The Ratio of Gay Black Men with Risk of Having HIV

HIV cases according to CDC

If the present HIV rates go on by around ½ of the rate of gay and bisexual black men in the US. They will mostly be detected with the AIDS virus in their lifetime. This is in accordance with the new analysis. The gay and the bisexual Hispanic men, which is another populace who are at risk of having HIV have 1 in 4 probabilities of contracting HIV, this is in accordance with the report coming from the US CDC. The rates may be alarming, because of the lifelong risk accompanied by the said rough numbers. They are not inevitable in terms of the conclusion. They are the call to action according to the director of the CDC. The care and so do with the preventive measures in handling this problem available these days may be promising for the future of the reducing HIV infections and differences in the US; however, thousands of people will also be detected with it during their lifetime if they will not scale up and make an effort now.

Gays and bisexual men on HIV

The new study has discovered that there is a danger of having HIV in the US and it went down by around 1:99 throughout their lifetime. It went down by 78 around 10 years ago, however, there are some minority groups who went on in hitting the hardest.  The diagnosis as well as the death rates starting in 2009 to 2013 hits the lifetime risk of HIV diagnosis by race, state and even sex. The nation’s HIV rates epidemic is still affecting gay, bisexual and men at most. The CDC researchers foresee the 1 in 6 people will be diagnosed with HIV in their lifetime. For the gays and bisexual black men, the rates will be 1 in every 2, for the gay or for the bisexual Hispanic men, 1 in every 4 and for the gay whites; there will be 1 in every 11 according to the CDC.

These are just rough estimates that serve as a reminder to the gay and bisexual men that they will face a risk of HIV and of the need for an immediate action. This is according to Dr. McCray; he is the director of the CDC’s Division of HIV and AIDS prevention. Men from the southern part of the US also have a higher possibility of having HIV in their lifetime. Being diagnosed and they comparing them from one to the other Americans may be in accordance with the report. The residents of the country where there is a big possibility in every thirteen for those who live in Washington D. C. this is followed by 1 in every 49 in Maryland.