HIV
Is Spreading in New York City at Three Times the National Rate HIV
is spreading in New York City at three times the national rate an incidence
of 72 new infections for every 100,000 people, compared with 23 per 100,000 nationally
according to a study released on August 26, 2008 by the New York City Department
of Health and Mental Hygiene.
The
findings, based on a new formula developed by the federal Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention, estimated that 4,762 New Yorkers contracted HIV in 2006,
the most precise estimate the city had ever offered. But the city stressed that
because the method of estimating infections was new, it could not be said definitively
whether the number of new infections in the city had increased or decreased from
previous years.
Blacks, and men who have sex with other men, are the groups
at greatest risk of contracting HIV, the study found. A summary of the new data
follows:
Men accounted
for 76 percent of new HIV infections and women for 25 percent. (The figures exceed
100 percent because of rounding.)
Blacks made
up 46 percent of the newly infected; Hispanics, 32 percent; and whites, 21 percent.
(Figures for other racial or ethnic groups were not provided.)
Those under
age 20 made up 4 percent of the newly infected; those 20 to 29 years old, 24 percent;
those 30 to 39 years old, 29 percent; those 40 to 49 years old, 29 percent; and
those 50 and older, 15 percent.
Sex between
men was the main cause in 50 percent of new infections; high-risk heterosexual
sex in 22 percent; intravenous drug use in 8 percent; and unknown or uncertain
causes in 18 percent.
Manhattan accounted
for 35 percent of new infections; Brooklyn, 26 percent; the Bronx, 19 percent;
and Queens, 17 percent.
As
the health department has repeatedly noted, gay minority men were particularly
at risk. For example, of new HIV infections among men under age 30 who have sex
with men, 77 percent were in black or Hispanic men, as were 59 percent of new
HIV infections among men ages 30 to 50 who have sex with men. Overall,
the study found some interesting differences between national and local rates
of new HIV infections. Nearly two-thirds of the citys new infections occurred
in people 30 to 50 years old. Nationally, people under 30 accounted for 41 percent
of new infections, compared with 28 percent in New York City.Also, within New
York City, whites were infected at four times the national rate, Hispanics at
three times the national rate, and blacks at almost twice the national rate. The
health department said in a news release: The
analytic technique is new, and the estimates may be imprecise, but even a rough
gauge of HIV incidence is a valuable tool for understanding and combating
the spread of HIV. The health departments new estimate includes 2006
incidence figures for different age groups, racial groups and both genders. By
repeating the exercise for subsequent years, researchers may be able to discern
increases and decreases over time, and target their prevention efforts accordingly.
Over
the past year, the health department has warned that HIV infections among young
gay men have risen and that unsafe sex remains common. 8/29/08 Source
S Chan. HIV Is Spreading in New York City at Three Times the National
Rate, a Study Finds. New York Times. August 27, 2008.
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