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Amid Trump’s call to end HIV/AIDS, here’s what’s being done in Hampton Roads

February 28, 2019 BY imani leave a comment

The Trump administration is launching a campaign to end the HIV/AIDS epidemic by the year 2030.  According to the CDC, more than 1 million people have HIV in the U.S., with about two-thirds of new infections occurring in gay or bisexual men. The president’s plan would focus on 48 U.S. counties where the most new infections occur, which are primarily in the South.

Several Hampton Roads health districts are teaming up to try and stop the spread of HIV in the local community. The latest numbers, according to the Virginia Department of Health’s annual report, show 831 new cases of HIV diagnosed in the commonwealth last year.  Of those new cases, 220 were in Hampton Roads. Norfolk had the most with 54, followed by Virginia Beach with 50.  Suffolk had the fewest with 12.

“It’s kind of scary, cause people thought,  ‘oh, HIV its not a thing anymore,’ and it is,” said Chesapeake Health Department spokesperson Kimi Stevens.Stevens said that STDs overall are on the rise in the area. But, why?

“The whole ‘hook-up culture, social media anonymous screen apps — Jack’d, Grindr, Tinder — you don’t know who they are, and you can take an Uber and you can leave,” she said.

That is why the Chesapeake Health Department is part of a new outreach campaign, Stevens said.

“Since November of 2017 we’ve seen a relatively large increase in the areas, so that’s why we decided to do this outreach event with Portsmouth and Virginia Beach, because people in Hampton Roads don’t stay in their own city.”

You will soon see public service announcements, billboards, testing events, and Stevens said a concert is even in the works — anything to get the word out.

“If you get tested and get treated, you can live a pretty healthy, normal life “

Those new drugs may actually be one reason for the spread. Since HIV is no longer an automatic death sentence, Stevens said, people stopped having safe sex. The most at risk groups are still gay men, and black and hispanic men, but anyone can get it at any age.

23 of the new cases in the state were diagnosed in people over the age of 65.

You never know who might have HIV — in fact, most who do have it don’t know it themselves for years. That’s why Stevens says everyone should get tested and treated.

MASS has events monthly where we offer free and confidential testing throughout the community. We offer educational literature on HIV/AIDS, STDs, and PrEP will be available along with free condoms and incentives for being tested. Check out our event calendar and follow us on twitter to stay in the loop!


Minority Aids Support Services