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mercuryblues

(14,537 posts)
Mon Oct 22, 2012, 07:19 PM Oct 2012

S. Carolina's Haley Slams Door on HIV Prevention






As part of a documentary team researching the impact of HIV/AIDS on black women in the rural South, I have learned these dire facts.

Eight of the 10 states with the most new cases of HIV infection and AIDS diagnoses are in the South.

African Americans account for 46 percent of all HIV diagnoses, and half of all rural AIDS cases.

Black women are disproportionately impacted at the national level (they make up 64 percent of new AIDS diagnoses) and face greater risk in southern states like South Carolina, which ranks fourth in the country for the number of African Americans living with AIDS.

Federal funding, however, is not following the epidemic and South Carolina is a particularly dire example of what that means.

In South Carolina, lawmakers cut the state's prevention funds to zero in 2010. Now it is the only state in the country that does not fund prevention, despite the fact that the state has the highest rate of heterosexual transmission in the nation, with black women accounting for a quarter of HIV/AIDS cases.

http://womensenews.org/story/hivaids/121019/s-carolinas-haley-slams-door-hiv-prevention#.UIWu0W_A_kV

It's a great day in South Carolina, isnt it Trikki Haley
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S. Carolina's Haley Slams Door on HIV Prevention (Original Post) mercuryblues Oct 2012 OP
It's crazy. defacto7 Oct 2012 #1
I wish I knew mercuryblues Oct 2012 #2

defacto7

(13,485 posts)
1. It's crazy.
Mon Oct 22, 2012, 07:25 PM
Oct 2012

Isn't it telling that the red/bible-belt states have the worst case reporting of STD's? They have the highest teen pregnancy rates, and the lowest age of virginity loss. So, what has their way of thinking brought them considering what they teach or profess? What has their sex education standards (or lack of them) done for them? Curious.

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