AIDS was once thought to mainly affect middle-class, often white gay men living in urban areas. However, because states like New York offer free health care to uninsured or underinsured residents who are HIV positive, as opposed to limited and expensive care in the South, "today, the face of AIDS is black or Latino, poor, often rural—and
Southern," Teresa Wiltz reports for Stateline. (Associated Press photo: Sterling Williams hammers in markers representing the 3,423 people in Shelby County, Tennessee, who have died from AIDS.)
"Southern states now have the highest rates of new HIV diagnoses, the
largest percentage of people living with the disease, and the most
people dying from it, according to Rainey Campbell, executive director
of the Southern AIDS Coalition, a non-profit group serving the 16 Southern states and Washington, D.C.," Wiltz writes. "Fifty percent of all new HIV cases are in the South. The HIV infection rate among African-American and Latina women in the
South now rivals that of sub-Saharan Africa. In some Southern states,
black women account for more than 80 percent of new HIV diagnoses among
women."
"States in the South have the least expansive Medicaid programs and the
strictest eligibility requirements to qualify for assistance, which
prevents people living with HIV/AIDS from getting care, according to a
Southern AIDS Coalition report," Wiltz writes. "In the South, Campbell said, people
living with HIV have to reach disability status before they qualify for
aid. This is significant, because nationally the vast majority of
HIV/AIDS patients rely on Medicaid for their health insurance, according
to research conducted by the Morehouse College of Medicine."
The nine deep South States with the highest rates of new
HIV/AIDS diagnoses—Alabama, Georgia, Florida, Louisiana, Mississippi,
North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee and Texas—have all refused to expand Medicaid under federal health reform, Wiltz writes. "Those states also have the
highest fatality rates from HIV in the country, according to the
Southern AIDS Coalition."
A White House Council of Economic Advisers study found "that if the nine
deep South States expanded Medicaid coverage, more than $65 billion in
federal funding would flood those states, and an additional four million
people would have insurance coverage," Wiltz writes. Campbell told Wiltz, “Jurisdictions throughout the South fail at nearly every level of HIV
prevention and care, ignoring proven strategies that could help to
address the uncontrolled epidemic and alarming death rate."
Part of the problem is the Southern attitude towards AIDS, Wiltz writes. "The escalating HIV rates are the result of a perfect storm of social
factors including poverty, racism, persistent anti-gay attitudes,
increasing homelessness and a lack of transportation in rural areas. In the South, AIDS still has the taint of the plague. Fear of being
judged and ostracized keeps some people away from clinics and the care
they need. Those who don’t know they’re infected will infect others,
creating what the University of Alabama’s (Dr. Michael) Saag calls a 'silent
epidemic.'” (Read more)
A digest of events, trends, issues, ideas and journalism from and about rural America, by the Institute for Rural Journalism, based at the University of Kentucky. Links may expire, require subscription or go behind pay walls. Please send news and knowledge you think would be useful to benjy.hamm@uky.edu.
Monday, September 08, 2014
Rural southern minorities new face of HIV/AIDS; states that failed to expand Medicaid hit hardest
Labels:
AIDS,
diseases,
health care,
health reform,
HIV,
Obamacare,
Patient Protection and Affordable Health Care Act,
poverty,
rural health,
rural-urban disparities,
sexually transmitted diseases
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