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information for people living and working with HIV
Patient Information Booklets
- HIV and women
- HIV and women's health
- Monitoring HIV in women
- HIV and your body
- Mother-to-baby transmission of HIV
- Pregnancy and conception
- Anti-HIV treatment in women
- Specialist support
- Summary
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HIV and women
Today, more women than men are infected with HIV worldwide.
It's now known that:
- HIV causes immune damage in women at the same rate as it does in men.
- Women and men are equally likely to develop AIDS.
- Some key tests used to monitor the effects of HIV on the immune system need to be interpreted differently in women and men.
- HIV can affect a woman's menstrual cycle and reproductive health.
- Cervical cancer is an AIDS-defining illness and all HIV-positive women should have regular PAP smears.
- An HIV-positive woman can pass HIV onto her baby but this can be prevented in nearly all cases.
- Women who breastfeed when they are ill with HIV/AIDS may have an increased risk of dying, although more research is needed to confirm this.
- Anti-HIV drugs work just as well in women as men, but the side-effects of some drugs may be different.
This booklet provides information on all of these issues, and also includes some general information on living with HIV.