HIV and AIDS cure update: Australian doctor claims cure in goat's milk with CAEV

(REUTERS)Retinal pigment epithelium (cell borders in red) treated with an HIV/AIDS drug.

An Australian doctor has revealed in a talk show that he has discovered the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) cure through the milk of arthritic goats.

A segment of "Real Time with Bill Maher" aired early this month, which featured the controversial Australian doctor Samir Chachoua who claimed that goat's milk, that has Caprine Arthritis Encephalitis Virus (CAEV), could cure HIV.

"This virus destroys HIV and protects people who drink it for life," Dr. Chachoua said without elaborating on the science behind it. However, on his website, he stated: "There are organisms that neutralize each other in nature, such as seen above in CAEV and HIV.... I had developed, isolated and enhanced a library of organisms that could be used to create vaccines and therapies to eradicate cancer and AIDS."

Dr. Chachoua also received wide media attention last year after former "Two and a Half Men" star Charlie Sheen, who's been HIV positive since 2011, approached him for treatment.

In an episode of "Dr. Oz" last month, it can be remembered that Charlie Sheen revealed that he had gone off the mix of antiviral HIV medications that he was prescribed and explored the alternative medication that Dr. Cachoua offers.

But what made a lot of viewers raise their brows while watching the episode is when D. Chachoua himself admitted to Dr. Oz that he had injected himself with Sheens blood.

On Dr. Chachoua's blog, he further claimed that vaccines were tested to the nation of Comoros—which, according to him, is the remaining country with zero deaths from AIDS—for thirty years to "eradicate both HIV and Chickungunya."

According to the World Health Organization (WHO), HIV is still a major global public health issue and there are currently 37 million people living with HIV. It has claimed more than 34 million lives so far. In 2015, 16 million HIV positive people have been received antiretroviral therapy.

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