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Trump plans to sign an executive order aimed at dismantling the Education Department; Advocates push Alabama Senate to fully end grocery tax; More Wyomingites get degrees, but anti-DEI law could slow progress; Competition prepares students for environmental science careers.

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White House attacks the judge who moved to block deportation of Venezuelans. Ukrainian President agrees to a limited ceasefire. And advocates say closing CFPB would put consumers on the hook for 'junk' charges and predatory fees.

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Cuts to Medicaid and frozen funding for broadband are both likely to have a negative impact on rural healthcare, which is already struggling. Plus, lawsuits over the mass firing of federal workers have huge implications for public lands.

World AIDS Day puts focus on perception

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Friday, November 29, 2024   

World AIDS Day is Dec. 1, which is dedicated to raising awareness of the AIDS pandemic caused by the spread of HIV.

Thousands of people live with HIV/AIDS in Nevada. Close to 60% of those diagnosed with HIV are virally suppressed, meaning they are taking medication allowing them to live a long and healthy life, with little to no risk of sexually transmitting the virus.

Anthony Petro, associate professor of religion and women's, gender and sexuality studies at Boston University, recognized there has been progress in how to medically treat the disease and how we speak about it has also changed. Petro said some diseases, such as HIV/AIDS, take on a set of political and moral meanings, which can impact societal and even scientific views.

"When you think about public health itself, it is the application of medicine to a public, and that depends upon us knowing who the public is that we care about," Petro explained.

Petro recalled the early years of the AIDS epidemic brought questions about whether the imagined "American public" included certain groups such as queer people, sex workers and IV drug users. He recounted in the absence of "state support," local activists helped advance the movement. He contended it was only when medical researchers decided it was a virus, it gained a level of "prestige" and funding started to flow. Petro noted today, access to reproductive and transgender health care are issues currently walking a moral-political line.

President-elect Donald Trump has picked Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to lead the Department of Health and Human Services. Petro emphasized Trump's selection has concerned public health experts since Kennedy has expressed a level of suspicion about whether HIV truly causes AIDS. He has instead suggested recreational drugs called "poppers" could be the real reason, which the medical community said is false.

Petro, like others, acknowledged a lot of work is still needed related to HIV prevention and treatment.

"To hear someone today in 2024, thinking about those kind of conspiracy theory approaches to thinking about HIV and AIDS is certainly troubling, but it is not new," Petro noted. "I think we do have a very good infrastructure for HIV/AIDS care."

Petro reminded people about pre-exposure prophylaxis, or PrEP, which is the use of antiretroviral medication to prevent HIV. Most private insurance and Medicaid programs are required to cover PrEP services without co-pays or deductibles, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.


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