on Earth.
(If I were God I *might* start a plague to punish "cat-killing"
but certainly not for sexual preference - either of gender or number
of partners. I'd want MY people to enjoy themselves!)
Lorna
|
779.10 | | 3D::CHABOT | That fish, that is not catched thereby, | Wed Mar 30 1988 17:58 | 3 |
| Who was it who wrote the story "The Plague"? Camus?
(Shouldn't that line be "Lesbians are the Goddess's chosen people"?)
|
779.11 | pass the cheese, please? | VINO::EVANS | Never tip the whipper | Wed Mar 30 1988 18:00 | 20 |
| Is this a rathole spawning a rathole?? Oh well, I'll keep diggin
with my little paws, here....
RE: certain types of sexual activity illegal
Many of our current laws have been handed down from ancient religious
groups which started as small sects and needed to grow, or which
simply made out better sustaining the life of the group if people
populated the group as much as possible.
Thus, any sexual activity which had no chance of procreation was
outlawed. (Look at what happened to the Shakers!) (*What* Shakers?
you may well ask)
There are plenty of people on the earth today. STill, the best way
to get someone to believe in your particular religion is to get
them *born* into it.
--DE
|
779.12 | my God is not a wrathful God | CADSYS::SULLIVAN | Karen - 225-4096 | Wed Mar 30 1988 18:33 | 28 |
| RE: .3
Kathy,
I don't believe there are reasons for a lot of things in life.
Sometimes things just happen, and sometimes outside occurences can
coincidentally combine to cause things. I don't believe in a God
who passes out retribution. I agree that multiple casual sex
partners is if not wrong, at least stupid (especially given the
known dangers). But I don't believe God thought up a disease to
prevent people from being homosexual or having multiple sex
partners (of course I'm not convinced that God is against multiple
partners). Jesus did not shun the lepers. He did not believe
that they got leperousy in retribution for some wrong.
AIDS is serious, but is not retribution against homosexuals. In
all the articles and documentaries, there is no agreement as to
the cause of AIDS. It is not only passed through homosexual sex.
In one african country (I forget which) it is a definate
heterosexual problem. It could be that it is prevalent in the US
homosexual society because it is in the blood stream (and semen?),
and anal sex is prone to breaking blood vessels. There are some
theories that the disease is from apes who are not themselves
affected by the disease, but could have bit a human at one time
and started it in humans. AIDS does not spontaneously occur because
of someone's method of sex.
...Karen
|
779.13 | Old myths, and new ones. | PSG::PURMAL | Ca plane pour moi | Wed Mar 30 1988 20:57 | 19 |
| re: 778.11
> a man and a woman can not contract aids between themselves, there
> has to be a third party
Kathy,
This is not true. The disease affects a large portion of the
heterosexual population of Uganda as .12 stated.
ASP
P.S. There are a number of people who believe that AIDS is a man-made
disease. A radio show called "Radio Free America" had several
programs devoted to this theory. They presented the evidence
that they believe links the disease to biological warfare
development. If anyone is interested in getting tapes of
the shows I can try to find out where the reproduced tapes are
available.
|
779.14 | He's a super person..... | SALEM::LUPACCHINO | From All Walks of Life 6-5-88 | Wed Mar 30 1988 21:53 | 7 |
|
Re:.1
I'm a little late on the pick up but the DEC Aids Program Manager
is Paul Ross who works in CFO2.
am
|
779.15 | more... | VINO::EVANS | Never tip the whipper | Thu Mar 31 1988 13:25 | 38 |
| I thought I had seen some more mis-information in the original
note, so I went back and looked, and by gosh, I was right.
>> Again with a little education on AIDS you would find that AIDS,
>> Which is a disease created in the body by the immune system to kill
>> the immune system. When semen gets into the blood steam, the body
>> considers it a foriegn object, the blood stream is no place for
>> semen which in all actuality is human cells. The body's immune
>> system fights the semen as it would any other foriegn substance.
>> and then you now have a natural anti body in the blood stream so
>> that it can fight this foriegn object if it ever appears again.
>> Except that the anti body finds that there are lots of human cells
>> around for it to fight so it keeps fighting, and that's where it
>> kills the immune system.
AIDS is not caused by "semen in the bloodstream". It is caused
by a VIRUS. This virus is related to that which causes some other
major disease, which escapes me at the moment. "Semen in the
bloodstream", so far as I know, is a mis-conception. [heh,heh ;-)]
In addition, the virus has been found in blood, semen, and saliva.
Presumably, it is in all body fluids, but the amount needed to
transfer the virus is more than the average mouthful, say, so
getting it from saliva has never happened. (I suppose you could
save up a gallon or so, but you'd have to keep it warm somewhere
and then.....what?...inject it with a syringe? bleah)
Males *can* pass the virus to females and other males quite easily.
Female-to-male transmission is less likely to happen, but presumably
could. And, of course, a blood transfusion will do it as well.
And, of course, there *are* ways to have sex which do not pass or
exchange body fluids, though I think some people define sex as
penetration-only and don't understand about the alternatives.
--DE
|
779.16 | | LDP::SCHNEIDER | | Thu Mar 31 1988 14:01 | 8 |
| I hope this won't be seen as picking on anyone's religion, but I wonder
whether the misconception (about semen itself being the infective
agent) comes from some biblical interpretation. "Thou shalt not spill
seed" sort of thing? I think Anita Bryant used such interpretations in
her crusade against homosexuality. This sort of argument would, of
course, be used to support the case for AIDS = punishment from God.
Chuck
|
779.18 | My advise to you :-) | APEHUB::STHILAIRE | 1 step up & 2 steps back | Thu Mar 31 1988 17:02 | 6 |
| Re .17, don't take everything you read in the bible literally.
A lot of it's just nonsense. You have to use your common sense
too. That's what "God" gave us brains for.
Lorna
|
779.19 | This Gets More Interesting | FDCV03::ROSS | | Thu Mar 31 1988 17:35 | 21 |
|
RE: .17
> But I do want to clarify that
> aids (sic) is not a virus. If it were a virus it could be taken
> care of by antibiotics.
Kathy, generally viral infections of any type - including the common
cold - do not respond very well to antibiotic treatments. Bacterial
infections do.
> About the "oral an anal" law, It was passed in 1986 by the Federal
> government, not certain states.
Can you elaborate more on exactly what this law states? It would
seem curious that the Feds would even think of proposing such a
law, since Americans have been taking it "up the ass" from Uncle
Sam for many years now.
Alan
|
779.20 | Will this ever end? | MCIS2::MORAN | | Thu Mar 31 1988 17:37 | 15 |
| RE: 17
You are right that all the info in the Bible is not correct, but
every thing had a moral to it. They are called parables.
RE: 18
The reason common colds do not react is because there are way to
many types.
I will get you details on the law if you would like, I would have
to look it up again to get you the exact info.
Kathy 8*)
p.s. I guess I did get some danders up! 8*)
|
779.21 | | VINO::EVANS | Never tip the whipper | Thu Mar 31 1988 17:59 | 14 |
| RE: "Will this ever end?"
For my part, not until any misconceptions about AIDS are
cleared up. Every legitimate medical authority I have ever
heard on this subject says AIDS is caused by a virus. You will
have to prove to me that "semen in the bloodstream" a) happens
and b) has anything to do with AIDS.
I'm not trying to give you a hard time, but it is ABSOLUTELY
VITAL that mis-conceptions about AIDS are not perpetuated, especially
not by medical personnel.
--DE
|
779.22 | Rampant misconceptions | MOIRA::FAIMAN | Ontology Recapitulates Philology | Thu Mar 31 1988 18:25 | 19 |
| There may be some fringe opinion that connects "semen in the
bloodstream" with AIDS, but the overwhelming medical opinion
is that AIDS is caused by the HTLV-3 (or HIV) virus. The process
described in 778.11 (antibodies to semen) is an auto-immune
rweaction, which (again, according to the medical consensus)
has absolutely nothing to do with AIDS.
As for:
> But I do want to clarify that
> aids is -not- a virus. If it were a virus it could be taken care
> of with antibiotics.
This is nonsense. There is *no* antibiotic which has *any* value
for the treatment of *any* viral disease. The only reason that
antiobiotics are ever prescribed for viral infections is to prevent
subsidiary bacterial infections.
-Neil
|
779.23 | Supreme Court and anal sex | ATO02::TYLDESLEY | | Thu Mar 31 1988 19:18 | 15 |
| RE: .17
In 1986, the Supreme Court upheld a Georgia law against sodomy that
has been in effect for as many years as Georgia has been a state.
The reason for the situation getting to the Supreme Court was
because police were serving a summons to a person, and when they,
the police, entered the house to serve that summons, they found
two men in a bedroom having sex. Not only did the police serve
their summons, they also arrested the men having sex. The State
in the long run was going to drop charges, but one of the indviduals
involved decided to push to have the offended law removed from the
books. Consequently, the case went to the Supreme Court, which
in turn upheld the State's rights to have such laws.
-shirley
|
779.24 | ........oops | ATO02::TYLDESLEY | | Thu Mar 31 1988 19:21 | 4 |
| RE: .23
. . . . . . . . "offended law" should be offending.
My opinion. 8^)
|
779.25 | on viruses and monkeys | VOLGA::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Thu Mar 31 1988 19:30 | 22 |
| May I add a third on the virus/antibody discussion. Viruses
are intracellular parasites. They cannot be attacked by antibiotics
because they are inside of cells. Bacteria are extracellular parasites
which can be killed by antibiotics. The body can develop antibodies
against viruses which will kill them when they burst out of the
cells to travel in the body fluids to attack other cells.
Also in re the ape connection.
One theory about the development of AIDs was that it passed from
people who� became infected by skinning green monkeys for food.
(Blood contamination.) It has been further speculated that it
moved into the United States as a result of the purchase of blood
from infected Africans for the manufacture of gamma globulin.
Since gamma globulin is frequently used to combat heptitis which
affected the active male homosexual community out of roportion
to their numbers in society the infected gamma globulin resulted
in AIDs showing up first in that community.
Bonnie
who taught nurses courses for many years before coming to DEC
|
779.26 | | HACKIN::MACKIN | Jim Mackin, VAX PROLOG | Thu Mar 31 1988 22:17 | 14 |
| Re: -.1
> May I add a third on the virus/antibody discussion. Viruses
> are intracellular parasites. They cannot be attacked by antibiotics
> because they are inside of cells.
Nit: As Neil pointed out, antibiotics will have *no* affect on
viral agents, regardless if the viruses are intracellular or
extracellular.
That's an interesting theory about how the AIDS virus got into the
human population; I hadn't heard that before.
Jim, a biologist in a former life
|
779.27 | that was what I thought I said. | DANUBE::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Thu Mar 31 1988 22:48 | 4 |
| Jim, um, that was what I meant...in re viruses and antibiotics..
Bonnie
(also a Biologist in a former life)
|
779.28 | I'm not a biologist. | OPHION::HAYNES | Charles Haynes | Thu Mar 31 1988 23:24 | 33 |
| As for antibiotics and the common cold, I believe the misconception
here is in regards *vaccinations*. It *is* possible to vaccinate
against many viral agents, possibly against AIDS (I heard a report
that a human HIV vaccine was being readied for human trials, but
the trials would be conducted in Europe). The common cold is hard
to vaccinate against because the protein coat on the "cold" virus
tends to mutate VERY rapidly, and there are a large number of viruses
that can cause the cold.
As for the "federal anti-sodomy law" that is a common misinterpretation
of the Harwick vs Georgia result. Sodomy between consenting adults is
NOT illegal in California, for example. The Supreme Court merely ruled
that *State* anti-sodomy laws did not necessarily violate one strict
Constitutionality test (privacy). One of the Justices (I forget which)
was heard to opine later that if the case had been brought via a civil
rights challenge (equal protection under the law, claiming that the law
was selectively enforced) the result might well have been different.
Were you aware that consensual oral sex between husband and wife is
prohibited by the same law that Harwick was convicted under?
Furthermore the argument that "it's against the law, so it must be bad"
is clearly deficient, otherwise why have mechanisms for changing the
law? Why do we have an entire body, the Supreme Court, who's sole job
is to decide if a partiular law really is good? (A gross
oversimplification, I admit, but apt nonetheless.)
The notion that AIDS or any other disease is a punishment or warning
is a classic example of the "pathetic fallacy", but let's agree
to disagree about that. AIDS is a dreadful disease, let's work on
educating people about how it is spread and how its spread can be
slowed.
-- Charles
|
779.29 | | MAY20::MINOW | Je suis marxiste, tendance Groucho | Thu Mar 31 1988 23:31 | 11 |
| According to the news today, another problem with the Aids virus is that
it mutates *within* humans -- the only virus known to do so. This is
apparently why there is such a long gestation period -- the early stages
don't cause serious illness.
One way this was discovered was by noting that people who received
contaminated blood transfusions from doners in the early stages of
the disease lived longer than those who received blood from doners
in later stages.
Martin.
|
779.30 | more cheery tidings | LDP::SCHNEIDER | | Fri Apr 01 1988 09:10 | 13 |
| Another point made in the report that Martin mentions was that the
AIDS virus is unusual in tending to mutate toward GREATER virulence.
(Whereas your more all-around successful viruses tend to get LESS
virulent as they mutate, thus letting the host last longer.)
I suspect that over enough generations, the tendency would reverse,
but for now it looks quite possible that AIDS will get worse before
it gets better. (Whatever 'worse' means in an already-fatal illness.)
All the more reason to apply maximum effort to squashing AIDS now,
regardless of any attached moral issues.
Chuck
|
779.31 | | GNUVAX::TUCKER | | Fri Apr 01 1988 10:44 | 15 |
| .17: I've never had anything to do with biology or medicine, but
official statements that antibiotics have no effect on viruses
seem to be common. I've heard it about as often as I've
heard that there's no cure for the common cold. In fact,
I've heard that when people mistakenly take antibiotics for
different viruses, they run the risk of eventually becoming
immune to the drugs and having them not work when they really
need them to kill bacteria.
The meaning of HIV escapes me now, but doesn't the V stand
for "virus"?
Brenda
|
779.32 | Squash! | MCIS2::MORAN | | Fri Apr 01 1988 10:44 | 4 |
| RE: .30
I agree.
|
779.33 | Ignorance = death | VINO::EVANS | Never tip the whipper | Fri Apr 01 1988 12:02 | 17 |
| HIV = "Human Immunodeficiency Virus"
There are variants of this virus which cause different things. I
believe Herpes is caused by one.
In a pamphlet from the Red Cross, HTLV-III is given as the particular
variant which causes AIDS.
Given the new information mentioned a few REPLYs previous, it is
VITAL that we understand as much about this killer as we can.
Presently, it is a very fragile virus so it is difficult to contract
AIDS if care is taken. IF THIS THING DOES INDEED BECOME STRONGER,
we need to quash it now, while we can.
Dawn
|
779.34 | | DPDMAI::RESENDEP | following the yellow brick road... | Fri Apr 01 1988 13:37 | 33 |
| I've read all I can about the AIDS epidemic, and am continually
amazed at all the mis-information I read and hear from intelligent
and educated people. However, something happened recently that
opened my OWN eyes and made me understand a little better why people
sometimes react the way they do.
I'm certainly in a low-risk group: straight, in a monogamous (marital)
relationship with a faithful partner, don't do any sort of drugs or
needles, and don't deal with body fluids in any way; i.e. my profession
is not related to medicine. So the logical side of me has been saying
all along "You don't really have anything to worry about."
But I was on an airplane not too long ago. I unfortunately had a
window seat, and there was a very nice looking gentleman in a business
suit sitting beside me. When dinner was served, we both sat there
eating our meals. Then the gentleman beside me sneezed. He covered
his mouth, and directed it down, not into my meal. But I found myself
unable to take another bite. This was not a logical reaction, but a
purely emotional one. I told myself over and over that there is no way
to contract AIDS from someone else's sneeze. But I was totally UNABLE
to bring myself to take another bite of that food; I just couldn't make
myself do it. When I got home and told my husband about it, he chuckled
till he realized how upset I was by the experience. Once we talked
about it, I think he also gained a little insight into how serious
the problem really is, and how utterly terrifying.
Wish I had the answers. I agree that education is probably our
best weapon against this scourge right now. That in itself is a
sad statement: we need better weapons than education (like a cure
for example). But for now, we MUST make people realize both (a)
the seriousness and (b) how to prevent the spread of AIDS.
Pat
|
779.35 | Nicht, Nein, No, Nyet... | GNUVAX::BOBBITT | modem butterfly | Fri Apr 01 1988 14:20 | 16 |
| Cold sores and Herpes ARE NOT related to AIDS.
They are caused by Herpes Simplex Virus I (oral, for the most part)
and Herpes Simplex Virus II (genital, for the most part)...I say
for the most part because one can mutate to the other location,
and vice versa. Herpes Zoster causes shingles, a painful skin problem.
Most people have been exposed to Herpes Simplex by the time they
are 8 or 9, and the main problem with it is that once it lodges
in the body it kind of resurfaces every now and then, particularly
when your body's defences are weak.
the abbreviations are probably what is causing the confusion. AIDS
is HIV, Herpes is HSV...but they are NOT the same...
-Jody
|
779.36 | srry | VINO::EVANS | Never tip the whipper | Fri Apr 01 1988 14:27 | 17 |
| RE: .35
My apologies. I know there are other diseases caused by the same
family of viruses, I thought one was Herpes.
Anybody know the ones that are related? Maybe just the specific
auto-immune diseases.
By the way, just because something is caused by a virus in the same
family does NOT mean the DISEASES are the same. And, of course,
if we are picking nits, AIDS isn't a *disease*, anyway...
Sorry about the mis-information; this is one subject I DON'T want
to spread drivel about.
Dawn
|
779.37 | Pointer | GNUVAX::BOBBITT | modem butterfly | Fri Apr 01 1988 14:27 | 8 |
| I'm not sure if anyone has done this yet - if they have feel free
to remove this response...
Pointer to 334, where there is information on AIDS from the Usenet
(I believe the note is set nowrite, but it's there for all to see)
-Jody
|
779.38 | T-cell lucemea ? | VINO::MCARLETON | Reality; what a concept! | Fri Apr 01 1988 18:28 | 18 |
| Re: .36
> Anybody know the ones that are related? Maybe just the specific
> auto-immune diseases.
HTLV-III is like HTLV-I and HTLV-II. I think HTLV stands for
Human T-cell Lucemea (sp) Virus. I think HTLV-I causes some kind
of T-cell Lucemea. I don't know much more about it. I think
that these Lucemea are also related to Feline lucemeas.
All of these virus are what's called "Retro-viruses". They have
only RNA instead of DNA and use a chemical call reverse transcriptace
(sp) to convert the RNA to DNA once the virus has invaded the cell.
My source is a NOVA show on the subject.
MJC O->
|
779.39 | Herpes can make catching AIDS easier | SSDEVO::YOUNGER | Enjoy your life. If you don't no one else will | Thu Apr 07 1988 19:02 | 8 |
| There is a relationship between AIDS and Herpes. If one has active
Herpes, this makes transmission of the AIDS virus much easier, since
there is an open sore to penetrate.
They are not genetically related in any way except that they are both
viruses that effect humans.
Elizabeth
|
779.40 | You can't get AIDS from giving blood | AQUA::WAGMAN | QQSV | Fri Apr 15 1988 21:11 | 16 |
| One thing that I have not seen mentioned up to now: although AIDS can be
transmitted by receiving contaminated blood or blood byproducts, you cannot
get AIDS by giving blood. In particular, it is 100% safe to give blood in the
Red Cross blood drives which Digital sponsors from time to time. The needles
which they use to take blood from you are manufactured sterile, used to take
blood from you and *only* you, and discarded after you give blood. You
*cannot* contract AIDS by giving blood.
Please, everyone: give blood when there is a blood drive at your site
(provided that you are not among the groups that the Red Cross specifically
requests not give blood--they can tell you which they are). You can save
someone's life that way. And you absolutely cannot contract AIDS from
giving.
--Q (Dick Wagman), working on his third
gallon of donated blood
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779.41 | | RANCHO::HOLT | Robert A. Holt | Sat Apr 16 1988 10:01 | 7 |
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Its nice to be able to help out like this, when one
can do so safely. Please understand that there are
also some who cannot give blood for perfectly
legitimate medical reasons having nothing to do
with AIDS or fear of it...a past history of hepatitis
will disqualify one from being a donor.
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779.42 | "You need it more than we do, friend..." | NEXUS::CONLON | | Sat Apr 16 1988 12:05 | 6 |
| RE: .41
Also, if one is slightly (or greatly) anemic, they will refuse
to take your blood. (This happened once to a friend of mine
who tried to donate some years back.)
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779.43 | do you think maybe I'll rust? | VIA::RANDALL | back in the notes life again | Mon Apr 18 1988 09:25 | 7 |
| re: .42
Not to mention that if you have a tendency to become anemic,
your doctor may prefer that you not donate blood even at times
when your iron is high enough . . .
--bonnie
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779.44 | ex | VIDEO::ENGBERGM | | Thu Apr 21 1988 11:58 | 9 |
| another reason red cross will not let you donate blood is if
you are under wieght... which happens to my case... it seems
by their chart you have to be at least 110 lbs. Anyone under
that cannot give blood...(weight in portion to height of course)
I've tried many times to give blood even baby booster size...
especially since I have rare blood type... but they refuse
due to me being under the 110 lbs.
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779.45 | | TFH::MARSHALL | hunting the snark | Thu May 26 1988 10:47 | 16 |
| re 778.10
> ... 3 people involved
> in an...er...alternate relationship who have been involved among
> themselves and WITH NO-ONE else for the last roughly 10 years are
> probably among the people with the *lowest* risk of getting AIDS.
> ...
>All this applies to the *het*erosexual community.
It applies to homosexuals as well.
/
( ___
) ///
/
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779.46 | fuzzy writing - sorry | VINO::EVANS | Never tip the whipper | Thu May 26 1988 13:09 | 7 |
| Yes, it certainly does. I made the point assuming people would
assume it for the gay community - I was trying to say that all
the issues involved with AIDS impact the heterosexual community
as well. Guess that wasn't clear..
--DE
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