WASHINGTON, May 15, 2012 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- Skyrocketing rates of HIV among African Americans and Latinos in the Bay Area will take center stage when national and local leaders in HIV policy convene in San Francisco on May 23-24 for a conference on the unequal burden of HIV/AIDS among communities of color, sexual minorities and the poor.
Sponsored by the Washington-based Forum for Collaborative HIV Research, the meeting comes at a time when HIV infection among African Americans is seven-fold the rate of whites and nearly three times as high among Latinos as for whites. In fact, in San Francisco alone, it is estimated that as many as a third (33%) of the African American men who have sex with men (MSM) now live with HIV and disparities exist across the spectrum of care – from early diagnosis to access and linkage to care and treatment outcomes. To change this situation, the conference will use the Bay Area as a test case for identifying innovative interdisciplinary approaches that overcome disparities by dealing with the root causes of the problem, including poverty, unequal access to healthcare services, lower educational attainment, social stigma, and sexual minority stress.
"This important conference is designed to solidify the science of HIV disparities and effective interventions that are changing the standard of care by approaching disparities from all sides and using the Bay Area as 'ground zero' for what is working and what is not," said Veronica Miller, Ph.D., Director of the Forum. "Our goal is to take up the current challenges faced by academic centers and community organizations in the Bay Area to generate novel ways to address disparities in HIV at the state and national levels."
The conference – Overcoming Health Disparities in the Bay Area: Using HIV/AIDS as a Model – will take place at the Mission Bay Conference Center at UCSF Robertson Auditorium. Held in association with the University of California, San Francisco Center for AIDS Research and San Francisco Department of Public Health, the meeting is expected to draw an estimated 150 scientists, clinicians, public health leaders and advocates, including many from the Bay Area.
New White House AIDS Policy Advisor to Give Keynote Address on May 24
Of special importance to the HIV/AIDS community, President Obama's new Director of the Office of National AIDS Policy, Grant Colfax, MD, returns to the Bay Area to provide an update on the Administration's National HIV/AIDS Strategy, which calls for accelerated adoption of routine HIV testing and for increasing patients' access to care. Joining the White House after working for many years in San Francisco as the Director of the HIV Prevention Section in the Department of Public Health, Dr. Colfax will describe the regional implications of implementing the National HIV/AIDS Strategy in terms of reduced HIV transmission rates.
Rhodessa Jones, Cultural Odyssey Troupe to Perform; Address Challenges for Women with HIV
Another conference highlight will be a performance by artist, singer and writer Rhodessa Jones and The Medea Project: Theater for Incarcerated Women addressing trauma, abuse, and HIV infection in women. Developed in conjunction with the Women's HIV Program (WHP) at University of California, San Francisco, this very innovative and effective intervention for HIV-positive women entails a year-long workshop where women write out their personal stories and make known their HIV status in a public theatrical performance called Dancing with the Clown of Love.
Government leaders; HIV/AIDS Experts to Speak at the Conference
Because disparities occur at all points along the HIV care continuum – from routine testing and linkage to care to antiretroviral prescribing – top government and HIV experts will also present the latest thinking on the causes of disparities in HIV and highlight innovative ways these barriers are being addressed in the Bay Area. Highlights include:
Wednesday, May 23
Thursday, May 24
About the Forum for Collaborative HIV Research
Part of the University of California (UC), Berkeley School of Public Health and based in Washington, DC, the Forum was founded in 1997 as the outgrowth of a White House initiative. Representing government, industry, patient advocates, healthcare providers, foundations and academia, the Forum is a public/private partnership that organizes roundtables and issues reports on a range of global HIV/AIDS issues. Forum recommendations have changed the ways that clinical trials are conducted, accelerated the delivery of new classes of drugs, heightened awareness of TB/HIV co-infection, and helped to spur national momentum toward universal testing for HIV. http://www.hivforum.org.
SOURCE Forum for Collaborative HIV Research
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