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Learn More About Aids
African American HIV/AIDS
Statistics
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HIV/AIDS - A Historical Overview
Acquired
Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS) was first reported in the United States in 1981
and has since become a major worldwide pandemic. AIDS is
caused by the Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV). By
killing or impairing cells of the immune system, HIV
progressively destroys the body’s ability to fight
infections and certain cancers. Individuals diagnosed
with AIDS are susceptible to life-threatening diseases
called opportunistic infections, which are caused by
microbes that usually do not cause illness in healthy
people.
More than 600,000 cases of AIDS have been
reported in the United States since 1981, and as many as
900,000 Americans may be infected with HIV. The epidemic
is growing most rapidly among minority populations and
is a leading killer of African-American males. According
to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
(CDC), the prevalence of AIDS is six times higher in
African-Americans and three times higher among Latinas
than among whites.
Transmission HIV is also spread most commonly
by sexual contact with an infected partner. The virus
can enter the body through the lining of the vagina,
vulva, penis, rectum or mouth during sex.
HIV also is spread through contact
with infected blood. Prior to the screening of blood for
evidence of HIV infection and before the introduction in
1985 of heat-treating techniques to destroy HIV in blood
products, HIV was transmitted through transfusions of
contaminated blood or blood components. Today, because
of blood screening and heat treatment, the risk of
acquiring HIV from such transfusions is extremely small.
HIV frequently is spread among
injection drug users by the sharing of needles or
syringes contaminated with minute quantities of blood of
someone infected with the virus. However, transmission
from patient to health-care worker or vice-versa via
accidental sticks with contaminated needles or other
medical instruments is rare.
Women can transmit HIV to their
fetuses during pregnancy or birth. Approximately
one-quarter to one-third of all untreated pregnant women
infected with HIV will pass the infection to their
babies. HIV also can be spread to babies through the
breast milk of mothers infected with the virus. If the
drug AZT is taken during pregnancy, the chance of
transmitting HIV to the baby is reduced significantly.
If AZT treatment of mothers is combined with cesarean
sectioning to deliver infants, infection rates can be
reduced to 1 percent.
Although researchers
have detected HIV in the saliva of infected individuals,
no evidence exists that the virus is spread by contact
with saliva. Laboratory studies reveal that saliva has
natural compounds that inhibit the infectiousness of
HIV. Studies of people infected with HIV have found no
evidence that the virus is spread to others through
saliva such as by kissing. No one knows, however, the
risk of infection from so-called “deep” kissing,
involving the exchange of large amounts of saliva, or by
oral intercourse. Scientists also have found no evidence
that HIV is spread through sweat, tears, urine or
feces.
Studies of families of HIV-infected
people have shown clearly that HIV is not spread through
casual contact such as the sharing of food utensils,
towels and bedding, swimming pools, telephones or toilet
seats. HIV is not spread by biting insects such as
mosquitoes or bedbugs.
HIV can infect anyone
who practices risky behaviors such
as:
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sharing drug needles or
syringes;
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Having sexual contact
with an
infected person or with someone whose HIV status
is unknown without using a latex
male condom. |
Having another sexually transmitted
disease such as syphilis, herpes, Chlamydia infection,
gonorrhea or bacterial vaginosis appears to make someone
more susceptible to acquiring HIV infection during sex
with an infected partner.
Early
Symptoms Many people do
not develop any symptoms when they first become infected
with HIV. Some people, however, have a flu-like illness
within a month or two after exposure to the virus. They
may have fever, headache, malaise and enlarged lymph
nodes (organs of the immune system easily felt in the
neck and groin). These symptoms usually disappear within
a week to a month and are often mistaken for those of
another viral infection. People are very infectious
during this period, and HIV is present in large
quantities in genital secretions.
More persistent or severe symptoms
may not surface for a decade or more after HIV first
enters the body in adults, or within two years in
children born with HIV infection. This period of
“asymptomatic” infection is highly variable. Some people
may begin to have symptoms in as soon as a few months,
whereas others may be symptom-free for more than 10
years. During the asymptomatic period, however, HIV is
actively multiplying, infecting and killing cells of the
immune system. HIV’s effect is seen most obviously in a
decline in the blood levels of CD4+ T cells (also called
T4 cells) – the immune system’s key infection fighters.
The virus initially disables or destroys these cells
without causing symptoms.
As the immune system deteriorates, a
variety of complications begins to surface. One of the
first such symptoms experienced by many people infected
with HIV is large lymph nodes or “swollen glands” that
may be enlarged for more than three months. Other
symptoms often experienced months to years before the
onset of AIDS include a lack of energy, weight loss,
frequent fevers and sweats, persistent or frequent yeast
infections (oral or vaginal), persistent skin rashes or
flaky skin, pelvic inflammatory disease that does not
respond to treatment, or short-term memory loss.
Some people develop frequent and
severe herpes infections that cause mouth, genital or
anal sores, or a painful nerve disease known as
shingles. Children may have delayed development or
failure to thrive.
AIDS
- The Definition The term AIDS applies
to the most advanced stages of HIV infection. Official
criteria for the definition of AIDS are developed by the
CDC in Atlanta, Ga., which is responsible for tracking
the spread of AIDS in the United
States.
In 1993, the CDC revised its definition
of AIDS to include all HIV-infected people who have
fewer than 200 CD4+ T cells. (Healthy adults usually
have CD4+ T-cell counts of 1,000 or more.) In addition,
the definition includes 26 clinical conditions that
affect people with advanced HIV disease. Most
AIDS-defining conditions are opportunistic infections,
which rarely cause harm in healthy individuals. In
people with AIDS, however, these infections are often
severe and sometimes fatal because the immune system is
so ravaged by HIV that the body cannot fight off certain
bacteria, viruses and other microbes.
Opportunistic infections common in
people with AIDS cause such symptoms as coughing,
shortness of breath, seizures, mental symptoms such as
confusion and forgetfulness, severe and persistent
diarrhea, fever, vision loss, severe headaches, weight
loss, extreme fatigue, nausea, vomiting, lack of
coordination, coma, abdominal cramps, or difficult or
painful swallowing.
Although children with AIDS are
susceptible to the same opportunistic infections as
adults with the disease, they also experience severe
forms of the bacterial infections to which children are
especially prone, such as conjunctivitis (pink eye), ear
infections and tonsillitis.
People with AIDS are particularly
prone to developing various cancers, especially those
caused by viruses such as Kaposi’s sarcoma and cervical
cancer, or cancers of the immune system known as
lymphomas. These cancers are usually more aggressive and
difficult to treat in people with AIDS. Hallmarks of
Kaposi’s sarcoma in light-skinned people are round
brown, reddish or purple spots that develop in the skin
or in the mouth. In dark-skinned people, the spots are
more pigmented.
During the course of HIV infection,
most people experience a gradual decline in the number
of CD4+ T cells, although some individuals may have
abrupt and dramatic drops in their CD4+ T-cell counts. A
person with CD4+ T cells above 200 may experience some
of the early symptoms of HIV disease. Others may have no
symptoms even though their CD4+ T-cell count is below
200.
Many people are so debilitated by
the symptoms of AIDS that they are unable to hold steady
employment or do household chores. Other people with
AIDS may experience phases of intense life-threatening
illness followed by phases of normal
functioning.
A small number of people (less
than 50) initially infected with HIV 10 or more years
ago have not developed symptoms of AIDS. Scientists are
trying to determine what factors may account for their
lack of progression to AIDS, such as particular
characteristics of their immune systems, or whether they
were infected with a less aggressive strain of the virus
or if their genetic make-up may protect them from the
effects of HIV. Scientists hope that understanding the
body’s natural method of control may lead to ideas for
protective HIV vaccines and use of vaccines to prevent
disease progression.
Diagnosis
Because early HIV infection often causes no
symptoms, it is primarily detected by testing a person’s
blood for the presence of antibodies (disease-fighting
proteins) to HIV. HIV antibodies generally do not reach
detectable levels until one to three months following
infection and may take as long as six months to be
generated in quantities large enough to show up in
standard blood tests. HIV testing may also be performed
on saliva and urine samples, in addition to blood
samples.
People exposed to HIV should be tested for HIV
infection as soon as they are likely to develop
antibodies to the virus. Such early testing will enable
them to receive appropriate treatment at a time when
they are most able to combat HIV and prevent the
emergence of certain opportunistic infections (see
Treatment below). Early testing also alerts HIV-infected
people to avoid high-risk behaviors that could spread
HIV to others.
HIV testing is done in most doctors’
offices or health clinics and should be accompanied by
counseling. Individuals can be tested anonymously at
many sites if they have particular concerns about
confidentiality. In addition, blood samples for
anonymous HIV testing may now be collected at home.
Home-based test kits are available by telephone order or
over the counter at pharmacies.
Two different types of antibody
tests, ELISA and Western Blot, are used to diagnose HIV
infection. If a person is highly likely to be infected
with HIV and yet both tests are negative, a doctor may
test for the presence of HIV itself in the blood. The
person also may be told to repeat antibody testing at a
later date, when antibodies to HIV are more likely to
have developed.
Babies born to mothers infected with
HIV may or may not be infected with the virus, but all
carry their mothers’ antibodies to HIV for several
months. If these babies lack symptoms, a definitive
diagnosis of HIV infection using standard antibody tests
cannot be made until after 15 months of age. By then,
babies are unlikely to still carry their mothers’
antibodies and will have produced their own, if they are
infected. New technologies to detect HIV itself are
being used to more accurately determine HIV infection in
infants between ages 3 months and 15 months. A number of
blood tests are being evaluated to determine if they can
diagnose HIV infection in babies younger than 3 months.
Treatment When
AIDS first surfaced in the United States, no drugs were
available to combat the underlying immune deficiency and
few treatments existed for the opportunistic diseases
that resulted. Over the past 10 years, however,
therapies have been developed to fight both HIV
infection and its associated infections and cancers.
The Food and Drug Administration has
approved a number of drugs for the treatment of HIV
infection. The first group of drugs used to treat HIV
infection, called nucleoside analog reverse
transcriptase inhibitors (NRTIs), interrupt an early
stage of virus replication. Included in this class of
drugs are zidovudine (also known as AZT), zalcitabine
(ddC), didanosine (ddI), stavudine (D4T), lamivudine
(3TC) and abacavir succinate. These drugs may slow the
spread of HIV in the body and delay the onset of
opportunistic infections. Importantly, they do not
prevent transmission of HIV to other individuals.
Non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NNRTIs)
such as delavirdine, nevirapine and efavirenz are also
available for use in combination with other
antiretroviral drugs.
A third class of anti-HIV drugs,
called protease inhibitors, interrupts virus replication
at a later step in its life cycle. They include
ritonavir, saquinivir, indinavir and nelfinavir. Because
HIV can become resistant to each class of drugs,
combination treatment using both is necessary to
effectively suppress the virus.
Currently available antiretroviral
drugs do not cure people of HIV infection or AIDS,
however, and they all have side effects that can be
severe. AZT may cause a depletion of red or white blood
cells, especially when taken in the later stages of the
disease. If the loss of blood cells is severe, treatment
with AZT must be stopped. DdI can cause an inflammation
of the pancreas and painful nerve damage.
The most common side effects
associated with protease inhibitors include nausea,
diarrhea and other gastrointestinal symptoms. In
addition, protease inhibitors can interact with other
drugs resulting in serious side effects. Investigators
also recently have reported cases of abnormal
redistribution of body fat among some individuals
receiving protease inhibitors.
A number of drugs are available to
help treat opportunistic infections to which people with
HIV are especially prone. These drugs include foscarnet
and ganciclovir, used to treat cytomegalovirus eye
infections, fluconazole to treat yeast and other fungal
infections, and TMP/SMX or pentamidine to treat
Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia (PCP)
In addition to antiretroviral
therapy, adults with HIV whose CD4+ T-cell counts drop
below 200 are given treatment to prevent the occurrence
of PCP, which is one of the most common and deadly
opportunistic infections associated with HIV. Children
are given PCP preventive therapy when their CD4+ T-cell
counts drop to levels considered below normal for their
age group. Regardless of their CD4+ T-cell counts,
HIV-infected children and adults who have survived an
episode of PCP are given drugs for the rest of their
lives to prevent a recurrence of the pneumonia.
HIV-infected individuals who develop
Kaposi’s sarcoma or other cancers are treated with
radiation, chemotherapy or injections of alpha
interferon, a genetically engineered naturally occurring
protein.
Prevention
Since no vaccine for
HIV is available, the only way to prevent infection by
the virus is to avoid behaviors that put a person at
risk of infection, such as sharing needles and having
unprotected sex.
Because many people infected with
HIV have no symptoms, there is no way of knowing with
certainty whether a sexual partner is infected unless he
or she has been repeatedly tested for the virus or has
not engaged in any risky behavior. CDC recommends that
people either abstain from sex or protect themselves by
using male latex condoms whenever having oral, anal or
vaginal sex. Only male condoms made of latex should be
used, and water-based lubricants should be used with
latex condoms.
Although some laboratory evidence
shows that spermicides can kill HIV organisms, in
clinical trials, researchers have not found that these
products can prevent HIV.
The risk of HIV transmission from a
pregnant woman to her fetus is significantly reduced if
she takes AZT during pregnancy, labor and delivery, and
her baby takes it for the first six weeks of
life.
Research
NIAID-supported
investigators are conducting an abundance of research on
HIV infection, including the development and testing of
HIV vaccines and new therapies for the disease and some
of its associated conditions. More than a dozen HIV
vaccines are being tested in people, and many drugs for
HIV infection or AIDS-associated opportunistic
infections are either in development or being tested.
Researchers also are investigating exactly how HIV
damages the immune system. This research is suggesting
new and more effective targets for drugs and vaccines.
NIAID-supported investigators also continue to document
how the disease progresses in different
people.
For information about studies of new
HIV therapies, call the AIDS Clinical Trials
Information
Service:1-877-304-3224
Department of Health Education &
Promotions HIV/AIDS Statistics
The Global
Pandemic
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AIDS is a global pandemic that
is impacting the developing world and people of
color most dramatically. Worldwide there
were 33.4 million persons estimated to be living
with HIV/AIDS as of the end of 1998 of which 95%
resided in developing
countries.
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While only one tenth of the
world’s population lives in Sub-Saharan Africa, it
is the region of the world hardest hit by
HIV/AIDS, accounting for 22.5 of the persons
living with HIV/AIDS by the end of
1998.
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In North America, there are an
estimated 890,000 persons living with HIV/AIDS; 1.4
million in Latin America; 560,000 in East Asia;
500,000 in Western Europe; and 6.7 million in South
and Southeast Asia.
HIV/AIDS
and African Americans in the United States
Full
CDC Report
In the United States, the HIV/AIDS epidemic is a health
crisis for African Americans. At all stages of
HIV/AIDS—from infection with HIV to death with
AIDS—blacks (including African Americans) are
disproportionately affected compared with members of
other races and ethnicities
STATISTICS
HIV/AIDS in 2005
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According to the 2000 census, blacks make up
approximately 13% of the US population. However, in
2005, blacks accounted for 18,121 (49%) of the
estimated 37,331 new HIV/AIDS diagnoses in the 33
states with long-term, confidential name-based HIV
reporting.
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Of all
black men living with HIV/AIDS, the primary
transmission category was sexual contact with other
men, followed by injection drug use and high-risk
heterosexual contact.
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Of all
black women living with HIV/AIDS, the primary
transmission category was high-risk heterosexual
contact, followed by injection drug use.
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Of the
estimated 141 infants perinatally infected with HIV,
91 (65%) were black (CDC, HIV/AIDS Reporting System,
unpublished data, December 2006).
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Of the
estimated 18,849 people under the age of 25 whose
diagnosis of HIV/AIDS wasmade during 2001–2004 in
the 33 states with HIV reporting, 11,554 (61%) were
black.
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Of
persons whose diagnosis of AIDS had been made during
1997–2004, a smaller proportion of blacks (66%) were
alive after 9 years compared with American Indians
and Alaska Natives (67%), Hispanics (74%), whites
(75%), and Asians and Pacific Islanders (81%).
AIDS in 2005
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Blacks
accounted for 20,187 (50%) of the estimated 40,608
AIDS cases diagnosed in the 50 states and the
District of Columbia.
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The rate
of AIDS diagnoses for black adults and adolescents
was 10 times the rate for whites and nearly 3 times
the rate for Hispanics. The rate of AIDS diagnoses
for black women was nearly 23 times the rate for
white women. The rate of AIDS diagnoses for black
men was 8 times the rate for white men.
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The
185,988 blacks living with AIDS in the 50 states and
the District of Columbia accounted for 44% of the
421,873 people in those areas living with AIDS.
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Of the
68 US children (younger than 13 years of age) who
had a new AIDS diagnosis, 46 were black.
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Since
the beginning of the epidemic, blacks have accounted
for 397,548 (42%) of the estimated 952,629 AIDS
cases diagnosed in the 50 states and the District of
Columbia.
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From the
beginning of the epidemic through December 2005, an
estimated 211,559 blacks with AIDS died.
AIDS Cases per
100,000 Population
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African-Americans have the
highest AIDS case rate per 100,000 population of
all ethnic/racial groups-66.4 per 100,000
population compared with 8.2 for
whites.
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African-American males have an
AIDS case rate of 125.2, over seven times the rate
for white males who have a rate of 17.8 per
100,000 population.
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African-American women have an
AIDS case rate of 49.8, over 20 times the rate for
white women who have a rate of 2.4 per 100,000
population.
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Georgia has an AIDS case rate
of 59.1 per 100,000 African-American
population.
AIDS Cases Among Gender
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African-American males make up
75% of the cumulative AIDS cases reported among
adolescent/adult
African-Americans, while females
make up 25% of the cases.
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In 1998, African-American
males made up 69% of the reported cases among
African-Americans while females made up 31% of the
cases.
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Among African-American males
the leading exposure category for AIDS is men who
have sex with men (38% of the cumulative cases and
31% of the new AIDS cases reported in
1998).
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