Having had a negative result in a blood test for the AIDS virus HIV.
the HIV-negative partner is at risk of becoming infected
Example sentencesExamples
HIV-infected patients respond as well as HIV-negative patients and can be similarly treated.
Most of them are HIV-negative, but they still suffer from poverty and the stigma associated with AIDS.
In the end the child was revealed to be HIV-negative.
If this is provided without a broader prevention piece, providers will have missed the opportunity to really help the person stay HIV-negative.
A trial involving children found the vast majority who were not HIV-positive after birth and in their early weeks of life remained HIV-negative 18 months later.
People responding well to antiretroviral medications should fare no differently than their HIV-negative peers, Cohan added.
Some positive men felt strongly about making sure that HIV-negative partners practiced safe sex with them.
I am a HIV-positive mother of a perfectly healthy 16-month-old HIV-negative son.
I am HIV-negative and though I have lost many friends and acquaintances to AIDS, I was and still am an outsider to the issue.
For HIV-negative men, the fear of getting infected might lead the list, and as the relationship progresses, that fear is often overtaken by anxiety about a partner's death.
The first phase of the trial is meant to determine the vaccine's safety and will enroll 50 healthy, HIV-negative volunteers.
Definition of HIV-negative in US English:
HIV-negative
adjectiveāCHīˌvēˈneɡədiveɪtʃaɪˌviˈnɛɡədɪv
Having had a negative result in a blood test for the AIDS virus HIV.
the HIV-negative partner is at risk of becoming infected
Example sentencesExamples
I am HIV-negative and though I have lost many friends and acquaintances to AIDS, I was and still am an outsider to the issue.
I am a HIV-positive mother of a perfectly healthy 16-month-old HIV-negative son.
The first phase of the trial is meant to determine the vaccine's safety and will enroll 50 healthy, HIV-negative volunteers.
Most of them are HIV-negative, but they still suffer from poverty and the stigma associated with AIDS.
Some positive men felt strongly about making sure that HIV-negative partners practiced safe sex with them.
People responding well to antiretroviral medications should fare no differently than their HIV-negative peers, Cohan added.
If this is provided without a broader prevention piece, providers will have missed the opportunity to really help the person stay HIV-negative.
For HIV-negative men, the fear of getting infected might lead the list, and as the relationship progresses, that fear is often overtaken by anxiety about a partner's death.
In the end the child was revealed to be HIV-negative.
HIV-infected patients respond as well as HIV-negative patients and can be similarly treated.
A trial involving children found the vast majority who were not HIV-positive after birth and in their early weeks of life remained HIV-negative 18 months later.