Volume XVIII, Number 4 December 7, 1987 AIDS: a growing problem in the blacic community by JOYCE ROGERS Staff Writer Although Blacks make up only 12% of the U.S. population, they currently ac count tor an alarming 25% of all AIDS cases. Nearly twt)-thirds of AIDS victims so far have been homosexual men, but the rale of new infection among gays has declined, while the rate among Blacks has risen. Medical experts fear that unless urgent actions arc taken to stop the rapid spread of AIDS in the Black community, it may become a predominantly minority disease. Why is the percentage of Blacks with AIDS so disproportionate to the total Black population? Some experts say that Black leaders are slow to acknowledge the problem because they fear a backlash ot racial discrimination. This may push Blacks further away from full participa tion in mainstream society. Intravenous drug users account for a large number of Black AIDS victims, especially in large cities. These people spread AIDS by sharing needles and pass ing the disease on to their mates. Even tually, the children born to mothers with AIDS contract the disease during birth or from the mother's milk. Black babies are 25 times more likely to get the disease than white babies. Tragically, many of these babies are orphaned or abandoned. Lack of educational programs and funds also contribute to the dispropor tionate rate of AIDS among Blacks. Drug addicts and inner-city, poverty-striken blacks are less likely to have access to in formation about AIDS and funds for health care. Without the financial ' V resources and support groups that middle- class white gays have or have lobbied for, black victims have a shorter life span. The average life expectancy of a minority per- st)n with AIDS is as little as 19 weeks after diagnosis, compared with two years for a white person. One view which attempts to explain the high rise of AIDS in the black com munity suggests that blacks have generally looked at AIDS as a disese which only af fects the gay white community. Therefore, blacks have failed to take necessary precautions that should have been taken. Consequently they have left themselves prey to the deadly disease. Fortunately there are some signs of progress in the black community in the fight against AIDS. In January of this year the National Urban League addressed the problem in a report on AIDS and American blacks by Dr. Beny J. Primm, executive director of Brooklyn's Addic tion Research and Treatment Corp. Also, the Southern Christian Leadership Con ference has held two national seminars on AIDS in the Black community. In addi tion to the measures, the Congressional Black Caucus and the NAACP have ex plored the issue at conferences. Funding for treatment and educa tional programs in the black community through minority organizations from the government is another measure aimed at slowing the spread of AIDS. Education and funding are two major ways to com bat the alarming rate of AIDS in the black community. Michael Jordan. Story on page 7. (photo by Fred Gorham) U Academic S] Skeltons in tiie 2] iMore on AIDS Aciiievers Cioset H] Magic IMiciiaei