Saturday, May 30, 2009

Women: The New Face of AIDS

While total HIV diagnoses in the U.S. dropped from an all-time high of 150,000 cases annually in the mid-80s to 40,000 cases today, women's numbers have gone in reverse. In 1992, American women accounted for 14% of people living with AIDS; today that number has jumped to nearly 25%.

Globally, the numbers are pandemic. More adult women are living with HIV/AIDS than ever before, nearly 50% of infected people worldwide. In countries throughout the world, women are the fastest-growing population of new HIV infections, and in some places women have surpassed men. In sub-Saharan Africa, for every 10 men living with HIV, there are 14 women living with the virus.

In 2004, 78% of new HIV infections among women were the result of heterosexual contact.
And promiscuity? A recent large-scale study out of London of 59 countries found that there is no link between promiscuity and sexually transmitted diseases. Women are getting AIDS because of economic and social inequalities. Most women who contract HIV worldwide are in monogamous relationships, victimized by partners who have unprotected sex with prostitutes and then bring the disease back home, where a woman is unaware or unable to negotiate condom use. It's not promiscuity, but rather a lack of education and resources that increases the rate of HIV infection.

At home, African-American women are suffering the consequences of poverty, inadequate health care, discrimination, and unsafe sex. African-American women are 20-times more likely to contract HIV than white women, accounting for 67% of new diagnoses; white women account for 15%. Yet black women constitute 13% of the population as a whole, while white women make up 66%.

So why are women at such high risk? The answer is part biological, in that women are twice as likely as men to contract HIV during vaginal intercourse, but mostly sociological.

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