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- Path: sparky!uunet!olivea!sgigate!sgi!cdp!NFMail!nyxfer.uucp!ww
- From: ww@nyxfer.UUCP
- Newsgroups: alt.activism
- Subject: AIDS Report Reveals Deep Racism
- Message-ID: <yLi1XB22w165w@nyxfer.uucp>
- Date: 27 Jan 93 04:51:00 GMT
- Sender: Notesfile to Usenet Gateway <notes@igc.apc.org>
- Lines: 104
- Nf-ID: #N:yLi1XB22w165w@nyxfer.uucp:-813409048:000:4268
- Nf-From: nyxfer.uucp!ww Jan 26 20:51:00 1993
-
-
- Subject: AIDS Report Reveals Deep Racism
- From: nyxfer!ww (Workers World Service)
-
-
- Via NY Transfer News Collective * All the News that Doesn't Fit
-
-
- AIDS REPORT REVEALS DEEP RACISM
-
- By Shelley Ettinger
-
- The National Commission on AIDS has acknowledged that racism is a
- key factor contributing to the spread of the AIDS crisis.
-
- According to the commission's latest report, released Jan. 10,
- African Americans and Latinos now make up 46 percent of people
- with AIDS. That is more than double their proportion in the U.S.
- population.
-
- Some 160,000 people in the U.S. have died of AIDS--one every
- seven minutes. One person is newly infected with the HIV virus
- every minute. By 1995 the total number of AIDS deaths is expected
- to have doubled.
-
- Now that the Centers for Disease Control have finally expanded
- the AIDS definition to include the illnesses most common in women
- with AIDS, the official statistics on AIDS in the Black and
- Latino communities are expected to skyrocket.
-
- Yet the government is cutting back rather than expanding funding
- for AIDS programs. People with AIDS, activists and advocates say
- the U.S. government is guilty of murder. And they're watching
- closely to see whether, how and how quickly President Bill
- Clinton moves to back up his promises for AIDS action.
-
- DYING DISPROPORTIONATELY
-
- In 1990 and 1991 AIDS cases increased 11.5 percent among Latinos
- and 10.5 percent among African Americans. Of the estimated 1
- million HIV-positive people, fully half are Black and Latino.
-
- This pattern holds true both among gay men, who constitute the
- majority of people with AIDS, and heterosexuals. On Jan. 9 San
- Francisco held a citywide moment of silence to mark its 10,000th
- AIDS death--a Latino gay man.
-
- Most women and children with AIDS are Black and Latina. The AIDS
- death rate is 10 times higher for Black women, and eight times
- higher for Latinas, than for white women. In New York, with the
- most AIDS cases in the country, the disease is the number-one
- cause of death among reproductive age Black and Latina women.
-
- Debra Frazier-Howe of New York's Black Leadership Commission on
- AIDS told the Black community newspaper Amsterdam News that
- "society's racism is affecting prevention-funding efforts among
- people of color."
-
- "As this disease gets more Black and Brown," Frazier-Howe said,
- "the funding gets cut back."
-
- In fact, the new New York state budget includes a freeze on AIDS
- funding. The federal Centers for Disease Control have slashed
- funding for prevention and education. Congress also cut National
- Institutes of Health funds for clinical AIDS research.
-
- POVERTY, RACISM
-
- Frazier-Howe and other Black and Latino AIDS activists charge the
- government continues to virtually ignore the extent of the crisis
- in the oppressed communities. They also tie the situation to the
- economic crisis, the lack of health care, and conditions of
- poverty and desperation.
-
- In this racist society joblessness and homelessness hit Third
- World communities hardest. For example, the AIDS Commission
- estimates that up to half of all people with AIDS are homeless.
- Many, possibly most, are Third World people.
-
- The commission's report charges the federal government "has
- virtually ignored the AIDS housing crisis" and "has resisted
- almost all efforts by community-based organizations ... to meet
- the housing needs of people with HIV disease."
-
- People of color are also less likely to have health insurance.
- Because of that, they are diagnosed later, if at all. So the new
- figures may actually understate the extent of the AIDS crisis.
-
- AIDS in the oppressed communities is also a direct result of the
- lack of funding for drug treatment programs. AIDS Commission
- members say universal access to drug treatment on demand is
- crucial to stopping the spread of AIDS.
-
- -30-
-
- Copyright Workers World Service: Permission to reprint granted if
- source is cited. For more info contact Workers World, 46 West 21st
- Street, New York, NY 10010; e-mail: ww%nyxfer@igc.apc.org or
- workers@mcimail.com.
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