BR leads U.S. in AIDS cases

After 2-year gap, panel reviews state’s AIDS rate

With HIV diagnoses on the rise in Louisiana, a commission formed to advise the governor on the virus met Wednesday for the first time in more than two years.

The Louisiana Commission on HIV/AIDS and Hepatitis C reviewed sobering statistics and discussed its future despite failing to muster a quorum.

Among the points made in the meeting: The latest figures put the Baton Rouge metropolitan area as first and the New Orleans metropolitan area as fifth in the rate of AIDS cases nationwide.

The statistics show new diagnoses of human immunodeficiency virus, which causes AIDS, are increasing in Louisiana. Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome allows often fatal conditions to grow.

The distribution of the number of people infected also is spreading from the metro areas to touch other parts of the state. Shreveport and Lafayette rank behind New Orleans and Baton Rouge in the number of new HIV diagnoses and rates.

Other statistics:

  • 18,502 people in Louisiana were living with AIDS or HIV as of June 30. Of those, 54 percent have AIDS.
  • The number of people newly diagnosed with HIV in Louisiana increased by 12 percent from 2010 to 2011.
  • Seventy-one percent of the newly diagnosed HIV patients were men. Seventy-four percent were black.

“There is no magic wand where this commission can go and find some money to get something done. But this commission is comprised of members who have a lot of experience ... Here we brainstorm to figure out what is best for our state,” said Raman Singh, the commission’s chairman.

DeAnn Gruber, administrative director for the Louisiana Office of Public Health STD/HIV Program, said the commission needs to determine its role.

“It’s definitely time, it’s past time, that we get together,” Gruber said.

Some progress was made in the gap between the commission’s meetings.

Late last year, Louisiana had one of the longest waiting lists in the nation for people waiting to receive medication through the AIDS Drug Assistance Program. ADAP leverages state and federal funds to help those who are HIV positive and who do not have private insurance, Medicaid or Medicare.

The services manager for the STD/HIV Program in New Orleans, Kira Radtke Friedrich, told the commission an infusion of federal funding helped the state whittle down the waiting list to 41 people.

A significant percentage also was found to be ineligible for ADAP once they were screened for the program, Friedrich said.

“ADAP is a payer of last resort. We’re happy in many ways that our clients were able to access other resources,” she said.

People can be found ineligible because of incarceration, income and third-party insurance.

Still, Friedrich said, new cases are being added to the waiting list.

The assistant director of the Division of Human Development and Services for Baton Rouge, Sylvia Andrews, said her office is continuing to see a rise in HIV and AIDS cases. DHDS manages grant programs for vulnerable populations.

Her office saw a 6 percent increase in funding for the 2012 fiscal year, Andrews said, with awards climbing to $4.3 million.

Since the commission last met, she said her office sought peer counseling from its counterpart in Houston.

The office is working on multi-year contracts that minimize the interruption of services, Andrews said.

At the end of the meeting, Singh said the commission could make a good start at tackling issues by meeting on a regular basis.


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Comments (24)


1) Comment by Whatnow - 26/10/2012

Money doesn't fix stupid. coachblades is correct on one point. Teach it in health class. It won't cost a penny. If they still don't get it, they never will. All the teaching and money in the world will not fix stupid or selfish pleasure.

2) Comment by coachblades - 25/10/2012

My point is Citizensarrest is that it wouldnt cost anything. And yes not everyone would learn something but if you could prevent a handful of teenage pregnacies (many of whom get on WIC and other welfare) and if you can save a handful of lives it would be worth it....LET ME REPEAT! IT WOULDNT COST ANYTHING>>>just an email to school districts giving the OK to teach it in Health classes that are already in EVERY highschool in louisiana! Most health books already have a sex ed section in them Or we can just sit back and call it a "cultural" problem. Im just glad the government didnt call yellow fever a "cultural" problem. Maybe the government could have said throwing chamber pot waste into the streets spreading dysentery was a cultural problem so lets not bother with telling our citizens

3) Comment by Chucky - 25/10/2012

Is this another Black problem ?

4) Comment by 8point6 - 25/10/2012

@CitizensArrest: Great comment. And that is one of the main problems.

5) Comment by CitizensArrest - 25/10/2012

These animals aren't learning to read and write. Do you think they'd learn anything in sex-ed? It's a cultural issue. No repercussions for having sex. Aids? Kids? Who cares? They aren't paying for any of it.

6) Comment by DMJ - 25/10/2012

It's cheaper to spend money to prevent AIDS than it is to spend money to treat AIDS. Think about it.

7) Comment by ex-louisianian - 25/10/2012

The solution is straightforward: real sex education, not phoney Christianist abstinence garbage. And destigmatize homosexuality while you're at it.

8) Comment by coachblades - 25/10/2012

And if you are truly worried about wasted tax dollars tell bobby to stop spending state money on his out of state trips. tell the dept of ed to stop buying and forcing an ACT test for every junior in highschool regardless of their plans after highschool. boilermaker, offshore worker, shrimp boat crewman yep they will have all taken a college entrance exam on your tax dollar despite the fact that 2 years earlier they opted out of a college curriculum.

9) Comment by coachblades - 25/10/2012

@Duckyluve How would it cost more money?? All louisiana students are required to take 1 semester of Health class already. All Health teachers are already trained in this subject. It would literally take nothing more than an email giving school districts the OK to add a week or two of Sex Ed (or STD prevention if that makes it sound more acceptable) to the curriculum. There you have it! A solution that literally costs NOTHING. Or we can do what we are doing now...letting taxpayers foot the bill for the very expensive treatments that many of these AIDS patients are recieving.

10) Comment by Preppy6917 - 25/10/2012

Phil: Assumptions are FUN! There are far more Christians in East Baton Rouge (81%) than gays (<10%), so I've decided that Christians are the problem. http://www.city-data.com/county/religion/East-Baton-Rouge-Parish-LA.html

11) Comment by gvm - 25/10/2012

@The_Host: you sound like an authority on HIV and AIDS transmission.

12) Comment by phil - 25/10/2012

I suppose we will be hearing how wonderful the gay lifestyle is now and how it should be supported and promoted in Baton Rouge, and how gay marriage needs to be made legal in the USA.. We are certainly first at a lot of things (murder etc) in BR, and maybe this should be added to the list of things BR is first at on the ad for the mayor's race by Holden. Of course, I also would like to know how the total count of people with AIDS is actually calculated.

13) Comment by DMJ - 25/10/2012

The private sector is not going to solve this. There's no money in it. This is why we need government- to provide for the common welfare, just like it says in the 1st line of the U.S. Constitution. And look...the reason we've known about AIDS and have yet to get rid of it is because a huge % of the people carrying HIV don't know they're carrying it....which is why we need increased testing, promotion of condom use, needle exchanges and....most of all....EDUCATION. But Host, you're right about one thing....you can't fix stupid.

14) Comment by The_Host - 25/10/2012

No DMJ what we need is fewer black men sticking their peckers in one anothers rumps with no protection at a minimum. Or just being so down right promiscuous in their sex lives that they spread disease around like Obama spreads other peoples money around. More government is not going to solve this or any other issue. Correct me if I am wrong but we have known about AIDS and how to prevent getting it for well over 25 years now. So the bottom line seems to be you STILL can't fix stupid!

15) Comment by Duckyluve - 25/10/2012

Yea thats the answer, throw more tax money at a social problem

16) Comment by coachblades - 25/10/2012

last legislative session our leges struck down a proposal to expand sex education in public schools in louisiana. our governor was staunchly against it (because the louisiana family forum told him to be) My students dont even know that AIDS/HIV is basically fatal and will pretty much ruin your life. But according to our guvment educating children about it is the wrong thing to do. Governor Jindal I rate you ineffective.

17) Comment by bourbon-soda - 25/10/2012

According to partly tax-funded Planned Parenthood, HIV testing is "easy to get:" http://www.plannedparenthood.org/health- topics/stds-hiv-safer-sex/std-testing-21695.asp 3955 Government Street, Ste. 2
Baton Rouge, LA 70806 225.387.1167. Condoms are pretty readily available unless we make them "free" - oh, sure, why didn't I think of that.

18) Comment by DMJ - 25/10/2012

What's needed is expanded testing, increased access to condoms, needle exchanges and, most of all, education. If this means "more government" then so be it. Also, this article is somewhat misleading. It's true that the overall # of AIDS/HIV cases are increasing, but they're increasing slower than the general population growth. Rates of infection are down nationwide, even in Louisiana. Based on the 2010 Census figures, .2% of Louisianians are infected. While this is still tragically high...it's very small percentage of the population.

19) Comment by Whatnow - 25/10/2012

Birth control pills? Yeah, those really help. Try pushing condoms.

20) Comment by bourbon-soda - 25/10/2012

Do the members get paid for these unofficial (no quorum) platitudes? What is it that the governor and everyone else does not know about HIV-AIDS and Hep-C that another commission can tell them? No mention of behavior change as an approach. The "commission needs to determine its role?" The role wasn't determined before it was constituted? Please raise my taxes so we can get more government.

21) Comment by lovemykids - 25/10/2012

Moreover, where are our city leaders in this issue? What plan do the mayoral candidates present to change our position as "AIDS capital of the US"? We were number two for several years and what did we do that was so ineffective? Perhaps nothing at all? Lets continue to ignore the problem and maybe it will go away.,

22) Comment by lovemykids - 25/10/2012

Why haven't they met in the past two years? Who is responsible for calling the meetings? Who is responsible for appointing the members of the commission (those that could not attend a meeting once in two years)?

23) Comment by tball - 25/10/2012

Do they have OBAMACARE??

24) Comment by Duckyluve - 25/10/2012

Thanks for making us proud