The AIDS pandemic is nearing its fourth decade, and the need for innovative strategies to help people living with HIV/AIDS has become increasingly important. There are 40 million people infected with ...
Nursing home providers that have residents with HIV may need to take additional steps to ensure they’re getting necessary medications for treatment. A clinical investigation led by Harvard researchers ...
Changing the course of the HIV/AIDS epidemic has taken a monumental effort that started with the work of small bands of passionate, committed individuals and turned into an international network of ...
HIV can't tell a physician from a nurse practitioner, and studies suggest that who cares for someone with HIV has no effect on the patient's outcome With that in mind, the Johns Hopkins School of ...
University of Alabama at Birmingham School of Nursing Assistant Professor Jenni Wise (BSN 2008, MSN 2015, PhD 2019) has received National of Institutes of Health funding to support her research on the ...
Researchers at Case Western Reserve University’s Frances Payne Bolton School of Nursing will assess the effectiveness of palliative care home health visits in treating people with HIV and other ...
May 4, 2021 - From the very beginning of the AIDS epidemic in 1981, nurses have been at the forefront of patient care, advocacy, and research. But even in the age of antiretroviral therapy and ...
As the treatment and prevention of HIV has evolved over the past decade, the role of nurses in HIV care has become more important than ever. “We don’t work for patients, but with them” Catarina ...
Dr. Horvat Davey is an assistant professor at the Frances Payne Bolton School of Nursing at Case Western Reserve University. She is a nurse scientist interested in symptom science, specifically ...
From the very beginning of the AIDS epidemic in 1981, nurses have been at the forefront of patient care, advocacy, and research. But even in the age of antiretroviral therapy and pre-exposure ...
It was as he writhed in pain on the bathroom floor, his anxious dog curled up in a ball against his back, that the grim reality of growing old with HIV hit Jim Ayerst. “I’ve never been suicidal, but ...
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