January 2, 2017
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Get on Treatment
If you haven’t started treatment, or have fallen off your
medication schedule there are now
More reasons than ever to start/restart antiretroviral
treatment. While current therapies involve
A once-a-day pill, bimonthly injectables are on the horizon
and should be available in 2017.
What’s more, one of the those recently approved drugs has
also been shown to be effective even
against
multi-drug resistant strains of HIV. There are also new treatments for
HIV-related issues
like diarrhea.
So make sure this year you get serious about treatment.
Become or Stay Undetectable
Once you’re on treatment the goal is to lower your viral
load to a point that it becomes
undetectable in your blood. The amazing news is that being
undetectable means you are
literally unable
to transmit HIV to someone else.
Get your T Cells Up
The sad truth is that it’s possible to become undetectable
and still have a stage three diagnosis.
once someone’s HIV has damaged their immune system and
caused AIDS-related illnesses, it
can be very difficult to recover entirely, even when you
viral load goes down via antiretroviral
therapy. If that’s true for you, this is the year to talk to
your doctor about methods to raise your
CD4 count.
Eat Healthy
People living with HIV need a balanced diet, without too
much fat, sugar or salt. If your doctor
has told you that you are underweight, overweight, or
diabetic; talk to them first about the right
diet. Otherwise you can focus on these tips: (a) eat plenty
of fruit and vegetables (like
these),
which provide fiber, vitamins and minerals, (b) eat enough
complex carbohydrates (brown rice,
potatoes, whole grain breads, pasta) to provide you with
energy, (c) eat about a fist size of
both good (e) limit the amount of fats and added sugar.
Drink to Your Health
Coffee has numerous benefits for those with HIV, including
boosting energy and improving
physical performance. It’s also a great source of
antioxidants, and may even increase HIV
treatment success.
Take Action
Getting involved in helping others or advocating for the
rights of people with HIV will help you
deal with things like depression and isolation that many POZ
people experience. Whether you
protest changes to the Affordable Care Act, join in the
efforts to decriminalize HIV, or just
volunteer at a soup kitchen, getting involved is a great
goal for 2017.
Get Heart Healthy
People living with HIV are more likely to have heart disease
as they age. Given the number of
celebrities who suddenly passed away from heart problems
last year, 2017 is the right time to
make sure you’re doing right by your heart: including cutting
back on sugar, stop smoking,
reduce the amount of alcohol you drink, and get regular
exercise.
Get Tested for STIs
Just because you’re already HIV-positive doesn’t mean you
can throw away all your safety gear
and bareback without consequences. Sexually transmitted
infection are on the rise –
especially among men who have sex with men (syphilis
rates are particularly high in gay men) –
and they are also becoming antibiotic resistant. There’s a
real threat that gonorrhea could become untreatable.
Get Fit
Staying fit is important for people with HIV, but don’t
worry, you don’t need a gym membership,
a lot of time, or expensive equipment. Los Angeles-based
fitness coach Sam Page – a celebrity
trainer who is HIV-positive – provides do-it-at-home fitness
tips here.
Become an Organ Donor
Until very recently, people living with HIV weren’t legally
allowed to donate their blood or
organs; and no doctor was legally allowed to transplant such
organs into another person –
regardless of that person’s status. But, beginning in 2016,
that all changed when the Hope Act
went into effect. The federal law allows certain hospitals
the right to transplant
POZ organs into
people living with HIV on
the waiting list for kidneys and livers. Since POZ people do poorly on
dialysis, these kinds of surgeries are literal life savers.
So, sign up, even if you
don’t want to
donate until after you’ve passed away. When you do, make
sure your loved ones know your
decision, in case you die suddenly (say in a car accident).
Read more articles from PLUS, here.
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