(Our view) National HIV Testing Day is Thursday. Know your status.

Published 12:00 am Wednesday, June 26, 2024

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, approximately 1.2 million people in the United States are living with HIV, and one in seven individuals are unaware of their infection.

Thursday, June 27, is National HIV Testing Day, an effort to raise awareness about HIV and AIDS and promote testing and early detection.

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“Getting tested for HIV provides you good baseline information on your test result and what actions to take to stay healthy or seek treatment,” according to Vontrese McGhee, Director of the Office of HIV Prevention and Care with the Alabama Department of Public Health. “Left untreated, HIV infection can cause serious health problems. However, earlier testing can lead to early treatment to stay healthier or delay and prevent complications caused by disease.”

As of September 2020, Preliminary Epidemiology Report for Alabama indicated that there were 361 newly diagnosed cases and 14,828 prevalent cases. Since 1982, when ADPH established HIV surveillance, 22,665 cases of HIV have been documented.

In the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s 2020 HIV Surveillance Report, nearby Georgia was ranked the 4th highest in the nation for the total number of new diagnoses of HIV infection among adults and adolescents. After the COVID-19 pandemic was declared a national and state emergency in March 2020, access to health care services, including HIV testing, prevention and care-related services, was reduced or temporarily suspended, making tracking of statistics on HIV and AIDS more challenging.

This is why testing is vital.

Why is AIDS so prevalent in the Southern part of the U.S.? Our region has high poverty, uneven medical care, many rural areas with transportation and visibility issues and a population with less health insurance coverage.

The tragic fact is that a simple and relatively inexpensive test might be the difference between life and death, yet many people may not know that testing is available free of charge in several locations.

To find the location most convenient for your needs, visit alabamapublichealth.gov/hiv/testing.html, the Cullman County Health Department website at alabamapublichealth.gov/cullman/index.html or call them at 256-734-1030.

For more information about HIV and a free test, visit https://www.alabamapublichealth.gov/hiv/.

In many pockets of our community, the stigma against HIV/AIDS remains strong. It often forestalls many people from seeking testing.

Get tested and know your status. Encourage your partners and family members to do the same. It’s about generating awareness and erasing stigma.

With CNHI News Service