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Step 2 - Reading

AIDS and healthcare systems

You are going to read two texts. The first one is about how to avoid getting AIDS, and the second one is about healthcare systems.

  • Read the texts and do assignment 1.
  • Read the text about AIDS again and do assignment 2.
  • Read the text about healthcare systems again and do assignment 3.

Assignment 1

The texts are mixed up.

  • (On your own) read the paragraphs and put them in the right column.
  • (In your group) discuss your answers.
  • Check your answers on the Answers page.

How do people get the HIV virus?
Is it difficult to catch aids?

World healthcare system for the rich

 

 

 

 

A

How do people get the HIV virus? Is it difficult to catch AIDS?

Your body has some power to fight disease. This is called your body's immune system. HIV is a virus that weakens the body's immune system or power to fight disease. HIV can pass from one person to another through body fluids like blood, semen, vaginal secretions, or a mother's breast milk.

B

World healthcare system for the rich

A new United Nations report has found that healthcare systems across the world are becoming more unequal. The annual World Health Report, launched on October 14th by the World Health Organization (WHO), found that the healthcare gap between rich and poor people is wider today than it was thirty years ago. Even people living in the same city experience enormous differences in the quality of medical care they have access to.

C

HIV causes AIDS but not everyone who has HIV looks sick. It can take from two to ten or more years before someone who is HIV+ becomes sick with AIDS. The only way to find out if someone has HIV is for them to get tested for the virus.

D

HIV can pass from one person to another through unprotected sex with someone who is infected with HIV. HIV can pass from one person to another through sharing needles for drugs. HIV can also pass from a mother to her baby during pregnancy (before the baby is born) or through breast feeding, from the mother's milk. But only about 1/3 of babies of HIV+ mothers are infected this way.

E

The WHO said in its report: “In far too many cases, people who are well-off and generally healthier have the best access to the best care, while the poor are left to fend for themselves.”

Perhaps the saddest conclusion of the report is that health care today is frequently treated as something which hospitals can make profits on.

F

Right now, there is no way to cure AIDS. People who become infected with HIV, become sick with AIDS after six months to ten years. Eventually, they die. There are some medicines to fight AIDS, but nothing yet that cures it. Scientists around the world are trying to find a cure for AIDS.

G

The WHO recommends a return to a more basic 'primary health care' system that many countries developed in the 1970s. Back then, the sick could visit a family doctor and get the treatment they needed.

H

The report says healthcare no longer focuses on poorer members of society: “Health care is often delivered according to a model that concentrates on diseases, high technology, and specialist care,” it stated.

I

The main way that HIV is passed from person to person is through unprotected sex with a person who is HIV infected. Thinking carefully about sex, discussing sex with your partner and trying to have safe sex (for example using a condom during sex) are some ways that chances of HIV infection can be reduced.

J

WHO Director-General Dr. Margaret Chan said: “Viewed against current trends, primary health care looks more and more like a smart way to get health development back on track.”

She added: “We are, in effect, encouraging countries to go back to the basics.”

More than 100 million people are pushed below the poverty line each year because they cannot afford healthcare.

K

HIV is very weak outside of the body and difficult to catch.

  • You cannot catch AIDS from visiting or talking to a friend who is sick with AIDS.
  • You cannot catch AIDS from hugging or kissing a friend who has HIV/AIDS.
  • You cannot catch AIDS from mosquito bites or insect bites.
  • You cannot catch AIDS from a toilet seat in a public restroom.
  • You cannot catch AIDS from going to the same school with someone who is sick with AIDS.
  • You cannot catch AIDS from being kind to someone who has AIDS.

L

AIDS is an international problem which touches people in every country of the world. People with AIDS need our support and encouragement. Let's think about how we can support them!

Answers  Answers

How do people get the HIV virus? Is it difficult to catch aids?

World healthcare system for the rich

A, C, D, F, I, K, L

B, E, G, H, J

Are the statements true or false?

HIV is a virus that weakens the body's power to fight disease.

After six months to ten years after the HIV virus gets into a person's body, they get a disease called AIDS.

You can catch AIDS from a mosquito bite.

You can get AIDS from swimming in the same swimming pool with someone who has HIV or AIDS.

You can catch AIDS from a cough or sneeze from someone who has HIV.

You can catch AIDS from using a public toilet.

It is safe to hug or kiss a friend who has HIV or AIDS.

You can get the HIV virus from blood from an infected person (a person who has the HIV virus in his/her body).

You can catch HIV through having unprotected sex with a person who has HIV.

A mother who has HIV in her body can give the virus to her baby before it is born.

Everyone who has HIV looks sick.

People who have the HIV virus will be infected for the rest of their lives or until there is a cure.

Assignment 3

Are the following statements true or false.

The UN has made a special healthcare system just for rich people.
The gap between rich and poor is 30 times wider than it used to be.
People who live in the same city generally receive the same healthcare.
A UN report says it’s sad that hospitals are out to make profits.
The UN recommends a return to the healthcare system of the 1970s.
Healthcare today is based on a system of visiting family doctors.
The UN said today’s healthcare systems follow the wrong model.
Healthcare costs push 100 million a year below the poverty line.

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