Today
in the United States the HIV/AIDS epidemic represents a
growing and persistent health threat to women, especially
young women and women of color. Early in the epidemic, HIV
infection and AIDS were diagnosed for relatively few women.
In 2002, HIV infection was the leading cause of death for
African American women aged 25 to 34 years and was among
the four leading causes of death for African American women
aged 20 to 24 and 35 to 44 years, as well as Hispanic women
aged 35 to 44 years. Overall, in the same year, HIV infection
was the 6th leading cause of death among all women aged
25 to 34 years and the 4th leading cause of death among
all women aged 35 to 44 years.
STATISTICS
Yes,
statistics can be very boring. However, if you are a woman
or know one, these numbers are very real.
(Statistics are not yet available for 2005).
-- (Janruary 2006)
Cumulative
Effects of HIV Infection and AIDS (through 2003)
Through 2003, 170,679 women were given a diagnosis of AIDS,
a number that represents about one fifth of the total AIDS
diagnoses.
An estimated 81,864 women with AIDS died. These women account
for 16% of the deaths of persons with AIDS.
Women with AIDS made up an increasing part of the epidemic.
In 1992, women accounted for an estimated 14% of adults
and adolescents living with AIDS]. By the end of 2003, this
percentage had grown to 22%.
According to a recent CDC study of more than 19,500 patients
in 10 US cities, HIV-infected women were 12% less likely
than infected men to receive prescriptions for the most
effective treatments for HIV infection
AIDS
in 2003
An estimated 11,498 women had a diagnosis of AIDS, a number
that represents 27% of the AIDS diagnoses.
The rate of AIDS diagnoses for African American women was
approximately 25 times the rate for white women and 4 times
the rate for Hispanic women.
African American and Hispanic women together represented
about 25% of all US women, yet they account for 83% of AIDS
diagnoses reported in 2003.
An estimated 88,815 women were living with AIDS, representing
22% of the estimated people living with AIDS. Diagnoses
of AIDS in women, by race/ethnicity, 2003 (Note: excludes
women from U.S. dependencies, possessions and associated
nations.