¶ … 2005 study by Mohala Tucker Besser et al., conducted upon HIV-positive pregnant women who are about to undergo voluntary caesarian section to give birth. Mohala Tucker Besser et al. used a sample population to study whether or not HIV was present within the amniotic fluid of these pregnant women, and discovered that -- contrary to a previous study published in 1987 -- it was not. Additional relevant studies -- including the original 1987 Lancet publication by Mundy Schinazi Gerber et al., and further studies involving viral transmission between mothers and newborns and specific risk factors for HIV transmission in prenatal and perinatal situations -- are examined in conjunction with Mohala Tucker Besser's 2005 study. The finding has implications for preventing HIV transmission between mothers and newborn infants, and confirms the growing clinical consensus that elective caesarian section remains one of the most reliable ways to reduce viral transmission from an infected mother to the infant.
Mohala Tucker Besser et al. (2005) conducted a study regarding one of the remaining mysteries about HIV transmission. It has been long established that an HIV-positive pregnant woman is capable of infecting her unborn child with the virus, however this does not always happen. Indeed Mohala Tucker Besser et al. give the most accurate current estimate of infection rates for the unborn child at being about ten to fifteen percent of such pregnancies (488). Obviously this issue is significant for a number of reasons. For a start, pediatric HIV is a massive public health concern: Mohala Tucker Besser et al. quote World Health Organization statistics that estimate approximately ten percent of new HIV infections in developing countries are children, and over ninety percent of these cases represent perinatal transmission. Even in the United States, over ninety percent of pediatric HIV infections are due to perinatal transmission.
Mohala Tucker Besser et al. (2005) are engaged in the specific examination of whether or not the amniotic fluid of the pregnant woman is involved in these cases of perinatal transmission. What is most significant about this is that they are revisiting an issue which had been reviewed earlier in the 1980s at more or less the height of the AIDS epidemic. At that...
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