Will the rates of infection in developed countries continue to decrease? It's been assumed that infection rates decrease substantially when education is increased, but there has also been an assumption that the decrease in infection rate is permanent. Is it possible for infection rates to initially decrease, then increase with social/cultural adaptation and complacence?
I heard some information about the UK's infection rate and how it had increased in recent years. I am curious if the US will experience a similar increase - culturally, we continue to treat sex as a harmless activity, we treat it as something of little value, to be given freely. Drugs, a little less common. Homosexuality is growing and increasing in cultural acceptance (which is a good thing), but the lifestyle frequented by many gay men is conducive to AIDs transmission.
What will it take the US as a culture to combat the spread of AIDs and other pandemic viruses?
I heard some information about the UK's infection rate and how it had increased in recent years. I am curious if the US will experience a similar increase - culturally, we continue to treat sex as a harmless activity, we treat it as something of little value, to be given freely. Drugs, a little less common. Homosexuality is growing and increasing in cultural acceptance (which is a good thing), but the lifestyle frequented by many gay men is conducive to AIDs transmission.
What will it take the US as a culture to combat the spread of AIDs and other pandemic viruses?