It's not: nothing good comes out of it, EVER.
NOOOOO! It can be life threating. It is anything BUT helpful
It isn't. For those who have it, HIV means lifelong medication - if they can afford it. And a seriously shortened lifespan for those who can't. Only way HIV can possibly be seen as helpful is that untreated HIV will kill off those affected, which if the government think the population is too big, would be helpful to them.
Lightning is helpful to organisms because it provides nitrogen, which plants need a little to live. Other organisms, such as animals, not so good for because it good die if it is un-sheltered.
HIV infects only humans. There are similar viruses that affect other species.
HIV has nothing to do with OZone. But saving ozone may be helpful to a lot of people.
Lightning is helpful to organisms because it provides nitrogen, which plants need a little to live. Other organisms, such as animals, not so good for because it good die if it is un-sheltered.
There are many ways in which the echinoderms are helpful to the environment. They help to clean up the waste of other marine organisms and they help to maintain the biodiversity within their ecosystem.
http://www.avert.org/usa-statistics.htm This website has a bunch of helpful statistics.
Ppl without HIV have a strong immune system so it's more dangerous to ppl with HIV since they don't have that. If they get sick it can easily lead to more serious conditions.
Ppl without HIV have a strong immune system so it's more dangerous to ppl with HIV since they don't have that. If they get sick it can easily lead to more serious conditions.
if the HIV person's blood gets into an another person's blood, then the other person can get HIV.
Definitely the answer to this is an emphatic NO. If you have HIV then you are a host for HIV and vice versa. You cannot be one without the other.