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Fact Sheets: Prevention

December 1, 1999

Primary HIV prevention focuses on keeping people from becoming infected with HIV and on helping people who are HIV-positive to help individuals develop skills for reducing the risk of infecting others.

Secondary HIV prevention focuses on helping prevent HIV-positive people from developing opportunistic infections, preventing the infection from progressing to AIDS and preventing HIV transmission to others.


Sometimes Treatment is Prevention


For HIV-Positive Individuals


For Pregnant & HIV-Positive Women

If you are pregnant, you can take zidovudine (AZT or ZDV) to reduce the chance of transmission to your baby. Because HIV can be transmitted through breast milk, don't breast-feed your baby. There are also ongoing clinical trials to determine if the drug nevirapine is both safe and effective in preventing maternal-infant transmission.


For Women who have Sex with Women


For Men who have Sex with Men

Peer opinion leaders play a critical role in prevention for young gay men. To be effective, prevention programs should address self-esteem, self efficacy and relationship factors. Social events such as safer-sex workshops are also effective.


For Heterosexual Sex

Effective interventions should include training in effective communication about sex and intimacy between men and women, including a discussion about various cultural and social norms in the U.S.


For Injection Drug Users

Effective prevention programs for this population require a wide range of approaches. Substance abuse treatment can also be viewed as HIV prevention.


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