Why a Kenyan Island May Teach the World How to Beat AIDS
The July 20th, 2016 installment of the PBS NewsHour series "The End of AIDS?," focusing on the disease in Kenya's fishing industry.
The July 20th, 2016 installment of the PBS NewsHour series "The End of AIDS?," focusing on the disease in Kenya's fishing industry.
Genetics study confirms a social cycle that helps infection to spread in South Africa.
The "Ending AIDS" project covers efforts to end AIDS in sub-Saharan Africa and the United States. This slideshow takes a look at the people Jon Cohen met along the way and the places he visited.
Globally, 3 million HIV patients have experienced ocular complications. Yet, a reference to CMV retinitis, an opportunistic infection responsible for more than 90 percent of cases of AIDS-related blindness, is absent from the World Health Organization’s guidelines on HIV/AIDS.
How Rwanda emerged from its 1994 genocide to build one of the most successful AIDS responses in Africa.
Nearly one in 10 Americans living with HIV live in New York.
The epicenter of the AIDS epidemic in America is Atlanta and the southeast.
PBS NewsHour launches its series "The End of AIDS?" with a look at prevention efforts in San Francisco.
The majority of people living with HIV/AIDS will experience at least one ocular complication—the most dreaded being potentially blinding CMV retinitis.
In the effort to end its HIV/AIDS epidemic, South Africa has made strides, but still faces major challenges.
In the United States, CMV retinitis, a late-stage opportunistic infection affecting those diagnosed with HIV, has virtually disappeared, yet in India CMV retinitis still remains a problem.
Africa begins a new operation to control outbreaks like Ebola, but experts worry it is understaffed and underfunded.