Well clarify something for me...Are looking at increased virulence and super progressive, another words since HIV infections take time to kill once a person is infected, are we talking about a decreasing “time to death factor as well...another words the period of time from infection to demise?
MA believes that in the very near future the HIV virus, which has been continually evolving to a higher level of virulence, will develop the ability to move from lung to lung.
Once in the lung, the new HIV mutant will create a cytokine storm that will quickly overwhelm the patient and the time from infection to death will be sudden and dramatic.
The virus has now defeated all of modern medicine and can be found in every geographical region and in every culture on our little rock.
The weakness of this very diabolical bug is it's lack of an effective transmission method.
HIV is one of the most mutanagenic life forms on earth. The numbers of mutants created daily is an almost unbelievable number.
The change necessary to allow it to ride water droplets in a cough from one lung to another is really quite achievable considering the massive mutation rate.
That is why the rising virus count of patients is worrisome. The denser the infection the more likely airborne transmission might be possible.
Her fixation on the use of neuriminidase inhibitors on HIV patients with the flu is based on the known science that neuriminidase increase HIV mutation. Which in a sick patient with coughing, sneezing etc. seems, to MA, insane.
So, sorry for all the words, your summation is spot on. The method of transmission changes the long time from infection to death to something much more akin to the Spanish Flu.