July 24, 2012
US Study Finds High HIV Infection in Black Gay Men
Jason St. Amand READ TIME: 1 MIN.
WASHINGTON (AP) - New research shows black gay men are becoming infected with the AIDS virus at higher rates than their white counterparts, sparking urgent calls to address this growing part of the epidemic.
A study funded by the U.S. National Institutes of Health tracked black gay and bisexual men in six cities, and found the rate of new infections is 2.8 percent a year. That's 50 percent higher than is seen in white men who have sex with men.
Worse, among those 30 and younger, nearly 6 percent a year were becoming infected. The authors said those rates rival some parts of sub-Saharan Africa.
The study didn't measure national prevalence of HIV in this population, but the government has long called HIV among young black gay men alarming.