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Back to home » HIV 101 » POZ Focus » African American HIV 101

Table of Contents

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Here’s to Your Overall Health

Queen Bee

Time to Treat?

Adherence Assistance

That Ain’t True!

ARV 101

Don’t Forget Your Annual Checkup

Accessing Care

Getting Proactive

Mind, Body and Spirit

The Importance of Support

Church Healing

Lean on Me

Click here to download a copy of African American HIV 101.

What You're Talking About
Ron Paul, Chris Wallace Need AIDS Education (blog) (42 comments)

Ron Paul Wants Higher Health Costs for People With AIDS (40 comments)

Detroit Man Alleges HIV Discrimination By Lysol-Spraying Dental Clinic Coworkers (26 comments)

You're Fired (blog) (13 comments)

Those Little Signposts (blog) (9 comments)

Effective Vaccine Against Virulent SIV Raises Hope for HIV (8 comments)
Most Popular Lessons

The HIV Life Cycle

Shingles

Herpes Simplex Virus

Syphilis & Neurosyphilis

Treatments for Opportunistic Infections (OIs)

What is AIDS & HIV?

Hepatitis & HIV


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Adherence Assistance

by Kellee Terrell

Managing your meds


HIV survives by using the cells of your immune system—your CD4 cells—to replicate. The meds stop that replication from happening, so it’s crucial to take them every day at the correct time in order to achieve the full benefit. Skipping doses can lead to resistance of not only the regimen you’re currently on, but also the combos you might need to take in the future, explains Smith. “This is not just about
your health now, but your health down the line.”

Suggestions to stay on top of your meds:

Buy a pillbox: Evidence shows that people who use pillboxes are more likely to take their meds on time and every day. Not only can they help you stay on schedule, but prying eyes won’t necessarily recognize the pills as meds for HIV—anonymity is very important to many of us.

Make it part of your daily routine: “If you take all of your pills when you go to bed, have the bottles on the nightstand, or if you are taking them in the morning, have them by your toothpaste in the bathroom,” says M. Keith Rawlings, MD, of Dallas. “If you find that after a few months these cues are not working, switch them up.”



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