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The Battle Against AIDSWill It Be Won?AIDSWhat Hope For the Future? |
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Apart from the lack of drugs to cure or prevent HIV infection, other factors work against suppressing the disease. One of these is that many people, not willing to change their life-style, are willing to risk infection. In the United States, for example, the infection rate has remained steady, despite a drop in the number of people who have developed full-blown AIDS. The reason suggested by the Associated Press is that "many people are not heeding warnings about prevention."
In the world's developing nations, reportedly home to about 93 percent of those infected with HIV, there are additional problems in confronting the disease. Many of these countries are too poor to provide even basic health-care services. Even if the new drugs were available in those landsand for the most part they are notthe price of a year of treatment would cost more than many people earn in a lifetime! Yet, let us assume that a new, inexpensive drug were developed that would actually cure the disease. Would such a drug reach all those who need it? Probably not. Each year, according to the United Nations Children's Fund, about four million children die from five diseases that can be prevented by inexpensive, existing vaccines.
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There Will Be a SolutionIs there any reason to believe that AIDS will one day be vanquished? Yes, there is. The best hope is contained in the words of what many call the Lord's Prayer or the Our Father (Paternoster). In that prayer, recorded in the Bible book of Matthew, we implore that God's will be done on earth as it is in heaven. (Matthew 6:9, 10) It is not God's will for humans to be forever plagued with illness. God will answer that prayer. In doing so, he will bring an end not only to AIDS but to all other diseases that plague humankind. Then, "no resident will say: 'I am sick.'" Isaiah 33:24. Meanwhile, the best strategy is prevention. For many diseases, there are two options: You can either prevent them or perhaps cure them. With HIV, there is no such choice. It can be prevented, but at present it cannot be cured. Why take risks that endanger your life? Prevention is certainly better than no cure. |
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Appeared in Awake! November 8, 1998 |
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