01/29/2026
Your Health and Reality with Dr. Rabbi-Cohen Shalomim Y. HaLahawi, world-renowned Doctor of Integrative Medicine & Public Health.
Topic :
, and the shortcomings of allopathic-only medical systems that find breakthrough medicines for diseases.
My answer to this post claim:
Almost True/Partially. Here's why-
As a physician who works in Integrative Medicine, with a background in International public health and infectious disease, one of 17 post-graduate medical specialities, I know that this is partially true. It is not every known strain, it's almost every known strain.....Scientists have discovered antibodies that neutralize nearly all known HIV strains—up to about 98–99%—but not literally 100%. The most recent breakthroughs are extraordinary, but no antibody has been shown to neutralize every known strain.
What the latest research actually shows is that multiple independent research teams have recently identified extremely potent “broadly neutralizing antibodies” (bNAbs):
1. Antibody 04_A06 (2025)
Neutralized 98.5% of more than 300 HIV strains tested.
Worked even against strains resistant to other treatments.
In humanized mice, it fully suppressed HIV with no rebound for 12+ weeks.
2. Antibody 04_A06 (German Center for Infection Research)
Reported to block almost all known HIV variants in neutralization assays.
3. Antibody N6 (NIH)
Neutralized 98% of HIV isolates, including many resistant strains.
Let's break it down:
Broadly neutralizing antibodies (bNAbs)
Researchers have identified several extremely powerful antibodies — such as N6, VRC01-class variants, and newer engineered antibodies — that neutralize a vast majority of HIV strains.
These antibodies:
Target highly conserved regions of the HIV envelope, &
Neutralize hundreds of diverse HIV variants.
They do show promise for long‑term suppression and potential cure strategies & are being tested in humans for prevention and treatment
Some recent engineered antibodies have reached 98–99% neutralization, which is in fact, extraordinary.
Why “100% of strains” is not accurate:
The strongest antibodies reach 98–99% coverage, which is extraordinary but still shy of 100%, because HIV mutates rapidly and exists as thousands of variants. Even the best antibodies occasionally encounter rare strains they cannot fully neutralize, so achieving true universal neutralization is extremely difficult.
It's literally like a cat and mouse chase.... One reason is because allopathic medicine does not combine their therapies with pure "naturally occuring substancess" commonly called standardize natural medicine, such as TCM which is by far the most superior system of medicine on the planet.....(which is one of the reasons why the US hates everything China), As such, natural viruses, bacteria etc, can mutate and evolve and resist 'synthetic medicine" which is can't do with Naturally isolated components of herbal medicine.. If Western medicine were combined with Eastern Medicine, such as TCM, we'd have super-medicines which are not long-term profitable for "capitalist for-profit healthcare systems" of the West....... Allopathic medicine alone can't compete or combat diseases that TCM literally can do on its own.
The scientific community avoids claiming “all strains” until it is definitively proven.
Bottom line
The discovery is groundbreaking, but the statement is slightly exaggerated. We are closer than ever to universal HIV neutralization, but not fully there yet.
Note: Direct-to-customer Herbal supplements are NOT the same, nor even in the same league, as Prescription-strength Natural Medicine Rx. So never equate evidence-based Natural Medicine, such as Traditional Chinese Internal Medicine, with over-the-counter tylenol styled herbs and vitamin supplements.
Shalom,
Shalomim Y. HaLahawi MD(I), OMD, PhD, PsyD, MRb, DFM, DPH, DACBN
Edenic-Light Integrative Pastoral & Family Life Care.
edenic-light.com
https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1DxpyfP34H/
Scientists have achieved a groundbreaking discovery in the fight against HIV by identifying an antibody capable of neutralizing all known strains of the virus. This broadly neutralizing antibody targets a critical weakness in HIV’s structure, preventing the virus from infecting human cells and halting its replication entirely.
Laboratory tests show the antibody is effective against even highly resistant strains, offering an unprecedented potential for both treatment and prevention. Scientists believe this could pave the way for universal HIV therapies or vaccines, providing long-term protection and reducing the risk of infection worldwide.
Beyond its immediate medical promise, the discovery reveals new insights into how the immune system can recognize and disable one of humanity’s most challenging viruses. Scientists highlight that understanding the mechanisms behind this antibody could transform the global approach to HIV care, saving millions of lives and bringing us closer to controlling the epidemic.