Scientific American Digital Home
   Advanced Search Sign In
Archive My Account Help and Support Subscribe View Cart 1 item(s) in cart

Preview


Tackling Major Killers: Infectious Diseases

Tackling Major Killers: Infectious Diseases
Exclusive Online Issues

Price: $5.00 *Not included with a subscription


Hope in a Vial; Tackling Major Killers: Infectious Diseases; Exclusive Online Issues; by Carol Ezzell; 6 Page(s)

It wasn't supposed to be this hard. When HIV, the virus responsible for AIDS, was first identified in 1984, Margaret M. Heckler, then secretary of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, predicted that a vaccine to protect against the scourge would be available within two years. Would that it had been so straightforward.

Roughly 20 years into the pandemic, 40 million people on the planet are infected with HIV, and three million died from it last year (20,000 in North America). Although several potential AIDS vaccines are in clinical tests, so far none has lived up to its early promise. Time and again researchers have obtained tantalizing preliminary results only to run up against a brick wall later. As recently as two years ago, AIDS researchers were saying privately that they doubted whether even a partially protective vaccine would be available in their lifetime.





Pay Per Issue

Pay for only the issues you want.
Search or browse, make your selections, and checkout.


Subscribe | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Site Requirements | Help | Contact Us | Institutional Site License
ScientificAmerican.com | Search | Browse | My Account | View Cart
Copyright © 2010 Scientific American, a division of Nature America, Inc. All rights Reserved.