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Know your HIV status

12/16/2016, 9:02 p.m.
I’m very proud of what we’ve accomplished together over the past eight years. Here and around the world, over 18 ...
Marc H. Morial

Marc H. Morial

I’m very proud of what we’ve accomplished together over the past eight years. Here and around the world, over 18 million people are receiving the treatment and care they need — millions of infections have been prevented. What once seemed like an impossible dream, the dream of an AIDS-free generation, is within our grasp. But we know that there’s work to do to banish stigma, save lives and empower everyone to reach their potential…Today we remember those we’ve lost, and reflect on the extraordinary progress we’ve won. We give thanks to the heroes on the front lines of this fight and tomorrow we get back out there, because together, we can do this.” — President Obama’s video message for World AIDS Day on Dec. 1

On June 5, 1981, the Centers for Disease Control published its weekly Morbidity and Mortality Report. The report, which described five cases of previously healthy, young gay men in Los Angeles infected with a rare lung infection, eventually would become recognized as the first official report on HIV/AIDS in the United States.

Since the start of the epidemic 35 years ago, an estimated 35 million people have died from AIDS-related illnesses around the globe. In the United States alone, more than 700,000 people have died an AIDS death since the beginning of the epidemic.  

Thirty-five years ago, testing HIV-positive was an automatic death sentence. But today, as a result of targeted HIV prevention efforts, rapid testing, advances in treatment and increased access to life-saving health care, what was once a death sentence in many cases, is now a chronic disease that can be lived with and managed.

More than 1.2 million people in the United States are living with HIV, according to the CDC. New infections are down from their peaks in the 1980s and 1990s, with the CDC estimating that new HIV diagnoses have fallen by 19 percent from 2005 to 2014. The death rate from AIDS-related illnesses has dropped by 30 percent, approaching our nation’s 2020 target rate.

As we celebrate those numbers, we must keep in mind that the epidemic is far from over and that our progress in combating this disease has been uneven and remains riddled with all-too-familiar racial and socioeconomic disparities. African-Americans and Latinos continue to bear the disproportionate burden of HIV infection in our nation.

In 2015, African-Americans, who represent 12 percent of the U.S. population, accounted for 45 percent of HIV diagnoses, while Latinos, who represent 18 percent of the U.S. population, accounted for 24 percent of HIV diagnoses.

Regionally, the South is experiencing higher infection rates, illness and deaths than any other U.S. region, with the Southern states accounting for close to half —an estimated 44 percent — of all people living with an HIV diagnosis in the United States.

For those of us on the front lines of the battle against this epidemic, these numbers are a call to action to put an end to HIV with leadership and commitment that amplifies our impact in all communities ravaged by this disease. It is also a vivid reminder that health, health care, disease and its dissemination and eradication do not exist in a cultural or social vacuum. The link between health, social and economic equity and our vision of an AIDS-free generation is real and borne out by the shocking rate of HIV/AIDS in communities of color and vulnerable populations. Given the disproportionate impact of the epidemic in communities of color, effectively addressing HIV/AIDS in the United States also means addressing poverty and a lack of access to health care.

Here is a final sobering statistic: 1 in 8 people living with HIV in the United States are unaware of their status. We cannot fight what we don’t know. We need leadership from service providers, advocates, doctors and government officials, but all of us, have a role to play on the journey towards an AIDS-free generation. Protect yourself and reduce the risk of spreading HIV, or any STD, by getting tested and knowing your status. We must all commit to keeping our communities healthy.

The writer is president of the National Urban League.