About the Disease
HIV (human immunodeficiency virus) is the virus that causes AIDS (acquired immune deficiency syndrome).
People with HIV will eventually develop AIDS. There is currently no cure, although early detection and
treatment with new medication combinations greatly increase both the quality of life and life expectancy.
These medications are extremely expensive, however, with complex dosage schedules and side effects.
Financial assistance for people infected with HIV is available.
HIV may be spread through blood-to-blood contact (which includes sharing needles with an infected drug user)
and sexual contact. Mothers may pass the virus to their children while breastfeeding, as well
as during pregnancy and delivery.
A person infected with HIV will usually develop AIDS within ten years. Symptoms of HIV may not appear for many of these years,
so a person may carry HIV without knowing it. Warning signs of HIV infection include rapid weight loss, dry cough, recurring fever
or profuse night sweats, extreme and unexplained fatigue, swollen lymph glands, diarrhea that lasts for more than a week
and white spots or unusual blemishes on the tongue (see Symptoms below).
In 2001, there were 454 adult/adolescent cases of HIV infection reported in Mississippi. Heterosexual contact
with an infected person is the primary mode of transmission in the state's population.
HIV weakens the immune system, putting a person at greater risk for opportunistic infections. These infections are
usually very mild in persons without HIV, but can cause severe illness in people with HIV-damaged immune systems.
Other information sources
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Get in Touch — Get Tested
AIDS testing is free and private. For information or testing, contact your county health department,
or call our AIDS Hotline at 1-800-826-2961.
Contact our STD/HIV Division at (601) 576-7723.
CDC National AIDS Hotline:
- 1-800-342-2437 (English)
- 1-800-344-7432 (Spanish)
- 1-800-243-7889 (TTY for the hearing impaired)
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