Health experts: With USAID funding gone, HIV will mutate into super HIV
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Date: August 7th, 2025 1:56 PM Author: ''"'''"''"''''"''
Inconsistent access to antiretroviral therapy (ART) increases the risk of drug-resistant HIV variants emerging in individuals.
These resistant strains, sometimes referred to informally as “super HIV”, are not a single, new monster virus, but multiple versions of HIV that don’t respond well to standard treatments.
Once they emerge, these drug-resistant strains can spread to others, making HIV infections more difficult and expensive to treat, though still treatable with more advanced or second-line therapies.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5759609&forum_id=2)#49164873) |
Date: August 7th, 2025 1:58 PM Author: ''"'''"''"''''"''
If global HIV treatment programs collapse due to Trump funding cuts, the world could face a silent, escalating threat: the rise and spread of “super HIV.” These are not science fiction mutations, but real, drug-resistant strains that emerge when people can’t access or stick to treatment. Once formed, they don’t stay contained. They spread — silently, across borders — through the same routes as regular HIV, but with one critical difference: standard medications don’t work. As these strains multiply in vulnerable populations, they could eventually reach everywhere — including the United States — making HIV harder, slower, and more expensive to treat. The gains of the past two decades could unravel, and the world could find itself battling a version of HIV that no longer responds to the tools we’ve long relied on.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5759609&forum_id=2)#49164882)
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