- The client/caregiver can define AIDS.
- AIDS is caused by HIV.
- HIV kills or damages cells of the body’s immune system.
- This damage destroys the body’s ability to fight infections and certain cancers.
- Viruses or bacteria that are not a threat to healthy people become opportunistic and life-threatening infections for the person diagnosed with AIDS.
- The term AIDS usually applies to the most advanced stages of HIV infection.
- The client/caregiver can list methods of transmission.
- HIV is spread through contact with contaminated blood. Because of blood screening and heat treatment for donated blood, the risk of getting HIV from transfusions is extremely small.
- HIV is spread most often by having unprotected sex with an infected partner.
- The virus can enter the body through the lining of the vagina, vulva, penis, rectum, or mouth during sex.
- HIV can spread among injection drug users by sharing needles or syringes that are contaminated with infected blood.
- Women can transmit HIV to their babies during pregnancy or at the time of birth.
- The client/caregiver can list risky behavior practices to be avoided in the prevention of the spread of HIV.
- Sharing of drug needles or syringes
- Having sexual contact, including oral, with an infected person without using a condom
- Having sexual contact with someone whose HIV status is unknown
- The client/caregiver can recognize early signs and symptoms of HIV.
- Flu-like symptoms within a month or two after exposure to the virus
- Fever
- Headache
- Swollen glands
- Fatigue
- The client/caregiver can recognize symptoms experienced later in the course of the disease.
- Swollen glands for more than 3 months
- Weight loss
- Frequent fevers and sweats
- Persistent or frequent yeast infections of mouth or vagina
- Persistent skin rashes
- Pelvic inflammatory disease in women that do not respond to treatment
- Short-term memory loss
- Frequent or severe herpes infections that cause mouth, genital, or anal sores or the painful nerve disease called shingles
- The client/caregiver can list tests common for the diagnosis of AIDS.
- Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA)
- Western blot, which is used to confirm the results of the ELISA test
- The client/caregiver can list measures to prevent AIDS.
- Avoid sex with multiple partners.
- Avoid intravenous drug abuse.
- Avoid sharing needles or syringes.
- Use condoms correctly.
- The client/caregiver can list measures to manage AIDS and prevent opportunistic infections.
- Avoid infections with good handwashing and personal hygiene.
- Avoid exposure to infection, such as people with respiratory infections, shingles, and tuberculosis or children with chicken pox.
- Report any signs and symptoms of infection.
- Use stress-management techniques.
- Set up an emotional support network with family, friends, or support groups.
- Eat a nutritious diet. Check high-calorie diets in therapeutic diets. Check food safety and prevention of foodborne illness in nutrition education.
- Maintain a balance of rest and exercise.
- Avoid donating blood or semen.
- Inform health care providers of the diagnosis.
- Inform sex partners of diagnosis.
- Keep follow-up appointments with the physician and laboratory.
- Avoid alcohol and tobacco product use.
- Avoid exposure to infection, such as people with respiratory infections, shingles, and tuberculosis or children with chicken pox.
- Use extra care when dealing with pets. Do not touch pet litter boxes, feces, bird droppings, or water in fish tanks.
- Use extra care with gardening activities. Germs live in gardens and potting soil. Wear gloves while handling dirt, and use good hand hygiene.
- The client/caregiver can list measures to maintain body requirements for nutrition.
- Provide good oral hygiene.
- Eat small, more frequent meals.
- Rest one-half hour after meals.
- Take vitamin and mineral supplements as ordered.
- Take medication (antiemetics) for nausea and vomiting as needed.
- The client/caregiver can list precautions to prevent transmission of the virus.
- Personal care
- Hands and other parts of the body should be washed immediately after contact with blood or other body fluids. Surfaces soiled with blood should be disinfected appropriately.
- Gloves should be worn during contact with blood or other body fluids that could possibly contain visible blood, such as urine, feces, or vomit.
- Cuts, sores, or breaks on both the caregiver and client’s exposed skin should be covered with bandages.
- Equipment
- Needles and other sharp instruments should be used only when medically necessary.
- Do not put caps back on needles by hand. Do not remove needles from syringes. Dispose of needles in puncture-proof containers out of the reach of children and visitors.
- Infected persons should not share razors, toothbrushes, tweezers, nail or cuticle items, pierced earrings, or other pierced jewelry.
- Disposable gloves should only be used once and then discarded.
- Household items and linens
- Clothes and bed sheets used by someone with AIDS can be washed the same way as other laundry.
- If clothes or sheets have blood, vomit, semen, vaginal fluids, urine, or feces on them, use disposable gloves and handle the clothes or sheets as little as possible.
- Put soiled linens in plastic bags until you can wash them. You can but do not need to add bleach to kill HIV; a normal wash cycle will kill the virus.
- Fabrics and furniture can be cleaned with soap and water or cleansers that you can buy in a store; follow the directions on the box. Wear gloves while cleaning.
- About one-quarter cup of bleach mixed with 1 gallon of water makes a good disinfectant for floors, showers, tubs, sinks, mops, sponges, and so forth.
- Soiled disposable items such as gloves, soiled underpads, or dressings should be secured in heavy-duty plastic garbage bags.
- Clean the food preparation area and bathroom area with hot, soapy water and then with a solution that is one part bleach to nine parts water.
- Personal
- The proper and consistent use of latex or polyurethane (a type of plastic) condoms when engaging in sexual intercourse— vaginal, anal, or oral—can greatly reduce a person’s risk of
acquiring or transmitting sexually transmitted diseases, including HIV infection. - If a person with AIDS has a cough that lasts longer than a week, the doctor should check for tuberculosis.
- If the person with AIDS has fever blisters or cold sores (herpes simplex) around the mouth or nose, do not kiss or touch the sores.
- If you have to touch the sores to help the person, wear gloves and wash your hands carefully as soon as you take the gloves off.
- The proper and consistent use of latex or polyurethane (a type of plastic) condoms when engaging in sexual intercourse— vaginal, anal, or oral—can greatly reduce a person’s risk of
- Proper condom use
- Use latex or polyurethane condoms. Never reuse a condom.
- Store condoms in a cool, dry place. Do not store in car or wallet.
- Check expiration date.
- Place the condom on an erect (hard) penis before any contact with the partner’s genital area.
- Use a water-based lubricant with latex condoms to help prevent the condom from tearing. Do not use oil-based products, such as baby or cooking oils, hand lotion, or petroleum jelly as lubricants.
- Hold the condom in place at the base of the penis before withdrawing after sex.
- Properly dispose of condoms.
- Avoid use of lubricants with spermicide called nonoxynol-9 (N-9). It may cause skin irritation or abrasions that can make the area more susceptible to sexually transmitted diseases.
- Personal care
Resources
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
www.cdc.gov/hiv/library/factsheets/index.html
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID)
www.aidsinfo.nih.gov/
National Institutes of Health (NIH)
www.nih.gov/
Department of Health and Human Services (HHS)
www.hhs.gov
AIDSinfo
800-HIV-0440 (800-448-0440) or 301-519-0459
888-480-3739 (TTY/TDD)
http://aidsinfo.nih.gov
CDC National Prevention Information Network (NPIN) 800-458-5231
www.cdcnpin.org
Caring for Someone with AIDS at Home
www.cdc.gov/hiv/pubs/BROCHURE/careathome.htm
CDC-INFO 24 Hours/Day for more information about sex 800-CDC-INFO (232-4636)
888-232-6348 (TTY), in English, en Español
American Social Health Organization
www.ashastd.org/condom/condom
References
Ackley, B. J., & Ladwig, G. B. (2006). Nursing diagnosis handbook: A guide to planning care. Philadelphia: Mosby Inc.
Caring for someone with AIDS at home. Retrieved from www.cdc.gov/hiv/pubs/BROCHURE/careathome.htm.
Cohen, B. J., & Taylor, J. J. (2005). Memmler’s the human body in health and disease (10th ed.). Philadelphia: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins.
Hitchcock, J. E., Schubert, P. E., & Thomas, S. A. (2003). Community health nursing: Caring in action. Clifton Park, NY:Thomson Delmar Learning.
How to use a condom. (1999–2007). American Social Health Organization. Research Triangle Park, NC.
Hunt, R. (2005). Introduction to community based nursing. Philadelphia: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins.
Lutz, C., & Przytulski, K. (2001). Nutrition and diet therapy. Philadelphia: F. A. Davis Company.
Nutrition made incredibly easy. (2003). Philadelphia: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins.
Timby, B. K., & Smith, N. C. (2003). Introductory medical-surgical nursing (8th ed.). Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott Williams & Wilkins.
Credits
Client Teaching Guides for Home Health Care, 2nd ed.
© 2008 Jones and Bartlett Publishers, Inc.
www.jbpub.com