Over the past 15 years, the number of people who die of AIDS each year in the United States has dropped by 70 percent. But AIDS remains a serious public health crisis among low-income African-Americans, particularly women. And in sub-Saharan Africa, the virus killed more than 1.6 million people in 2007. QUEST meets two Bay Area research groups studying innovative approaches that could lead to new treatments and possibly a cure.
In 2003, nearly 26 percent of foreign-born TB patients in the United States were from Mexico. Another third of the foreign-born cases were among those from the Philippines, Vietnam, India and China, the CDC report said.[41][42][43] The history of HIV/AIDS in the United States began in about 1969, when HIV likely entered the United States through a single infected immigrant from Haiti. In the United States, concerned parties argue that an influx of immigrants, especially less educated …
March 09 1881 Ernest Bevin 1918 Mickey Spillane 1934 Yuri Gagarin 1923 M. Andree Courreges 1932 Keely Smith 1933 Lloyd Price 1940 Air Marshal Sir Roger Austin 1943 Bobby Fischer 1952 Bill Beaumont