The Oslo patient is the seventh man in the world likely cured of HIV: 'Offers hope' (www.sciencenorway.no)
from floofloof@lemmy.ca to world@lemmy.world on 20 Apr 02:39
https://lemmy.ca/post/63610392

cross-posted from: lemmy.zip/post/62853947

Researchers at Oslo University Hospital have closely examined the man’s blood, bone marrow, and intestines without finding any trace of active HIV virus.

Archived version: archive.is/newest/https://…/2649112


Disclaimer: The article linked is from a single source with a single perspective. Make sure to cross-check information against multiple sources to get a comprehensive view on the situation.

#world

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lennybird@lemmy.world on 20 Apr 03:11 next collapse

If you could aspire to solve one thing for humanity, what would it be? It’s okay if it’s not the most logical thing but rather something that has impacted you or your loved ones, etc. I.e. Something that would drive your passion and pursuit of solving it.

Salamanderwizard@lemmy.world on 20 Apr 04:14 next collapse

Is greed an answer? I’d go with our greed.

etchinghillside@reddthat.com on 20 Apr 04:18 next collapse

Hair loss and ED – so that time and money can be put elsewhere.

victorz@lemmy.world on 20 Apr 05:05 next collapse

Maybe energy? Or food? Housing? Just… That "one thing"™️ that seems to be the biggest cause for everyone to be at war all the fucking time.

psx_crab@lemmy.zip on 20 Apr 05:42 next collapse

Male pattern baldness and allergic to cat.

EndlessNightmare@reddthat.com on 20 Apr 07:37 collapse

ONE thing

psx_crab@lemmy.zip on 20 Apr 07:46 next collapse

FINE. Allergic to cat.

EndlessNightmare@reddthat.com on 20 Apr 08:26 next collapse

Good choice!

0x0@lemmy.zip on 20 Apr 09:38 collapse

Is that a form of vaginophobia?

lennybird@lemmy.world on 20 Apr 12:36 collapse

Yeah, that’s sadly how specialization tends to work. Most innovators in advanced fields can only push the boundaries after thousands upon thousands of hours of education, research, and honing of skills and knowledge; FTA:

It has been 30 years since Trøseid first met someone with HIV. That was also around the time the first HIV medications became available – treatments that turned HIV into a chronic condition and, as a result, somewhat reduced the priority of research on the virus.

“I have followed this field closely for many years, and the fact that we are now starting to talk about the possibility of a functional cure is very meaningful,” he says.

EndlessNightmare@reddthat.com on 20 Apr 07:42 next collapse

If you could aspire to solve one thing for humanity, what would it be?

Remove people’s ability to insulate themselves from the consequences of causing harm to others. In a word: accountability.

WaxRhetorical@lemmy.world on 20 Apr 11:58 next collapse

Damn, I couldn’t think of a better choice myself

lennybird@lemmy.world on 20 Apr 14:07 collapse

Equitable justice would be really nice.

Dremor@lemmy.world on 20 Apr 07:57 next collapse

Sorry of I miss something, but what does that have to do with the topic of this article?

Your comment kinda sound what a clueless LLM would post on r/AskReddit to farm karma (no offense if you are human, it is just what it looks like).

0x0@lemmy.zip on 20 Apr 09:37 next collapse

OP didn’t reply, so you’re likely right.

lennybird@lemmy.world on 20 Apr 12:28 collapse

Or, OP must sleep and you’re in a different time zone, lol

Try not to jump to conclusions now; hopefully you’re not the LLM here :|

lennybird@lemmy.world on 20 Apr 12:34 collapse

The question was tangential; the question came to mind when reading the submission. Scientists devoting much of their life to work spur medical breakthrough: to what would you dedicate your life?

Not LLM – though even if I was, the question remains – what would you do!?

Damage@feddit.it on 20 Apr 07:59 next collapse

Lack of empathy. As society we could do so much if we started caring for each other, working to lift everyone to the same level.

lennybird@lemmy.world on 20 Apr 12:37 collapse

This was my choice, too. Related to this as well, figuring out how to identify its absence early and find a way to correct course.

0x0@lemmy.zip on 20 Apr 09:36 next collapse

Decree that all furniture must have soft, rounded, cushy edges so my pinky can safely find it at night on a zombie run to the bathroom.

Agent641@lemmy.world on 20 Apr 14:25 next collapse

UBI.

I don’t have much imagination or intelligence but I’m pretty sure there’s a million Einstein’s out there who could be solving global warming, deforestation, rising salinity, desertification, leoukemia, species extinction, landlordism, gridscale energy storage and a host of social problems if they weren’t broke-ass and forced to work in soul-crushing retail 9 hours a day just to survive and eat.

Buddahriffic@lemmy.world on 20 Apr 16:55 next collapse

Susceptibility to propaganda.

partofthevoice@lemmy.zip on 20 Apr 20:18 collapse

What if propaganda is the exploit of a natural, even beneficial, human process? Belief, trust, faith… we all have to do this. Propaganda just changes the frame around the picture… but there was already a frame there. Compared side by side, both are just frames… Remove the frame, there might not be anything left over.

Buddahriffic@lemmy.world on 20 Apr 21:23 collapse

I would say that I’m not satisfied with how our species handles belief, trust, and faith. It comes down to how confidently someone talks to them, when someone expressing uncertainty to me indicates more honesty rather than the other way around.

Though since I have to at least agree that it’s hard to define exactly how it should change, I can adjust to wishing more people were willing to think critically about things.

partofthevoice@lemmy.zip on 20 Apr 20:23 next collapse

I would want to create a more dynamical system of government… something that complements the way humans actually work. Something that changes and adapts as a first-class feature, but using levers derived from society. It would take air away from political theater, give it instead to real people who have real concerns.

I’d want something that’s so flexible, safe, perfect… people look back to us arguing about “communism” and “socialism” and they should think we’re a bunch of stupid barbarians for getting stuck here.

LaunchesKayaks@lemmy.world on 20 Apr 21:06 collapse

There are so many, but a cure for autoimmune diseases like lupus would be incredible. My father’s side of the family is plagued by lupus, and I have it. It killed both of my grandparents and will like kill my father and uncle. It’ll probably also kill me.

If I could cure lupus and diseases like it, I would. I’d want to save the world from the suffering it causes.

Deestan@lemmy.world on 20 Apr 05:04 collapse

The article doesn’t go into it, but the university’s published perspective adds that the cure is that a bone marrow transplant he got for non-HIV reasons turned out to come from a person with natural HIV immunity.

oslo-universitetssykehus.no/…/banebrytende-hiv-fo…

neukenindekeuken@sh.itjust.works on 20 Apr 12:34 collapse

That is consistent with the other cured patients.

The question is, how do we synthesize this as a global cure? Also, bone marrow transplants seem intense. We need to figure out a better delivery method for this to scale.

SaveTheTuaHawk@lemmy.ca on 20 Apr 14:39 next collapse

Its not a drug, it’s a procedure. It’s very expensive and risky.

captainlezbian@lemmy.world on 20 Apr 14:50 collapse

And it can be compared to modern antiretroviral drugs which are mass manufactured. They can absolutely be difficult to afford and to ensure compliance, but they’re relatively accessible as far as any long term medication is in most places, thanks in large part to the queer community in first world countries and NGO-governmental cooperation to deal with the third world HIV epidemic. We still have a ways to go with it, but HIV+ people who have proper treatment are able to live long and full lives and have no risk of transmission once viral loads are undetectable.

8oow3291d@feddit.dk on 20 Apr 15:03 collapse

As I understand it, not going to happen. A bone marrow transplant is way more dangerous than just living the rest of your life on antiviral meds. The cure is worse than the disease.