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D.C. HIV/AIDS Report: HIV and AIDS Cases Rise 22 Percent In D.C.
Update: Monday, March 16, 2009; 7:07 pm EST: As noted at the end of this story, Dr. Hader was to take questions about the levels of HIV/AIDS cases in the Washington, D.C. area today at 2:00 pm. Questions and comments could be submitted before or during the discussion.
Dr. Hader did take questions about the levels of HIV/AIDS cases in Washington, DC; the Transcript follows, here.
A report to be released today by the Department of Health District of Columbia HIV/AIDS Administration shows an alarming increase in HIV/AIDS in the Washington, D.C. area, and further dispels the myths that HIV/AIDS is exclusive to homosexuals.
The findings in the 2008 epidemiology report by the D.C. HIV/AIDS Administration point to a severe epidemic that's impacting every race and sex across the population and neighborhoods.
"Our rates are higher than West Africa," said Shannon Hader, the administration's director, who used to spearhead the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's work in Zimbabwe. "They're on par with Uganda and some parts of Kenya."
The report, obtained by The Washington Post, updates a landmark 2007 study that discovered the epidemic had moved from affecting a mostly gay population to a general one, and that it disproportionately affected blacks.
The study found that the number of HIV and AIDS cases jumped 22 percent from the 12,428 reported in 2006. Almost 1 in 10 residents between 40 and 49 are living with the virus, and black men had the highest infection rate at almost 7 percent, the report said.
It added that 3 percent of black women in D.C. have HIV.The virus was most often transmitted by men having sex with men, followed by heterosexual transmission and injection drug use, the report said.
"This is very, very depressing news, especially considering HIV's profound impact on minority communities," said Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institutes of Health's program on infectious diseases. "And remember: The city's numbers are just based on people who've gotten tested."
The epidemiology report warns that the true number of D.C. residents infected with HIV "is certainly higher."
Dr. Shannon Hader will take questions about the levels of HIV/AIDS cases in the Washington, D.C. area today at 2:00 pm. Questions and comments can be submitted before or during the discussion, here.
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Rhonda J Mangus
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Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (11)
at 10:31 on March 16th, 2009
Half of all new cases of AIDS in the US are young, black American women.
A great deal of the rest are these men who use viagra and meth and use Craig's list to meet up and have unprotected sex. As this began, gonorrhea and syphilis rates went up in San Francisco, and the HIV rate climbed again.
AIDS isn't seen as the death sentence it used to be seen as.
at 06:04 on March 16th, 2009
According to estimates from the UNAIDS 2008 Report on the global AIDS epidemic, around 30.8 million adults and 2 million children were living with HIV at the end of 2007.
at 06:29 on March 16th, 2009
Paschen, thank you for reading, commenting, and for the recommendation! The numbers are alarming, to say the least. As the video I uploaded points out, education is a key component to the prevention of HIV/AIDS, and America seemingly is failing.
at 10:05 on March 16th, 2009
Shocking figures.
at 13:21 on March 16th, 2009
What heartache this epidemic has caused.
at 14:47 on March 16th, 2009
Very shocking, I agree. Thank you for reading, commenting, and for the recommendation, Rachel!
at 19:19 on March 16th, 2009
Roy C, thank you for reading, commenting, and for the recommendation!
at 19:19 on March 16th, 2009
Thank you for reading, commenting, and for the recommendation, Barbara!
at 19:29 on March 16th, 2009
This is a disturbing trend. I wonder if the advances made (living longer with less signs of the disease) have somehow resulted in complacency.
at 19:40 on March 16th, 2009
You are very welcome, Cypresso! Thank you for reading, commenting, and for the recommendation. A report by the CDC, HIV Prevention Education and HIV-Related Policies in Secondary Schools---Selected Sites, United States, 2006 also points to the fact that HIV/AIDS education is less than satisfactory.
at 02:39 on March 17th, 2009
It is alarming as well as shocking, situation in Africa cannot be compared to DC, but the dimension is alarming.