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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 9 page paper which examines the history of AIDS and its presence in society today. Bibliography lists 8 sources.
Page Count:
9 pages (~225 words per page)
File: JR7_RAAIDStd.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
essentially turned upside down as AIDS seemed to be at the forefront of everyones thoughts. People were fearful and ignorant about how they could catch the virus, and the nation
was all but petrified for many years. Today, however, it seems that we rarely hear about AIDS and as such many people assume that it is a condition that is
under control, infects far less people, and is somewhat treatable. The following paper examines these conditions as they involve AIDS yesterday and AIDS today. The paper also examines AIDS in
other parts of the world, indicating that while the United States may not have as much of a problem as it used to, other parts of the world are experiencing
very serious problems due to AIDS. AIDS Yesterday and Today In terms of the origins of AIDS there is not concrete evidence or proof regarding where this virus
originated. There is speculation, but no proof. In addition, "We do not know how many people developed AIDS in the 1970s, or indeed in the years before" (Kanabus; Fredriksson, 2005).
In the very early 80s, however, it has been somewhat defined and identified in patients and once this happened there were apparently 452 cases reported to the CDC (Kanabus; Fredriksson,
2005). At this time it was a very frightening disease or virus or condition because not enough was known about the disease: "It is frightening because no one knows whats
causing it, said a 28-year old law student who went to the St. Marks Clinic in Greenwich Village last week complaining of swollen glands, thought to be one early symptom
of the disease. Every week a new theory comes out about how you re going to spread it" (Kanabus; Fredriksson, 2005). This is perhaps the single most important reason as
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