HIV antibodies that are positive will not turn negative with treatment. Because HIV antibodies are not protective antibodies, they are only an immune response to the HIV virus. There is no cure for HIV infection, so the current treatment for HIV is mainly antiretroviral therapy. Long-term antiviral drugs are used to suppress the HIV virus in the patient’s body, thereby preventing the virus from attacking the body’s immune system and preventing the CD4 T-lymphocyte count from dropping. Patients can achieve a long-term asymptomatic survival, allowing them to live peacefully with the virus for a long time. The patient only needs to take antiviral drugs once a day and can work, live and study as a normal person. Therefore, AIDS is now fully equivalent to a chronic disease, as long as regular review is maintained.