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HIV/AIDS Among Youth

August 2008

Young people in the United States are at persistent risk for HIV infection. This risk is especially notable for youth of minority races and ethnicities. Continual prevention outreach and education efforts, including programs on abstinence and delaying the initiation of sex, are required as new generations replace the generations that benefited from earlier prevention strategies. Unless otherwise noted, this fact sheet defines youth, or young people, as persons who are 13-24 years of age.


Statistics

The following are based on data from the 35 areas with long-term, confidential name-based HIV reporting.*

Age of Persons With HIV Infection or AIDS Diagnosed During 2004

Age of Persons With HIV Infection or AIDS Diagnosed During 2004

Note: Based on data from 35 areas with long-term, confidential name-based HIV reporting.


AIDS in 2004


Risk Factors and Barriers to Prevention

Sexual Risk Factors

Early age at sexual initiation. According to CDC's Youth Risk Behavioral Survey (YRBS), many young people begin having sexual intercourse at early ages: 47% of high school students have had sexual intercourse, and 7.4% of them reported first sexual intercourse before age 13.4 HIV/AIDS education needs to take place at correspondingly young ages, before young people engage in sexual behaviors that put them at risk for HIV infection.

High School Students Reporting Ever Having Had Sexual Intercourse, 2003

High School Students Reporting Ever Having Had Sexual Intercourse, 2003

Source. CDC's Youth Risk Behavioral Survey, 2003.4

High School Students Reporting Sexual Intercourse for the First Time Before Age 13, 2003

High School Students Reporting Sexual Intercourse for the First Time Before Age 13, 2003

Source. CDC's Youth Risk Behavioral Survey, 2003.4

Heterosexual transmission. Young women, especially those of minority races or ethnicities, are increasingly at risk for HIV infection through heterosexual contact. According to data from a CDC study of HIV prevalence among disadvantaged youth during the early to mid-1990s, the rate of HIV prevalence among young women aged 16-21 was 50% higher than the rate among young men in that age group.5 African American women in this study were 7 times as likely as white women and 8 times as likely as Hispanic women to be HIV-positive. Young women are at risk for sexually transmitted HIV for several reasons, including biologic vulnerability, lack of recognition of their partners' risk factors, and having sex with older men who are more likely to be infected with HIV.

MSM. Young MSM are at high risk for HIV infection, but their risk factors and the prevention barriers they face differ from those of persons who become infected through heterosexual contact. According to a CDC study of 5,589 MSM, 55% of young men (aged 15-22) did not let other people know they were sexually attracted to men.6 MSM who do not disclose their sexual orientation are less likely to seek HIV testing, so if they become infected, they are less likely to know it. Further, because MSM who do not disclose their sexual orientation are likely to have 1 or more female sex partners, MSM who become infected may transmit the virus to women as well as to men. In a small study of African American MSM college students and nonstudents in North Carolina, the participants had sexual risk factors for HIV infection, and 20% had a female sex partner during the preceding 12 months.7

Sexually transmitted diseases (STDs). The presence of an STD greatly increases a person's likelihood of acquiring or transmitting HIV.8 Some of the highest STD rates in the country are those among young people, especially those of minority races and ethnicities.9

Substance Abuse

Young people in the United States use alcohol, tobacco, and other drugs at high rates.10 Both casual and chronic substance users are more likely to engage in high-risk behaviors, such as unprotected sex, when they are under the influence of drugs or alcohol.11 Runaways and other homeless young people are at high risk for HIV infection if they are exchanging sex for drugs or money.

Lack of Awareness

Research has shown that a large proportion of young people are not concerned about becoming infected with HIV.12 Adolescents need accurate, age-appropriate information about HIV infection and AIDS, how to talk with their parents or other trusted adults about HIV and AIDS, how to reduce and eliminate risk factors, how to talk with a potential partner about risk factors, where to get tested for HIV, and how to use a condom correctly. Information should also include the concept that abstinence is the only 100% effective way to avoid infection.

Poverty and Out-of-School Youth

Nearly 1 in 4 African Americans and 1 in 5 Hispanics live in poverty.13 The socioeconomic problems associated with poverty, including lack of access to high-quality health care, can directly or indirectly increase the risk for HIV infection.14 Young people who have dropped out of school are more likely to become sexually active at younger ages and to fail to use contraception.15

The Coming of Age of HIV-Positive Children

Many young people who contracted HIV through perinatal transmission are facing decisions about becoming sexually active. They will require ongoing counseling and prevention education to ensure that they do not transmit HIV.


Prevention

CDC estimates that 56,300 new HIV infections occurred in the United States in 2006.16 Populations of minority races or ethnicities are disproportionately affected by the HIV epidemic. To reduce further the incidence of HIV, CDC announced a new initiative, Advancing HIV Prevention, in 2003. This initiative comprises 4 strategies: making HIV testing a routine part of medical care, implementing new models for diagnosing HIV infections outside medical settings, preventing new infections by working with HIV-infected persons and their partners, and further decreasing perinatal HIV transmission.

Through the Minority AIDS Initiative, CDC also addresses the health disparities experienced in the communities of minority races or ethnicities at high risk for HIV. These funds are used to address the high-priority HIV prevention needs in such communities.

CDC provides 9 awards to community-based organizations (CBOs) that focus primarily on youth and provides indirect funding through state, territorial, and local health departments to organizations serving youth. Of these 9 awards, 5 are focused on African Americans, 3 on Hispanics, 1 on Asians and Pacific Islanders, and 1 on whites. The following are some CDC-tested prevention programs that state and local health departments and CBOs can provide for youth.

CDC research has shown that early, clear parent-child communication regarding values and expectations about sex is an important step in helping adolescents delay sexual initiation and make responsible decisions about sexual behaviors later in life. Parents have unique opportunities to engage their children in conversations about HIV, STD, and teen pregnancy prevention because the discussions can be ongoing and timely.18

Schools also can be important partners for reaching youth before high-risk behaviors are established, as evidenced by the YRBS finding that 88% of high school students in the United States reported having been taught about AIDS or HIV infection in school.

Overall, a multifaceted approach to HIV/AIDS prevention, which includes individual, peer, familial, school, church, and community programs, is necessary to reduce the incidence of HIV/AIDS in young people. For Guidelines for Effective School Health Education to Prevent the Spread of AIDS, visit http://www.cdc.gov/
HealthyYouth/sexualbehaviors/guidelines/guidelines.htm
.


Understanding HIV and AIDS Data

AIDS surveillance: Through a uniform system, CDC receives reports of AIDS cases from all US states and territories. Since the beginning of the epidemic, these data have been used to monitor trends because they are representative of all areas. The data are statistically adjusted for reporting delays and for the redistribution of cases initially reported without risk factors. As treatment has become more available, trends in new AIDS diagnoses no longer accurately represent trends in new HIV infections; these data now represent persons who are tested late in the course of HIV infection, who have limited access to care, or in whom treatment has failed.

HIV surveillance: Monitoring trends in the HIV epidemic today requires collecting information on HIV cases that have not progressed to AIDS. Areas with confidential name-based HIV infection reporting requirements use the same uniform system for data collection on HIV cases as for AIDS cases. A total of 33 states (Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, Colorado, Florida, Idaho, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Louisiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Nebraska, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Virginia, West Virginia, Wisconsin, and Wyoming) have collected these data for at least 5 years, providing sufficient data to monitor HIV trends and to estimate risk behaviors for HIV infection.

HIV/AIDS: This term is used to refer to 3 categories of diagnoses collectively: (1) a diagnosis of HIV infection (not AIDS), (2) a diagnosis of HIV infection and a later diagnosis of AIDS, and (3) concurrent diagnoses of HIV infection and AIDS.


References

  1. CDC. HIV/AIDS Surveillance Report, 2004. Vol. 16. Atlanta : US Department of Health and Human Services, CDC; 2005:1-46.
  2. CDC. HIV Prevention in the Third Decade. Atlanta: US Department of Health and Human Services, CDC; 2005.
  3. CDC. HIV incidence among young men who have sex with men -- seven US cities, 1994-2000. MMWR 2001;50:440-444.
  4. CDC. Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance -- United States, 2003. MMWR 2004;53(SS-2):1-29.
  5. Valleroy LA, MacKellar DA, Karon JM, Janssen RS, Hayman DR. HIV infection in disadvantaged out-of-school youth: prevalence for U.S. Job Corps entrants, 1990 through 1996. Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes 1998;19:67-73.
  6. CDC. HIV/STD risks in young men who have sex with men who do not disclose their sexual orientation -- six US cities, 1994-2000. MMWR 2003;52:81-85.
  7. CDC. HIV transmission among black college student and non-student men who have sex with men -- North Carolina, 2003. MMWR 2004;53:731-734.
  8. Fleming DT, Wasserheit JN. From epidemiological synergy to public health policy and practice: the contribution of other sexually transmitted diseases to sexual transmission of HIV infection. Sexually Transmitted Infections 1999;75:3-17.
  9. CDC. Sexually Transmitted Disease Surveillance, 2004. Atlanta : US Department of Health and Human Services, CDC; 2005.
  10. Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration. 2004 National Survey on Drug Use & Health.
  11. Leigh B, Stall R. Substance use and risky sexual behavior for exposure to HIV: issues in methodology, interpretation, and prevention. American Psychologist 1993;48:1035-1045.
  12. The Kaiser Family Foundation. National survey of teens on HIV/AIDS, 2000.
  13. US Census Bureau. Poverty: 1999. Census 2000 Brief. May 2003.
  14. Diaz T, Chu S, Buehler J, et al. Socioeconomic differences among people with AIDS: results from a multistate surveillance project. American Journal of Preventive Medicine 1994;10:217-222.
  15. Office of the Surgeon General. The Surgeon General's call to action to promote sexual health and responsible sexual behavior. July 9, 2001.
  16. Hall HI, Ruiguang S, Rhodes P, et al. Estimation of HIV incidence in the United States. JAMA. 2008;300:520-529.
  17. Clark LF, Miller KS, Nagy SS, et al. Adult identity mentoring: reducing sexual risk for African-American seventh grade students. Journal of Adolescent Health 2005;37:337.e1-337.e10.
  18. Dittus P, Miller KS, Kotchick BA, Forehand R. Why Parents Matter! The conceptual basis for a community-based HIV prevention program for the parents of African American youth. Journal of Child and Family Studies 2004;13(1):5-20.




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