Tag Archives: HIV positive

Hepatitis C

Last Christmas, my brother in law was plagued with Hepatitis A. He missed our Christmas dinner, but miraculously, he became so much better that he was able to join us for New Year’s Eve dinner. By now, he is no longer on medication but his utensils are still being separated from ours. We still take precautions.

My daughter is immunized at birth with Hepatitis B. She has already completed the three required shots.

And now there is Hepatitis C? I heard over the news that it is really dangerous especially among those who are HIV positive. How does one contract Hepa C? What are its symptoms?

According to the news today, it is not later in the stages that Hepa C is detected, or at least its symptoms detectable.

Wikipedia says that Hepa C is contracted through blood to blood contact. Here are further information about Hepa C from Wiki.

“Acute hepatitis C refers to the first 6 months after infection with HCV. Between 60% to 70% of people infected develop no symptoms during the acute phase. In the minority of patients who experience acute phase symptoms, they are generally mild and nonspecific, and rarely lead to a specific diagnosis of hepatitis C. Symptoms of acute hepatitis C infection include decreased appetite, fatigue, abdominal pain, jaundice, itching, and flu-like symptoms.

The hepatitis C virus is usually detectable in the blood within one to three weeks after infection by PCR, and antibodies to the virus are generally detectable within 3 to 15 weeks. Spontaneous viral clearance rates are highly variable and between 10–60%[2] of persons infected with HCV clear the virus from their bodies during the acute phase as shown by normalization in liver enzymes (alanine transaminase (ALT) & aspartate transaminase (AST)), and plasma HCV-RNA clearance (this is known as spontaneous viral clearance). However, persistent infections are common[3] and most patients develop chronic hepatitis C, i.e., infection lasting more than 6 months.[4][5][6]

Previous practice was to not treat acute infections to see if the person would spontaneously clear; recent studies have shown that treatment during the acute phase of genotype 1 infections has a greater than 90% success rate with half the treatment time required for chronic infections.[7]”

And now I know that there are other types of Hepa, Hepa D and Hepa E.

HIV Epidemic in Call Centers

The call center agency is the pride of the Arroyo Administration.

But today, even President Arroyo has been alarmed with the seeming rising cases of HIV positive call center agents. Then I thought, what? That means it is no longer safe to work in call centers? How does the virus spread? Through needles? Infected gadgets? Etc?

Gosh I am so naive. Then it was said because of the lifestyle of call center agents. It cannot be denied that many call center agents live a rather liberated lifestyle. Many of them work at night and many of them can already afford a lot of things because of the higher salaries that they earn. Then it dawned on me that the cause of the spread of the HIV among call center agents is promiscuity.

Now, call centers are trying to encourage a more healthy lifestyle among their workers. But really, it will still boil down to what a person thinks is right or wrong. Morality will still play a major part. If people think that casual sex is okay, they will continue to do it. Not even the scare of HIV-AIDS will stop them.

There is the son of acclaimed director Peque Gallaga. Wango Gallaga came out on the news today that he is HIV positive. I remember him as a sweet young boy during the Negros Summer Worshops at the University of St. La Salle almost 2 decades now. Today, I see him on TV as a advocate of safe sex. He said he thought he would find love in sex. He said that he has had more than 50 partners in a span of 3 years. And most of them he found through internet dating or chat sites.

Although new medicines have made HIV not so scary, would you really want to go there? Or would you rather be monogamous and save yourselves a lot of heartache?