<momalley10@yahoo.com> wrote in message
> There will be a protest rally in Tampa on Thursday,
Main Category: HIV / AIDS News
Article Date: 11 Sep 2006 - 1:00 PDT
Although there has been progress in recent years, blacks in south Florida are more than three
times as likely to be HIV-positive than whites in the region, according to a report from the
Florida Department of Health, the Miami Herald reports (Goldstein, Miami Herald, 9/7).
The report, titled "Silence is Death: The Crisis of HIV/AIDS in Florida's Black Communities,"
looks at 20 counties in the state with at least 600 reported HIV/AIDS cases ("Silence is Death:
The Crisis of HIV/AIDS in Florida's Black Communities," 9/5). HIV prevalence is six times as
high among blacks as whites in Florida, down from about 11 times as high in 1999, Spencer Lieb,
a senior state epidemiologist who co-authored the report, said. In Miami-Dade County, 2.3% of
blacks are HIV-positive, compared with 0.7% of whites and 0.6% of Latinos, the report says.
In Broward County, the figures are 1.7%, 0.5% and 0.5%, respectively (Miami Herald, 9/7). "It
is unacceptable that for 15 years in a row, HIV/AIDS has been the leading cause of death among
black Floridians aged 25 to 44 years," state health department Secretary M. Rony Francois said,
adding, "It is time for us to mobilize communities and all those who have a stake in the
epidemic to find innovative ways to reduce the associated morbidity and mortality."
The report makes recommendations for fighting HIV/AIDS among blacks in Florida -- including
raising awareness about the disease among blacks, promoting HIV testing, increasing access to
HIV prevention and care, encouraging communities and local governments to increase their
response to HIV/AIDS among blacks and initiating development of a plan to address the epidemic
(FDOH release, 9/5).
The Miami-Dade County Health Department has launched new efforts targeting black men who have
sex with men alongside current programs targeting the broader black community in the county,
Evelyn Ullah, who runs the department's HIV/AIDS program, said. In addition, the World AIDS Day
committee in Broward County plans to hold World AIDS Day events this year in a predominantly
black neighborhood that is home to the county's highest number of new HIV cases, according to
Jean Starkey, who chairs the committee (Miami Herald, 9/7).
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