Sustiva (Efavirenz)

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"Sustiva"
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200mg10 days/freemost countries
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600mg
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600 mg14-21 days/$15
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200 mg
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Sustiva (Efavirenz)
WHEN FIRST DIAGNOSED: UNDERSTANDING AND COMMUNICATING ABOUT
HIV-TELLING PEOPLE ABOUT THE DIAGNOSIS: WHO TO TELL AND WHY
First, decide who you are obliged to tell. That category includes your doctor and dentist, your sexual partners, needle-sharing partners if you use drugs, the health care institution in which you work, and, only if you are filing claims for HIV-related conditions, your insurance company.
Next, decide who you would like to tell. Some people feel that they have a responsibility to tell those they love. They worry that not telling might be seen as lying. Steven Charles and Dean Lombard both feel close to their families and do not want to be seen as secret-keepers. They both think their families would want to know something this important. “I couldn’t not tell my parents,” Dean said, “I owed them at least that.”
Many people want to tell those they trust because they need the sympathy and support of these people. “My relatives who knew said, ‘Don’t tell anyone else,’” said Lisa Pratt, whose husband was then in the final stages of AIDS. “I said, ‘I’ve got to. I can’t live alone with this.’” People find it hard to be alone with physical illness or emotional distress. They find that talking to someone alleviates that loneliness. Talking also makes problems easier to analyze and to solve. And if the problems have no solutions, talking them over makes them easier to live with.
Some people even want to tell everyone. They find that going public with their problems helps other, more isolated people. These people write articles about AIDS, and have even begun newspapers and newsletters. Lisa eventually talked to a reporter, she said, “because so many
people were hurting. And the article did help people who are alone in this.” Once the newspaper article on Lisa was published, the rest of her relatives and friends found out about her husband’s diagnosis.
To decide who you would like to tell, ask some of the following questions. Who do you feel ought to know? Who do you love? Who will not run away? Who can see past the infection, and love and value you? Who can keep a confidence? Who is practical and sensible and reliable? Who can help you plan your affairs? Who can respond to requests for help? Who can listen to what you have to say? You might also think about which you are more comfortable with: the sense that you have no secrets, or the sense that you take care of your own business.
Lisa initially told her daughters because she babysits regularly for one daughter’s children and the other daughter is a practical nurse whose help she might need. Steven told his parents partly so they could prepare themselves in case he got sick, and partly because he couldn’t put anything over on them. He told his sister so she could help his parents. Alan told his partner, so his partner could get tested and so they could both take precautions. He also told his counselor and a friend, because “it helps when someone knows you other than as a patient.” Later, he told a co-worker, who also happened to be infected with HIV, because “he’s a positive, ‘up’ person to talk to. It does good to hear how someone else handles it, someone who has a good outlook.” June told her sister about her son’s diagnosis: “She feels as badly as I do. We share the misery.” In general, Steven likes sharing his life with everyone he knows. Alan is more comfortable maintaining a sense of his own privacy.
HIV In general, like June, most people believe they can trust their own inner senses of who they can tell: “You play it by ear,” June says. “You know who’s right to discuss it with.”
If you would like to talk about your diagnosis and are uncomfortable telling the people you would usually talk to, you might try joining a support group for people with HIV infection.
Deciding who to tell has a complication: telling people about your diagnosis also means telling them how you got the virus. Sometimes that means telling them about a history of blood transfusions or hemophilia, or your spouse’s transfusions or hemophilia. Other times, it means telling them things about your sexual habits or drug use they might find difficult to accept.
*16/191/2*

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