
The HIV/AIDS Atlas finds that 80% of those infected are in counties that are primarily gay, black, or latino.
Forbes, June 22, 2009
MONDAY, June 22 (HealthDay News) -- Your chances of getting
infected with HIV may largely depend on where in America you live,
a new report finds.
The HIV/AIDS Atlas found that 80 percent of U.S. cases
are clustered in 20 percent of counties -- typically comprised
heavily of gay, black, Latino and other minority populations.
The new data doesn't mean that anyone should relax their
guard in protecting themselves against the AIDS-causing virus,
experts said, but it may alert people and policymakers to the level
of danger closest to home.
"If we think of the AIDS pandemic as a global wildfire, the
way that you fight wildfires is to identify the hot spots,"
said Michael Weinstein, president of the AIDS Healthcare
Foundation. "The reality right now is that we have not focused
on geographies in this country and we know that you can't fight
the disease if you don't know who has it. And we know that in
every disease early detection is the key."
The report, put together by the National Minority Quality Forum
with support from drug company Gilead Sciences, is the first
ground-level look at the HIV/AIDS epidemic in the United
States.
"We wanted to make sure that organizations had the
information they needed to organize interventions in their
communities, as well as talk intelligently to legislators,"
Gary Puckrein, president and chief executive officer of the forum,
said at a Monday teleconference.
"We also think a lot about policymaking. We're trying
to create a more mature conversation in the 21st century of,
'Where are the communities that have the burden?' The
question is, do communities have the resources they need? We want
to improve the quality of care that patients get but we can also
manage health-care resources a lot better" with these facts,
he added.
The release of the Atlas also helps sets the stage for
National HIV Testing day on June 27.
According to the federal Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention, more than 1.1 million people in the United States now
live with HIV, with 56,000 more infected each year -- a number
about 40 percent higher than previously estimated. Some 20 percent
of people with HIV -- 220,000 individuals -- do not know they are
infected and are thought to be responsible for up to 70 percent of
new infections.
In a way, the new level of reporting on HIV incidence is simply
catching up with monitoring routinely done for other diseases.
"We have been mapping chronic disease now for about three
to four years. We've mapped diabetes to the zip code level,
cardiovascular disease and end-stage renal [kidney] disease,"
Puckrein noted. "After the CDC announced that everyone should
know their HIV status in their guidelines, we thought that
communities also needed to know their status."
TheAtlas draws on 2005-07 data from health departments in
all 50 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, the U.S.
Virgin Islands and New York City. It found that, of 3,027 counties
that provided data for the report, 556 counties bear the lion's
share of the nation's HIV/AIDS burden.
Furthermore, the epidemic has hit hardest in the two-thirds of
the 556 counties that are predominantly minority populations,
including blacks, Hispanics, Asians and Pacific Islanders.
A random sampling of the 20 percent of counties with the highest
HIV rates include: Marin and San Francisco counties, Calif;
Miami-Dade county, Fla; Bronx, Queens and New York (Manhattan)
counties, New York City; Richland (Columbia), S.C.; Orleans (New
Orleans), La; Butts, Clayton and Dekalb counties (Atlanta), Ga; New
Haven and Hartford counties, Conn; Multnomah (Portland) Ore; and
Denver (Denver) Colo.
In New York City, data on HIV prevalence has now been pinpointed
to the zip-code level, although other locales were "more
comfortable" providing data at the wider, county level,
Puckrein said.
Puckrein emphasized that the Atlas does not count the
actual number of people in the community living with HIV/AIDS.
Instead, it looks at a ratio of what percent of the population in
those communities are living with the disease.
The map is also broken down by age, gender and race/ethnicity,
as well as by congressional and state legislative districts.
More information
To view the atlas, visit the National Minority Quality Forum.
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