The Department of Defense can ban recruits living with HIV from joining all branches of the U.S. military after a ...
The ruling reversed a 2024 injunction blocking the ban.
A U.S. appeals court on Wednesday upheld the U.S. military's longstanding policy banning people with HIV from enlisting, ...
The appeals panel said the military itself was better suited than a court to make its own personnel decisions.
The Center for Disease Control and Prevention said this week that an HIV-positive person with an undetectable viral load is at "effectively no risk" of transmitting the virus.In a statement from the ...
In a move long encouraged by advocates, the World Health Organization has reaffirmed that people with HIV who consistently take antiretroviral treatment and maintain an undetectable viral load do not ...
A new Defense Department policy allows HIV-positive service members with an undetectable viral load to not only stay in uniform, but remain deployable. New guidance laid out in a memo released Tuesday ...
Medical organizations endorse the “Undetectable = Untransmissible” campaign, which aims to raise awareness of scientific evidence showing that virally suppressed people living with HIV cannot infect ...