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							A new study warns of a potential return to the bad 
							old days when there were no effective drugs to fight 
							HIV, the virus that causes AIDS. Timed for release 
							on Dec. 1, World AIDS Day, the new study looked at 
							data on more than 56,000 adults living with HIV in 
							sub-Saharan Africa, Asia and Latin America. In 
							total, patients in 63 low- and middle-income 
							countries were screened, and all began or restarted 
							treatment with antiretroviral drugs between 1996 and 
							2016. The study found that the virus is gaining 
							resistance to the lifesaving medicines. Resistance 
							to the drugs increased between 2001 and 2016 and is 
							approaching and exceeding 10 percent of people 
							tested. Drug resistance was increasing fastest in 
							countries in Eastern and Southern Africa. If the 
							trend continues, the researchers warned, even a 
							resistance rate of 10 percent or more would mean 
							890,000 more deaths from AIDS in sub-Saharan Africa 
							by 2030, along with 450,000 new infections. Patients 
							with drug resistance were more likely to have 
							previously taken antiretroviral drugs, often during 
							pregnancy, said by lead researcher. Treatments for 
							HIV have improved immensely in recent years, and 
							close to 21 million people worldwide are now being 
							treated with antiretroviral therapy. Yet to end the 
							AIDS epidemic as a public health threat, minimizing 
							drug resistance will be one part of the response. 
							Many people develop drug resistance after being 
							treated by antiretroviral drugs if they stop taking 
							their medication often due to personal reasons, 
							difficulty accessing treatment providers, or drug 
							supply issues that are common in low-income regions. 
							When these individuals restart treatment at a later 
							date, they are less likely to respond to therapy and 
							may pass on the drug-resistant strains to other 
							people. |