| By George E Curry | SACOBSERVER.COM WIRE
SERVICES The disclosure that more than 4 percent
of Blacks in the District of Columbia have HIV, matching San
Francisco’s city-wide rate at the height of the epidemic
in 1992, is but one example of how the disease is devastating
the Black community. D.C. health officials made public a report
Monday that showed the overall HIV/AIDS city rate of 3 percent
is three times the level considered a “generalized and
severe” epidemic.
One percent of the population is the standard yardstick
used to measure a “generalized and severe” epidemic.
In addition to African Americans, that level was exceeded
in Washington by Latinos – 2 percent – and Whites
at 1.4 percent.
“Our rates are higher than West Africa” Shannon
L. Hader, director of the District’s HIV/AIDS Administration,
told the Washington Post. “They’re on par with
Uganda and some parts of Kenya.”
The city’s 2008 epidemiology report found the number
of HIV and AIDS cases had risen 22 percent from the 12,500
cases reported in 2006. As bad as things appear to be in the
nation’s capital, the report observed, “We know
that the true number of residents currently infected and living
with HIV is certainly higher.”
The study says 7 percent of Black men in D.C. are infected.
Almost 1 in 10 residents between the ages of 40 and 49 has
the virus. Approximately 3 percent of African American women
in the District of Columbia carry the virus, 58 percent of
whom were infected through heterosexual sexual activity. About
a quarter of Black women were infected through drug use.
Overall, 76 percent of the infected are Black. Heterosexual
sexual activity was the primary mode of transmission for African
Americans at 33 percent. On the other hand, men having sex
with men was the principal mode of transmission for Whites
– 78 percent – and 49 percent for Latinos.
“I'm extremely angry and sad but not surprised,”
said Phill Wilson, CEO of the Black AIDS Institute, the only
think tank devoted exclusively to the elimination of HIV/AIDS
in the African American community. “If you wanted to
create the perfect storm for an explosive HIV/AIDS epidemic,
it would look like Washington D.C. You have a public health
system that is totally overwhelmed, high poverty, low HIV
literacy, a history of neglect, insufficient HIV prevention
infrastructure and a general populace that is not mobilized.”
The HIV/AIDS epidemic is what Wilson calls “a Black
disease.” Although African Americans represent only
12 percent of the U.S. population, they account for half of
all diagnosed AIDS cases. Black women represent 61 percent
of all new HIV infections among women, a rate nearly 15 times
that of White women. And, as was the case in Washington, most
Black women are more likely to be infected through heterosexual
transmission. Black teens represent just 16 percent of those
aged 13 to 19, but 69 percent of new AIDs cases reported among
teens in 2006. A recent study in five major U.S. cities found
that 46 percent of Black men having sex with men were infected
with HIV, compared to 21 percent of White men having sex with
other men.
This isn’t the first depressing report about AIDS,
so what’s the answer to curbing the epidemic?
‘For years, the Black AIDS Institute has been calling
for a national Black AIDS mobilization,” said Wilson
of the Los Angeles-based Black AIDS Institute. “We've
been calling for developing a 5-year plan with specific measurable
goals and objectives to cut HIV rates in half, increase HIV
testing by 50 percent, and increase utilization of HIV treatment
and care by 50 percent. Every Black leader in America needs
to stand up today and declare a war on AIDS.”
C. Virginia Fields, president and CEO of the National Black
Commission on AIDS, also believes testing is a key to halting
the spread of the disease in the U.S. She said health patients
should be routinely tested for HIV, the virus that causes
AIDS. In about half of the states, a separate consent form
is required to grant permission to test for HIV.
“It is time to remove that special requirement and
make testing for HIV as routine as it already is for other
diseases,” Fields said.”It is estimated that 50
to 70 percent of new sexually transmitted cases are spread
by people who don’t realize they’re infected.”
Blacks tend to discover they are HIV positive later than
Whites, meaning that many of them are late entering into treatment
and, consequently don’t live as long as others who were
treated earlier.
If C. Virginia Fields and other activists get their wish
and have AIDS testing incorporated into routine health testing,
that will place a heavier burden on crowded counseling and
treatment facilities. But it’s not an insurmountable
burden. The question is: Do we have the national will to take
on this epidemic?
George E. Curry, former editor-in-chief of Emerge magazine
and the NNPA News Service, is a keynote speaker, moderator,
and media coach. He can be reached through his Web site, www.georgecurry.com.
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