Planet Aid Post For the Environment, For People
Vol. 1 No. 2
THE END OF AIDS?
T
oday we stand at a vital threshold. Within our grasp is the opportunity to end 30 years of suffering and death due to HIV/AIDS. Individuals and communities around the world have been mobilized toward prevention, and existing treatment can prolong life for many years. While we celebrate these successes, we reject any modicum of complacency. Now is the time to double down and finish the job. The world is fighting AIDS today just as it had previously fought to eliminate smallpox. For centuries, smallpox was a feared scourge that killed nearly half of those infected and maimed those that survived. A worldwide campaign to end the disease began in earnest in the late 1960s and by 1980 smallpox was officially eradicated. Planet Aid anticipates the day when AIDS, too, will be stopped. To this end, we have been helping mobilize communities around the globe to increase HIV/AIDS prevention and care. With this special issue of the Planet Aid Post, we focus on the battle ahead. We also extend a warm welcome to those joining us on the forefront of this work, who are participants in the 19th annual International AIDS Conference.
Community organizers hold a rally in Mozambique. See related stories on pages 2-5.
Beyond the AIDS Stereotype AIDS is today perceived as a problem for poor countries. However, there are still areas in the United States where the disease has tightened its grip. In certain districts of Washington, D.C., for example, the rate of HIV and AIDS is so high as to match that of developing nations. In 2007, the District of Columbia made headlines in reporting a far higher rate of AIDS diagnoses than any other area in the U.S. In 2009, the capital city’s estimated rate of AIDS diagnoses declined but remained the highest in the nation. In black males, HIV prevalence was a startling 7.1%. Contrary to the stereotype of HIV being primarily transmitted among gay males, heterosexual contact has been a leading mode of transmission in the area. The 2010 statistics indicated a decline in the rate of new HIV and AIDS cases, but the disease remains at epidemic levels. The D.C. Department of Health reported the latest overall HIV prevalence at 3.2% (UNAIDS defines a generalized epidemic as having a prevalence of at least 1% ). A strong association with poverty More than one million cases of AIDS have been reported in the U.S. since the beginning of the epidemic, with 85% occurring in major metropolitan areas. Recent studies have clearly shown a strong correlation between poverty rates and HIV/AIDS. In 2010 the CDC released the results of a study that showed HIV rates among people below the federal poverty threshold were 2.4%, which is approximately double that of those earning an income above the poverty threshold. The research was conducted in high-poverty neighborhoods in 23 U.S. cities and involved 9,000 heterosexual adults aged 18 to 50.
CONTENTS
TCE’s Goal: Total Control ............................................................................ 2 Mobilizing a New Generation in Mozambique ................................. 4 USDA and Planet AId Team Up ........................................................... 6 Planet AId Post Makes its Nationwide Debut ..................................... 6 CBS’s Big Bang Theory Features Planet Aid ............................................ 6 A Single Mom’s Career Selling Used Clothing ................................... 7
From: Paul Denning, MD, MPH and Elizabeth DiNenno, PhD, Centers for Disease Control, Communities in Crisis: Is There a Generalized HIV Epidemic in Impoverished Urban Areas of the United States? August 2010. Data Source: NHBS-HET-1 2006−2007.
The Early Story of HIV/AIDS Where did HIV/AIDS start and how did it become a killer epidemic? These are questions authors Craig Timberg and Daniel Halperin explore in their insightful book Tinderbox. The story begins with geneticists tracing the origin of Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) to a simian (ape) virus (or SIV) in remote Cameroon. Because viruses are opportunisitic, they adapt and spread given the right chance. SIV’s chance came in the late 1800s with the frenzied colonization of West Africa. The virus most likely began its escape from the deep jungle when, according to the authors, a hunter butchered an SIV infected ape and in the process cut his finger. Once in the bloodstream SIV mutated to HIV and began to spread slowly through the merchants and explorers blazing trade routes in search of new riches. It took nearly a century for the disease to blossom into a full-blown epidemic. Nevertheless, as Timberg and Halperin indicate, “Without ‘the Scramble for Africa,’ it’s hard to see how HIV could have made it out of southeastern Cameroon to eventually kill tens of millions of people.” For more information see www. tinderboxbook.com.