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The Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections (CROI) is an annual scientific meeting devoted to the understanding, prevention and treatment of HIV/AIDS and the opportunistic infections associated with AIDS. Thousands of leading researchers and clinicians from around the world convene in a different location in North America each ...
The International AIDS Conference (abbreviated AIDS 2012, AIDS 2014 and so on) is the world's most attended conference on HIV and AIDS, and the largest conference on any global health or development issue in the world. [7] First convened during the peak of the AIDS epidemic in 1985, they were held annually until 1994 when they became biennial.
III International AIDS Conference, 1987; X International AIDS Conference, 1994; XI International AIDS Conference, 1996; XII International AIDS Conference, 1998; XIII International AIDS Conference, 2000; XIV International AIDS Conference, 2002; XV International AIDS Conference, 2004; XVI International AIDS Conference, 2006; XVII International ...
Pages in category "2024 conferences" The following 35 pages are in this category, out of 35 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. 0–9.
This list is only documented cases, not for estimated cases. Estimated case numbers differ in significant ways: estimates are available for all areas for all years unlike hard records, and estimates attempt to quantify an epidemic in current time, whereas registered/documented cases are behind the curve , they have lag time to detection and ...
International AIDS Conferences (16 P) N. Neuroscience conferences (5 P) Pages in category "Medical conferences" ... This page was last edited on 6 July 2024, ...
The European AIDS Clinical Society (EACS) is a not-for-profit organisation. Founded in 1991, the EACS has the stated mission to promote quality care, research and education of HIV and related infections with a view to reducing its burden on Europe.
The global response to the HIV/AIDS crisis was initially led by the US based Center for Disease Control which discovered the first HIV/AIDS case. A 2011 report "AIDS: the Early Years and the CDC's Response", [12] makes the case that it is due to the CDC's rapid and effective approach, and staff, that the virus was even discovered in the first ...