|
|
Way too scared now to test....AIDS leading cause
#211336 - 10/11/06 06:30 AM
|
Reply
|
Quote
|
|
|
of death in San Francisco. The article is posted right on the main page of The Body.
Post Extras:
|
|
|
|
Sorry...sounds like a death sentence to me.
AIDS Main Killer of Men in San Francisco
October 10, 2006
Despite the 1996 advent of highly active antiretroviral therapy, 2003 data from the San Francisco Department of Public Health show that AIDS remained the number-one cause of death for men ages 15-54 in the city. A DPH epidemiologist believes it is most likely also the leading cause of mortality among gay men ages 15-64. That assessment was shared by some AIDS advocates, who said nearly 90 percent of the city's AIDS cases are gay and bisexual men.
Ling Hsu, co-director of DPH's HIV/AIDS Statistics and Epidemiology section, said the numbers translate to 52 HIV/AIDS deaths per 100,000 male residents in the 15-54 age group. In the state and nationally, HIV/AIDS is about the sixth-ranking cause of death for males ages 15-54, said Hsu. The high HIV/AIDS prevalence among gay men in the city makes it "reasonable to assume that HIV/AIDS would be the #1 cause of death among gay men ages 15-64 ... ." But Hsu emphasized that while the city has an estimate of its gay population, it does not have mortality figures grouped by sexuality.
HIV/AIDS decreased as an underlying cause of death among those infected from 88 percent between 1992-1995 to 72 percent in 2000-2003, according to the DPH 2005 HIV/AIDS report. During 2000-2003, non-AIDS cancers (6.7 percent), and heart and liver disease (5.2 percent and 2.3 percent, respectively) increased as a proportion of causes of mortality among those with AIDS. Cumulatively, most AIDS deaths were in those ages 30-39. In recent years, however, most AIDS deaths occurred among those ages 40-49.
"I think people haven't made a newsworthy piece of it because people assumed it was true," said Steven Tierney, San Francisco AIDS Foundation's executive director. "I think people have a right to know that; it might have some impact in people's decision-making."
Back to other news for October 10, 2006
Search the Newsroom archive
Excerpted from: Bay Area Reporter (San Francisco) 10.05.2006; Matthew S. Bajko
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
This article is a part of the publication CDC HIV, STD, TB Prevention News Update.
Our thanks to U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which provided this article to The Body.
Post Extras:
|
|
|
|
All the more reason to test. Knowing your status is a GOOD thing. HIV doesn't go away if you ignore it. It just kills you.
Post Extras:
|
|
Survivor
|
|
Legend
|
|
|
|
|
Reged: 10/30/05
|
|
Posts: 3256
|
|
Loc: Get off the fence and live again!
|
|
|
Rats... Just when I thought I was going to live, I am going to die again... Well that just sucks.....
Post Extras:
|
|
1 registered and 43 anonymous users are browsing this forum.
Moderator: TheBody, bogart, crabman, riverprincess, kicker
|
Permissions
You cannot start new topics
You cannot reply to topics
HTML is enabled
UBBCode is enabled
|
Thread views: 1654
|
|
|
|
|
|

UBB.threads™ 6.2.3
| |