
Past Articles by Joe Neel
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England Offering Free HIV Treatment For Visitors The National Health Service is providing care for short-term travelers. So if you're on holiday and run out of an HIV drug, the NHS will help out, gratis. But if you're thinking of going for a long time to get free care, you're probably out of luck. |
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U.S. AIDS Cases Come Into View The first reports of AIDS were from Los Angeles, New York and San Francisco among gay and bisexual men. Even now, you can see the lingering geographic contours of how the epidemic unfolded with AIDSVu, an interactive map developed by Emory University's school of public health. |
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AIDS Returns To The U.S. Spotlight The leading international AIDS conference returns to the U.S. after a 22-year hiatus. A lot has happened in the years since the conference was last here. Treatments have turned a disease with a near-certain death sentence into a disease that people can live with for decades. And there is evidence that the epidemic could be greatly slowed or even stopped. |
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U.S. Public Health Service Official Clarifies Stance On Uniforms Lt. Cmdr. Kyle Lyons of the U.S. Public Health Service clarifies a bulletin on uniforms - and our post about requiring a jacket or sweater during the summertime. |
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Uniform: Not Just A Word, For Public Health Service's Commissioned Corps A heat wave is no reason to lower the uniform standards of the Commissioned Corps of The U.S. Public Health Service, which requires its members to "wear either the sweater or windbreaker jacket when outdoors," according to a new bulletin. |