BEIJING, March 9 (Xinhuanet) -- African Americans make up 13 percent of the U.S. population but account for nearly half of Americans living with HIV, and black men are nearly seven time more likely to diagnosed with the disease than white men, according to a U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention report
released Thursday.
The report also stated 40 percent of AIDS deaths and
61 percent of all new diagnoses of people aged 13-24 in America are black.
The report is based on 2001-2005 data. It does
not show a dramatic increase in the rate of HIV infection among African
Americans and it does show a significant decline in black mother-to-child
transmission of HIV.
Robert Janssen, director of the division of HIV/AIDS
prevention at CDC, said the report verifies an epidemic that affects the black
community disproportionately.
"What is beginning to happen is a recognition of the
severity of the problem," Janssen said in an interview on Thursday.
"Black men particularly are hard hit. The HIV
diagnosis rate among black men is seven times higher than among white men," he
said, adding men who have sex with men account for around half of those
cases.
In Washington, D.C., and Philadelphia around 3
percent of blacks are living with AIDS, a rate higher than Senegal's and on a
par with Cameroon in central African, he said.
Blacks do not engage in riskier sexual behavior than
other groups but high HIV rates meant African Americans who have sex with other
African Americans were more likely to contract HIV than people within other
ethnic groups, he said.
Federal allocations of money to the CDC for fighting
AIDS within the black community has increased 10-fold since 1988 and now stands
at 30 million dollars, Janssen said.
The CDC was expanding prevention services, increasing
opportunities for diagnoses and encouraging all blacks to know their HIV status,
developing new interventions and mobilizing broader action within the black
community, he said.
Black leaders have been criticized for being slower
to mobilize against HIV and AIDS than leaders of other groups such as gay whites
and Janssen said stigma over sexual issues within the black community had been
damaging.
The reasons why the black community had not provided
the necessary leadership over the issue are complex, according to Ivory Brown,
an African American entertainment, sports and family lawyer who has written
about the issue.
"There is a silence. I don't want to say the African
American community is not an open community. We are more prone to adopt people
and issues that are cast-offs to the rest of society," she said.
Brown was a contributor to "Not In My Family," a book
edited by Gil Robertson, in which dozens of black celebrities, politicians,
civil rights leaders, academics and others write essays about AIDS in the black
community.
(Agencies)