Twenty years ago, Maria Davis got tested for the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) as part of an application for a life insurance policy. She thought nothing of it until week and a half later, when she received a letter in the mail telling her she'd tested positive.
"It was devastating," she told CBS News. "I
didn't know anyone else who was HIV positive. Back then it was known as the 'Monster' and
thought of as a gay white man's disease."
Davis, a native of New York City who is now 55, soon learned
that she contracted the virus from her then fiancé, who knew he was infected
but did not tell her. With a successful career as a hip-hop promoter, working
with artists like Jay Z, Queen Latifa, and P. Diddy, she felt she needed to
keep her illness secret.
But in 1998, her condition declined rapidly and was
hospitalized for over six weeks. Doctors informed her the virus had progressed
into AIDS.
"I was 95 pounds," she said. "I was too weak
to do anything. After all that I went through, I had to tell the world that
this is serious and we need to talk about it."
Today, Davis's illness is under control and works to spread
awareness and encourage others to know their HIV status.
In fact, people unaware that they are living with the virus
contribute to nearly one third of HIV transmissions, the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention reports. According to new figures released by the CDC on
Friday, 14 percent of the 1.2 million Americans with HIV don't know they're infected. The
report was released just before National HIV Testing Day June 27.
Experts say that although HIV was once considered a death
sentence, many people with the virus now go on to live normal, healthy lives.
"The medicines have become safer, simpler, and more
effective," Dr. Cameron Wolfe, an infectious disease specialist at Duke
University Medical Center, told CBS News. "If you wound the clock back 10
or 15 years, treatments involved multiple tablets that were more prone to
giving people side effects and their ability to restore health was just not
particularly effective compared to what's available now. Most of the patients I
see today take one pill once a day and have absolutely no side effects neither
from their pill nor the HIV. You would have no idea walking past them on the
street that they were on HIV treatment."
As far as life expectancy in the United States, Wolfe said
that if people are diagnosed in their 20s, "there's no reason that you
shouldn't live through your 70s, provided that you know about it and pick it up
early, you get connected to care, and that you maintain diligence with
treatment." Getting tested and treated could not only improve their
overall health, but prevent the further spread of the virus.
While certain populations, including gay and bisexual men
and African Americans, are at a higher risk of contracting HIV, Wolfe said
anyone who is sexually active should be tested.
"The more we move away from select groups and the more
we try and move toward that this is part of a standard discussion that you have
with your healthcare provider period, then I think the better we get," he
said.
Davis, who is a spokesperson for Merck's HIV awareness
campaign, Project I Design, also works with a number of HIV/AIDS organizations,
including amfAR. She continues to speak out to spread the message of the
importance of HIV testing.
"I have no problem telling people that I'm living with
AIDS," she said. "The most important thing you can do is empower yourself.
You don't have to be an activist like me, but what you can do is get tested and
know your status."
Reference: http://www.cbsnews.com/
Reference: http://www.cbsnews.com/

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