Tuesday, September 23, 2008

Young Black [gay/bi] Men at High Risk for HIV, CDC says




Young black men at high risk for HIV, CDC says

Elizabeth Fernandez, Chronicle Staff Writer


Friday, September 12, 2008

A new, detailed picture released Thursday of the swath of HIV infections
nationally illustrates the severe impact the virus is taking on young
black gay and bisexual men, black women, and white gay and bisexual men
in their 30s and 40s.

The report by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, for the
first time breaking down new infections in terms of race, gender and
age, shows an alarming prevalence of the disease in young black men. The
report found that the number of new infections in black gay and bisexual
men 13 to 29 years old is roughly twice that of white or Hispanic gay
men in the same age group.

"The house has been on fire for African American gay men for many
years," says Mark Cloutier, chief executive of the San Francisco AIDS
Foundation. "It keeps spreading, and we aren't bringing the fire corps
to it."

The new analysis - based on 2006 figures, the latest available - also
shows that among Hispanic men who have sex with other men, most new
infections are occurring in the 13-29 age group. Overall, white gay men
account for almost half the number of new HIV cases with most of them
among white men 30 to 39 years old, followed by those 40 to 49 years
old.

Additionally, the report found that while there were fewer new HIV
infections among black women than black men, black women are
disproportionately affected by HIV compared with women of other races,
with an incidence rate nearly 15 times as high as white women and nearly
four times as high as Hispanic women.

The study augments a CDC report last month that documented a
significantly higher-than-expected rate of new HIV infections in the
United States in 2006 - 56,300 actual infections compared with the
estimate of 40,000.

"In short, we learned that the HIV epidemic is worse than was previously
known," said Dr. Kevin Fenton, director of the CDC's National Center for
HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD and TB Prevention during a telephone news
conference Thursday.

He said the report will help public health experts more directly target
prevention efforts to "ensure that HIV infection doesn't become a rite
of passage for young gay and bisexual men."

"That means we need to reach each new generation ... early in their
lives to provide the knowledge and skills they'll need to prevent
infection," Fenton said. "At the same time, we must develop strategies
for keeping (older gay men) HIV-free for life."

Dr. Richard Wolitski, acting director of the CDC's Division of HIV/AIDS
Prevention, said new infections can be attributed to such factors as
"lack of access to effective HIV prevention services and underestimation
of personal risk."

"Many younger men have not personally experienced the severity of the
early AIDS epidemic," he said.

Bay Area experts said the report underscores the critical need to
educate the young.

"For some time, we've tried to come up with strategies to get young
people to take fewer risks and to make smart decisions with their
partners," said Jimmy Loyce, executive director of the San
Francisco-based Black Coalition on AIDS. "Young people still believe
they are bulletproof - it happens to other people, not to them."

That's how Phillip Garcia felt when he was a teenager. Now 22, Garcia,
who is African American and Hispanic, learned in December that he is
HIV-positive.

He said he probably contracted the virus when he was 15 or 16, and
living in Texas, his home state.

"As I got further into my teens, I became more cautious and more
educated, but by then, it was too late," said Garcia, a freshman at UCSF
who is studying fashion design. "In the black and Latino communities,
there is a sense of machismo - a lot of men don't disclose that they are
having sex with other men. We need to better inform young people. Sexual
experimentation is beginning so early for a lot of kids. I don't think
the message is being delivered as strongly as it should be in school or
at home."

Ryan Fails said he never got the message when he was growing up in Ohio.
Nor did he pay much heed when he was in his early 20s and living in
Washington, D.C.

Fails, 27, who is white and African American, learned he had HIV two
years ago.

"In school, there was more focus on teen pregnancy and things like syphilis and crabs," said Fails, a San Francisco resident who worked as
a political consultant. "We really didn't go into AIDS. I never thought
that AIDS applied to me."

E-mail Elizabeth Fernandez at efernandez@sfchronicle.com
.

This article appeared on page A - 6 of the San Francisco Chronicle



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