This reading list accompanies our story on the unexpected effects of the HIV prevention pill.
Touted as a way to end HIV within a generation, the HIV prevention pill (PrEP) is being trialled in the UK.
What we know so far about PrEP, HIV and sexually transmitted infections.
In Durban in South Africa, local women are getting involved in innovative research.
Sex workers in Mozambique are providing health support to those at the margins of society. They face political and financial challenges, but against the odds they are helping thousands. Jules Montague reports.
Governments around the world were slow to get to grips with HIV/AIDS. But a big change came when they started understanding it not just as a health issue but as a security threat too. Alexandra Ossola investigates.
In Austin, widespread drug use led to the single largest outbreak of HIV in the United States. Jessica Wapner asks if a new approach to public health can rescue the town.
Though it is possible to live with HIV/AIDS today, for some, the reality of being HIV positive remains harsh. On World AIDS Day 2015, Patrick Strudwick reflects on how little things have changed.
Good wages, plentiful sex workers and cheap heroin mean that HIV is rife in Myanmar's jade-mining state of Kachin.
A historical 18-image gallery of AIDS awareness posters from around the world.
Lisa Power on how being HIV positive can affect everything from relationships to travel.
HIV consultant Ranjababu Kulasegaram on the medical impacts of being HIV positive.
Professor Ian Everall on what being HIV positive can mean for you mentally.
What does it mean to be HIV positive today? Patrick Strudwick meets four people living with the virus to find out.
Françoise Barré-Sinoussi shares her views on three exciting areas of HIV research.
The Nobel laureate talks to Patrick Strudwick about identifying HIV as the cause of AIDS and the latest efforts to prevent, treat and manage HIV.