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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 7 page observation that the number of people infected with Auto Immune Deficiency Disorder (AIDS)/HIV varies tremendously between the more technologically developed regions of the world and the less developed regions. In developing countries these fatal conditions are seldom treated at the same level as they are in more developed countries. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Page Count:
7 pages (~225 words per page)
File: AM2_PPaidBrb.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
people infected with Auto Immune Deficiency Disorder (AIDS)/HIV varies tremendously between the more technologically developed regions of the world and the less developed regions. In developing countries these fatal
conditions are seldom treated at the same level as they are in more developed countries. The availability of medicines and adequate levels of medical intervention in these countries is
abhorrent in itself but when that is coupled with the misunderstandings and misconceptions that surround the disease the situation becomes even more disturbing. They lead to what the Canadian
HIV/AIDS Legal Network refers to as an: "inequity of very considerable portions"1
The misconceptions and misunderstandings that contribute to this inequity exist even within the medical community itself and greatly
affect the degree to which AIDS victims in this country and others can obtain appropriate treatment. A comparison between countries like the Barbados and the United States, for example,
reveals many injustices in terms of access to and the appropriateness of medical treatment for AIDS victims. AIDS gained its name because HIV
attacks the human immune system making it ineffective in fighting disease or sickness caused by microbial organisms. The virus currently infects some forty million people2. Africa suffers the
greatest from this disease but other developing regions suffer as well. In the Barbados, for example, access to the drugs and treatment that have proven effective in extending the
lives of these individuals is hampered by a number of problems. Fortunately, there is a world wide move to combat the
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