Latinos and HIV/AIDS

Latinos in the United States continue to be impacted by HIV/AIDS, having higher rates of both new HIV infections and people living with HIV disease than their white counterparts.1,2,3,4  Latino youth and gay and bisexual men have been particularly affected, and the epidemic’s impact varies across the country. Moreover, a number of challenges contribute to the epidemic in Latino communities, including poverty, injection drug use, stigma and discrimination, limited access to health care, and language or cultural barriers in health care settings.5  As the largest and fastest growing ethnic minority group in the U.S., addressing HIV in the Latino community takes on increased importance in efforts to address the epidemic across the country.

Snapshot of the Epidemic

New HIV Infections & U.S. Population, by Race/Ethnicity, 2010

New HIV Infections & U.S. Population, by Race/Ethnicity, 2010

Key Trends and Current Cases

Rates of New HIV Infections per 100,000, by Race/Ethnicity, for Adults/Adolescents, 2010

Transmission

Women and Young People

Gay and Bisexual Men

Among Latinos, men who have sex with men are heavily affected by HIV:

Number of Latino Adults/Adolescents Estimated to be Living with an HIV Diagnosis, Top 10 States/Areas, year-end 2010

Geography

Although HIV diagnoses among Latinos have been reported throughout the country, the impact of the epidemic is not uniformly distributed:

HIV Testing and Access to Prevention & Care

Concern About HIV/AIDS

Endnotes
  1. CDC. HIV Surveillance Report, Vol. 23; February 2013.  HIV diagnosis data are estimates from all 50 states, the District of Columbia, and 6 U.S. dependent areas. Rates do not include U.S. dependent areas.

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  2. CDC. HIV Surveillance Supplemental Report, Vol. 17, No. 4; December 2012. Data are estimates and do not include U.S. dependent areas.

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  3. CDC. Fact Sheet: HIV in the United States; November 2013.

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  4. CDC. HIV Surveillance Supplemental Report, Vol. 18, No. 5; October 2013. Data are estimates and do not include U.S. dependent areas.

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  5. CDC. Fact Sheet: HIV among Hispanics/Latinos in the United States and Dependent Areas; November 2013.

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  6. U.S. Census Bureau. 2010 Population Estimates.

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  7. Hall HI et al. “Estimation of HIV Incidence in the United States.” JAMA, Vol. 300, No. 5; August 2008.

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  8. NCHS. Health, United States, 2012; May 2013.

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  9. CDC. Slide Set: HIV Surveillance by Race/Ethnicity (through 2011).

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  10. Wejnert C et al. “HIV Infection and Awareness among Men Who Have Sex with Men – 20 Cities, United States, 2008 and 2011.” PLoS ONE, Vol.8, No. 10; October 2013.

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  11. CDC. National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention Atlas. Data are estimates from all 50 states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico. Rate is not available for Puerto Rico.

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  12. CDC. HIV Surveillance Supplemental Report, Vol. 18, No. 1; January 2013. Data are estimates from 46 states and Puerto Rico. Estimates are not available for all metropolitan statistical areas.

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  13. The Washington Post/KFF. 2012 Survey of Americans on HIV/AIDS; July 2012.

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  14. CDC. Fact Sheet: HIV in the United States: The Stages of Care; July 2012.

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