Yes
Scientists believe that a vaccine for AIDS will be developed within the next year, according to Wikpedia. A dedicated agent will be happy to help you find more information on their official website.
AIDS is what you get when you have the HIV virus, its the next stage of the virus and that will kill you so once you get AIDS that's it, there is no cure and no treatment for AIDS. There is treatment for HIV and Magic Johnson is the first person that i have ever heard of that announced that he had the HIV virus 15 years ago and never got AIDS but he took these drugs and it stopped him from getting AIDS but he will always have the HIV virus.
For the next hundreds years: wars, pollution, population growth, AIDS, resource depletion, hunger, etc.
Typically the flu vaccine is trying to predict the possible states of the flu coming for that season. The flu virus mutates so rapidly that they are always trying to predict what's coming next. That's why you can also still get the flu even if you get a flu shot. STUDY ISLAND ANSWER:The virus which causes influenza adapts each year to the last vaccine in order to survive and reproduce.
the answer is aids btw ambers next to me im and we are in it XD
There will be more technology,work,etc.. One sentence = The country would be more developed
The only way would be by a lab test. If you have been HIV positive, AIDS is the next stage in the disease.
vaccine was invented by Edward Jenner on May 14, 1796
She is the one who died of AIDS.
Well, if a person infected with AIDS cuts herself with a razor and doesn't clean it up by disinfection, the next person that cuts herself with the same razor can definitelly get AIDS, since aids also spreads through blood.
I think... that its when the next season of Tosh.0 comes out... either that or he has AIDS
Actually, the very first vaccines were produced in China about 3,000 years ago.Edward Jenner’s work, begun with his successful 1796 use of cowpox material to create immunity to smallpox, made the practice widespread. His method underwent technological changes over the next 200 years, and eventually resulted in the eradication of smallpox.Louis Pasteur’s 1885 rabies vaccine was the next to make an impact on human disease. Antitoxins and vaccines against diphtheria, tetanus, anthrax, cholera, plague, typhoid, tuberculosis, and more were developed through the 1930s.