With Proper Treatment, HIV Patients Can Now Live Nearly as Long as the Average American

A study from the University of Bristol revealed that people with HIV are now living almost as long as people without the disease.
The research gathered and analyzed data on the mortality rates among 88,504 patients over 16 years old who used antiretroviral therapy (ART) to treat their HIV from 1996 through 2013. The study checked in with patients every three years, and found a decrease in the mortality rate during these three year spans between those who started ART in 1996 and those who started ART in 2013.
The life expectancy for people with HIV in 1996 was 68 years—today it is 78 years. That is similar to the life expectancy of American men and about four years less than the life expectancy for American women.