World HIV/AIDS Day

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Each year, World AIDS Day takes place on 1 December. It is an opportunity for people around the world to join in the fight against HIV, to show solidarity for people living with HIV, and to mourn the deaths of people living with AIDS. Established in 1988, the first ever global health day was World AIDS Day. World AIDS Day is important because it reminds the public and government that HIV has not vanished. There is still a critical need to raise funds, raise awareness, tackle discrimination and enhance education. World AIDS Day is a chance to express solidarity with the millions of people worldwide living with HIV. Most individuals do this by wearing a red ribbon with HIV awareness on the day. The COVID-19 pandemic focused the world's attention in 2020 on health and how pandemics influence lives and livelihoods. Once again, COVID-19 shows how health is interlinked with other main topics, such as disparity reduction, human rights, gender equality, social security and economic development. With this in mind, "Global solidarity, shared responsibility" is the theme of World AIDS Day this year. COVID-19 has shown that, once everyone is safe, no one is safe during a pandemic. To end the colliding pandemics of HIV and COVID-19, removing stigma and prejudice, placing people at the center and grounding our responses in human rights and gender-responsive approaches are crucial. Today, more people living with HIV have access to life-saving HIV drug care (called antiretroviral therapy or ART) that is beneficial for their health than ever before. They will remain safe and have no chance of sexually transmitting HIV to their partners if people living with HIV achieve and sustain viral suppression by taking HIV medication regularly as prescribed. Through this review, we can understand about the importance of celebrating world hiv aids day. Submit your manuscripts in our journal through given link: https://www.scholarscentral.org/submissions/hiv-aids-research.html