Young black gay men appear to be the hardest hit population when
it comes to AIDS in the United States being followed by white gay men in their
30’s and 40’s, Hispanic gays and black women, the latest federal report on the
subject published in the Sept. 12 issue of Morbidity and Mortality Weekly
Report reveals.
Last month, during the 17th International AIDS Conference
held in
The new
report made by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention based on data
collected in 2006 in 22 US states, appear to reach to the same results made
public last month. Overall, “the male-to-male sexual contact transmission
category represented 72 percent of new infections among males, including 81
percent of new infections among whites, 63 percent among blacks and 72 percent
among Hispanics,” the report said.
But the incidence of HIV infections among black males aged 13 to
29 was “alarming,” as they were 1.6 more likely than whites and 2.3 more likely
than Hispanics to contract the virus, according to the findings.
“The number of new HIV infections among young black men who
have sex with men is alarming,” Dr. Kevin Fenton, director of the CDC’s
The report found that 48 percent of new infections among
black men were among those aged 13 to 29 compared with 31 percent for whites
and 21 percent for Hispanics.
Also, the report found that black women bear the heaviest
burden of HIV infections. More exactly, the incidence of HIV among them was
14.7 times higher than for white women, while the incidence of HIV among
Hispanics was 3.8 times higher than that for white women.
The researchers however couldn’t give a clear explanation
for this high rate of infection among young black men.
“A range of issued contributes to disproportionate HIV risk
for African-Americans, such as poverty, stigma, lack of access to health care,
and higher rates of sexually transmitted diseases. Black women face additional
challenges such as power imbalances in sexual relationships with men. This may
affect their ability to protect themselves by measures such as using condoms,”
Richard Wolitski, PhD, acting director of the CDC’s division of HIV/AIDS
prevention, said.
In order to stop HIV from spreading, Fenton said there is
tremendous need for programs reaching each new generation early in their lives
in order to teach them how to prevent HIV spreading and also “strategies for
keeping (older gay men) HIV-free for life.”
About
56,000 people became infected with HIV in the past year, according to the
revised estimate of HIV’s toll in the