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UCSF Team Shows Spirit at AIDS Walk San Francisco

<p>The UCSF team showed its spirit in the 25th Annual AIDS Walk San Francisco, which drew more than 25,000 walkers and raised more than $3 million to benefit HIV/AIDS programs and services in the Bay Area.</p>

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Learning Lessons from an HIV Cure

<p>For doctors confronting the AIDS epidemic, past ambitions always boiled down to two main goals: prevention, or finding ways to protect people not yet exposed to HIV, through vaccines, safe sex education or other means; and treatment, or discovering effective drugs and providing them to people with HIV/AIDS, helping them live longer.</p>

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SFGH Grand Rounds Explores Disease That First Defined AIDS

<p>Doctors and other health care professionals packed into San Francisco General Hospital’s Carr Auditorium for the June 7 medical grand rounds, commemorating the 30th anniversary of the first AIDS report to the US Centers of Disease Control (CDC) and Prevention.</p>

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SFGH's Ward 86: Pioneering HIV/AIDS Care for 30 Years

<p>San Francisco General Hospital's internationally renowned Ward 86, one of the oldest and largest HIV/AIDS clinics in the United States,&nbsp;has from the start of the epidemic led efforts to understand HIV and develop treatments that make it possible for patients to manage the disease.</p>

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Treatment is Key to Prevention of HIV/AIDS, Doctors Say

<p>Preventing transmission to partners or children is key to this curbing the HIV/AIDS epidemic and researchers report t&nbsp;exciting new tools and tactics employed in the now 30-year war against the disease.</p>

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UCSF Marks Three Decades of AIDS

<p>As one of the preeminent biomedical education and health sciences research institutions in the world, UCSF emerged early as a pioneer in the fight against AIDS. Today, three decades later, UCSF is working on multiple fronts to prevent, treat and stop the spread of the disease that has killed 33 million people worldwide.</p>

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Deficit in body fat from early HIV drugs persists years later

HIV-infected patients who lost subcutaneous fat as a result of taking first-generation antiretroviral drugs still had strikingly less body fat than non-infected controls five years after switching to newer medications, according to a study led by researchers at the San Francisco VA Medical Center and the University of California, San Francisco.

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Space station experiment will probe failure of immune system in space

In April 2010, personnel aboard the International Space Station plan to carry out an experiment designed by a San Francisco VA Medical Center researcher that will investigate why the immune system&#8217;s T cells stop working in the absence of gravity. The experiment has implications for understanding the body&#8217;s ability to mount an immune response on earth, as well.

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New study examines progress in meeting international health goals

A new study co-authored by a UCSF resident physician and published this week examines why low-income countries are making poor progress in meeting international health goals. Study researcher Sanjay Basu, MD, PhD, of the Department of Medicine at UCSF and Division of General Internal Medicine at San Francisco General Hospital, said findings highlight the importance of looking at the entire health experience of a family, rather than just one or a few diseases.

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