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When patients demand more than science can provide, high-priced, ineffective treatments can reach the market.
In the 1980s physician Miguel Ribeiro took stunning photographs of his South African patients. How has the nation’s health care fared in the years since?
An MGH program in South Africa partners with young women to research the earliest phase of HIV infection.
Scientists looking to block HIV’s evasions of the immune system found an unlikely source of inspiration: the spam filter.
Could natural killer cells, long thought to be blind and blunt, actually be discerning enough to help defeat HIV’s protean defenses?
New AIDS research and the study of asymptomatic HIV-positive patients has brought optimism to those looking to cure the disease.
With zinc finger technology, scientists might be able to “cut and paste” DNA to fight certain diseases.
Of every 300 people infected with HIV, one doesn’t get AIDS. Understanding this uncanny protection might help science imitate nature.
They were hooked from the start, four pioneers whose work changed the course of a modern plague—and they’re not done yet.
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