HIV/AIDS Rate in Washington D.C.
Hits 3%
Considered a 'Severe' Epidemic, Every Mode of Transmission
Is Increasing, City Study Finds

March 15, 2009
At least 3 percent of District residents
have HIV or AIDS, a total that far surpasses the 1 percent
threshold that constitutes a "generalized and severe"
epidemic, according to a report scheduled to be released by
health officials tomorrow.
That translates into 2,984 residents per
every 100,000 over the age of 12 -- or 15,120 -- according
to the 2008 epidemiology report by the District's HIV/AIDS
office.
"Our rates are higher than West Africa,"
said Shannon L. Hader, director of the District's HIV/AIDS
Administration, who once led the Federal Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention's work in Zimbabwe. "They're on
par with Uganda and some parts of Kenya."
"We have every mode of transmission"
-- men having sex with men, heterosexual and injected drug
use -- "going up, all on the rise, and we have to deal
with them," Hader said.
In addition to the epidemiology report, the
city is also releasing a study on heterosexual behavior tomorrow.
That report, funded by the CDC, was conducted by the George
Washington University School of Health and Health Services.
Among its findings: Almost half of those
who had connections to the parts of the city with the highest
AIDS prevalence and poverty rates said they had overlapping
sexual partners within the past 12 months, three in five said
they were aware of their own HIV status, and three in 10 said
they had used a condom the last time they had sex.
Together, the reports offer a sobering assessment
in a city that for years has stumbled in combating HIV and
AIDS and is just beginning to regain its footing. A more accurate
accounting of the crisis offers a chance to contain what is
largely a preventable disease.
So urgent is the concern that the HIV/AIDS
Administration took the relatively rare step of couching the
city's infections in a percentage, harkening to 1992, when
San Francisco, around the height of its epidemic, announced
that 4 percent of its population was HIV positive. But the
report also cautions that "we know that the true number
of residents currently infected and living with HIV is certainly
higher."
The District's report found a 22 percent
increase in HIV and AIDS cases from the 12,428 reported at
the end of 2006, touching every race and sex across population
and neighborhoods, with an epidemic level in all but one of
the eight wards. Black men, with an infection rate of nearly
7 percent, carry the weight of the disease, according to the
report, which also underscores that the District's HIV and
AIDS population is aging. Almost 1 in 10 residents between
the ages of 40 and 49 has the virus.
The report notes that "this growing
population will have significant implications on the District's
health care system" as residents face chronic medical
problems associated with aging and fighting a disease that
compromises the immune system.
Men having sex with men has remained the
disease's leading mode of transmission. Heterosexual transmission
and injection drug use closely follow, the report says. Three
percent of black women carry the virus, partly a result of
the increase in heterosexual transmissions.
"This is very, very depressing news,
especially considering HIV's profound impact on minority communities,"
said Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institutes of
Health's program on infectious diseases. "And remember:
The city's numbers are just based on people who've gotten
tested."
Ron Simmons, who is black, gay and HIV positive,
said he's not shocked by the study's findings. "You have
a high incidence of HIV among African Americans, and a lot
of African Americans live in the city," said Simmons,
who is a member of a black gay support group. "D.C. also
has a high number of gay men, and HIV is high among gay black
men."
Charlene Cotton, a D.C. resident who got
an HIV positive diagnosis five years ago, said breaking the
taboo on discussing HIV is the key to moving forward. "You
need to start at home and talk about it," Cotton said.
"It's so hush-hush."
Mayor Adrian M. Fenty (D) said he is aware
that some advocates have called on elected officials and others
to more aggressively and publicly address the crisis. He praised
the city's recent efforts, however, and expressed his frustration
about the struggle ahead.
"In order to solve an issue as complex
as HIV and AIDS, you have to step up," he said. "It's
the mayor and certainly other elected officials. But it's
also the community. You have this problem affecting us, and
you tell people how serious it is and it literally goes in
one ear and out the other."
David Catania (I-At Large), chairman of the
D.C. Council's health committee, said that although the District's
testing and monitoring have improved in the past two years,
the AIDS office is still playing catch-up. The city was in
the forefront of the crisis when it created the office in
1986, but it fell far behind. Hader took control in 2007.
She is its 12th director and the third in five years.
"Frankly, there can be no excuse for
the state of the HIV/AIDS Administration that I found in 2005,"
Catania said. "I cannot speak to why it was not a priority
previously. For years prior to 2005, mayors and previous individuals
allowed things to exist in an unacceptable way. And I do blame
this government for part of the epidemic we're confronting."
Until recently, the District's AIDS office
lacked a fully staffed surveillance unit to collect, analyze
and distribute data. Inevitably, the office lost credibility,
and although it has received millions in federal and local
funds -- $95 million this year -- some care providers questioned
whether resources were being properly allocated.
Critics also say congressional control over
the District had restricted the AIDS office's ability to combat
the virus among drug injection users by banning the use of
local tax dollars for a needle exchange program. After almost
a decade, the ban was lifted last year.
The study is the most precise count to date,
according to the authors. The document is an update of a breakthrough
2007 report, which brought into clearer focus a picture of
a city in the grip of a complex and "modern epidemic"
that had traveled from a mostly gay population to the general
one and disproportionately hit blacks.
For years, District HIV/AIDS workers depended
on estimates that put the rate at 1 of 20 living with HIV
and 1 of 50 living with AIDS.
The current study notes that its tracking
occurred as the city made a switch from a code-based counting
system to a name-based one. The surveillance unit interviewed
medical providers to find unreported cases, pressed providers
who did not consistently report to the administration and
searched databases for unreported cases.
More than 4 percent of blacks in the city
are known to have HIV, along with almost 2 percent of Latinos
and 1.4 percent of whites. More than three-quarters -- 76
percent -- of the HIV infected are black, 70 percent are men
and 70 percent are age 40 and older.
Heterosexual sex was the principal mode of
transmission for blacks with the disease, 33 percent. Men
having sex with men was the chief mode of transmission for
white residents, 78 percent; and Latinos, 49 percent. Black
women represent more than a quarter of HIV cases in the District,
and most, about 58 percent, were infected through heterosexual
sex. About a quarter of black women were infected through
drug use.
The companion study, "Heterosexual Relationships
and HIV in Washington, D.C.," is a detailed look at those
whose social networks include individuals at high risk of
infection and aims to analyze people's choices and actions
before they set foot in a clinic or get HIV.
The 750-participant study targeted four areas
in wards 1, 2, 5, 6, 7 and 8 with both high rates of AIDS
and poverty. Salaries of a majority of participants -- 60
percent -- were under $10,000 yearly; a similar percentage
had never been married; and 43 percent were unemployed.
The survey's methodology -- interviewing
those with connections to high-risk networks rather than those
who exhibit high-risk behavior themselves -- highlights a
shift in the direction by the CDC, which developed the survey
protocol.
There is good news in the AIDS office's report:
More people are getting HIV diagnoses early, while they are
still healthy, as a result of a policy of routine testing
implemented by the city in mid-2006. Publicly supported HIV
testing expanded by 70 percent.
Walter Smith, executive director of the DC
Appleseed Center for Law and Justice, praised the study but
also lamented that it did not offer more current data on new
infections. The report said that detailed information on new
HIV cases is not included because the transition from the
code-based tracking system to a name-based one takes five
years to be mature, according to the CDC.
"I'm not criticizing them for that,"
he said. "But we've had more testing, more needle exchange
programs. We don't have, at this moment, any understanding
about what impact the new programs have had."