HIV treatment involves taking medicine that reduces the amount of HIV in body. HIV medicine is called antiretroviral therapy (ART). There is no effective cure for HIV. But with proper medical care, it can be controlled. It is not a life threating disease anymore in the developed countries. However, that is a different story in the developing countries, especially in Africa and some Asian countries because ART is too expensive and patients cannot afford to buy it. Worse yet, the lack of proper medical system means patients can’t receive any proper medical care. The spread of HIV/AIDS is therefore still ongoing in Africa and the continent are far from eradication.
(Photographs by Kibae Park – i tell a story.com)
An AIDS hospice I visited in Lopburi, Thailand is where female AIDS patients, shunned by family, go through treatment or spend the final moments of their lives. Caskets fill up the hallways and when a patient dies, the staff perform a short ritual and creamtes the body right away. The ashes are put in a bag and kept underneath a statue of Buddha. In the photograph below these bags look like a trench made by soldiers. One bag belongs to one patient. Most of them die alone, not surrounded by loved ones. Their eyes are truly heartbreaking.
Professional documentary multimedia producer. Specialized in global issues, refugees, and civil wars with the United Nations, UNHCR, News Agencies, and International NGOs in the world. Studied photography at Sheridan College and Ryerson Polytechnic University in Canada - 유엔과 유엔난민기구의 주요 프로젝트인 글로벌 이슈와 전쟁 난민, 내전을 촬영하는 다큐멘터리 작가. 유엔 및 뉴스 포토 에이전시, NGO와 함께 아시아, 중동, 아프리카 현장에서 활동. 쉐리던 컬리지와 라이어슨 대학에서 사진 전공 (email: itellastory@hotmail.com)
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