Map of Confederacy Is A Near Mirror of Highest HIV Rates in U.S.

In News by AHF

A comparison of maps of the 13 Confederate States with a heat map of states, cities and locales with the highest rates of HIV in the US suggests entrenched, widespread health disparities in the South.

As debate unfolds around the public display of the Confederate flag, AHF—which has free HIV/AIDS treatment clinics in nearly half of the former Confederate States—examined current HIV incidence in the US and found a striking overlap of HIV case rates within Southern states of the former Confederacy.

WASHINGTON (June 26, 2015) As AIDS Healthcare Foundation (AHF) prepares to host HIV testing events in twenty states to honor National HIV Testing Day on Saturday, June 27th, a side-by-side comparison of a map detailing the geographic regions with the highest rates of HIV in the United States and a map of the 13 states of the Confederacy shows a strong correlation that with long-documented, widespread public health disparities that continue to plague the Southeast.

Indeed, while New York Times columnist Paul Krugman has already pointed out that only one former member of the Confederacy has expanded Medicaid coverage for low-income people under President Obama’s Affordable Care Act, the concentration of today’s HIV/AIDS epidemic closely follows the map of the Confederate States of the United States as it stood in 1861, when the Battle of Fort Sumter in South Carolina ignited the Civil War. Given that the Census Bureau has reported that over half (57%) of the black American population is concentrated in the southern states and that black Americans are 55% more likely to be uninsured than white Americans, the lack of equal access to quality medical care—including routine HIV testing and medical treatment—underscore the urgent need for coordinated action to address these enduring health disparities and fight the AIDS epidemic sweeping through minority communities in the South.

“Today, income inequality, stigma, fear, and lack of equal access to healthcare are just a few of the variables that contribute to exploding HIV/AIDS rates in the Southeast—particularly among young, black, gay or bisexual men,” said Michael Weinstein, president of AHF.  “The danger of the epidemic is compounded by the lack of routine HIV testing programs at healthcare facilities that help detect the virus at early stages.  These factors were named in national headlines generated by a WABE public radio story that reported that in Atlanta, one of the most populous cities in the Southeast, nearly a third of newly diagnosed people have already progressed from HIV infection to a clinical diagnosis of AIDS.  We need to mobilize on all fronts and work together as a community to address these disparities in health care.”

“While I and the National Action Network have fought to bring down the confederate flag, I will also join the AIDS Healthcare Foundation to continue the fight,” said Reverend Al Sharpton, president of National Action Network. “We not only need to bring down the flag but need to bring down health policies that minimize the value of Black lives.”

AIDS Healthcare Foundation (AHF) has free HIV/AIDS treatment clinics and testing and outreach programs in six former states of the Confederacy: Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, South Carolina and Texas.

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