HIV History and Definitions
Cultural and Social Factors
Blood and Perinatal Transmission
Patho and Testing
Prevention and Nursing Care
100

HIV was first recognized as a clinical syndrome in this decade

The 1980s

100

This population has been disproportionately affected by HIV since 2000 due to access, language, and cultural barriers

Hispanics

100

Blood donations in the US have been screened for HIV antibodies since when?

The 1980s

100

This viral protein (antigen) is detected early by HIV testing

The p24 antigen

100

This type of lubricant should be used with condoms to prevent breakage

water-based

200

This is the earliest documented case of HIV infection, found in a patient's preserved blood sample

1959

200

This group experiences HIV diagnosis rates ten times higher than others

African-American adults and adolescents

200

This is the estimated rate of perinatal HIV transmission in the US when the mother receives no treatment

25%

200

HIV infects this specific type of immune cell, eventually leading to immune collapse

CD4 T-helper cells

200

This prevention strategy involves staying sexually active with only one uninfected partner

Monogamy

300

This term describes HIV classification as a virus that integrates into host DNA and progresses slowly

Slow retrovirus

300

Undocumented residents often delay HIV treatment due to fear of 

Deportation or legal consequences

300

True or false: It is perfectly fine to breastfeed the baby immediately after delivery because the risk of transmission is nearly zero

This is false!  HIV can be transmitted through breastmilk at any time. 

300

This test looks for HIV's genetic material and can detect infection earlier than antibody tests

Nucleic acid test (NAT)

300

This multidisciplinary team member plays a key role in helping clients address financial issues 

Social worker

400

AIDS is defined by a CD4 count of 200 or lower, or the presence of this category of illnesses

Opportunistic infections/cancers

400

This nursing intervention should always be used instead of relying of family members to translate patient educations

Use of a certified professional interpreter

400

The nurse should educate mothers with HIV to avoid doing this postpartum, due to a high risk of transmission

Breastfeeding

400

Patients awaiting HIV test results often experience this emotional response

Fear or anxiety

400

True or false: HIV cannot be transmitted if the patient is on ART 

False!  Transmission risk increases as the viral load increases.  ART can reduce the viral load, therefore reducing the risk of transmission

500

In this decade, the CDC first reported occupationally acquired HIV in healthcare workers

1980s

500

This psychosocial issue commonly emerges when family members misunderstand how HIV is transmitted and withdraw physical or emotional contact

Social isolation

500

True or false: The mother can stop ART during pregnancy if the side effects are too severe

False!  ART should be continued during pregnancy to decrease the viral load and decrease the likelihood of transmission to the infant

500

This type of testing is essential before choosing a new ART regimen if treatment failure is suspected

Drug resistance testing

500
True or false: Patients never have to worry about getting tested while pregnant if they have only ever been with one partner

False!  We should recommend testing to ALL pregnant patients 

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