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Stigma keeps US youth at high risk for HIV/AIDS

FILE - Solutions Oriented Addiction Response organizer Brooke Parker displays an HIV testing kit in Charleston, W.Va., on March 9, 2021.

If I asked you to tell me which age group has one of the highest incidences of HIV, I’m willing to wager that you wouldn’t say 13- to 24-year-olds. And, yet, these young people represent 20 percent of new HIV diagnoses, the second-highest rate of new cases, behind only 25- to 34-year-olds.

We must keep this in mind as we observe National Youth HIV and AIDS Awareness Day on April 10 — in the wake of two devastating court decisions that perpetuate stigmatization and harm to people living with HIV, making the situation even direr for young people.

Last month, U.S. District Judge Reed O’Connor struck down provisions in the Affordable Care Act that required insurers to cover free screenings, including tests for HIV, mental health, cancer and diabetes. In September 2022, the same jurist ruled that HIV prevention drugs like pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) do not have to be covered by the Affordable Care Act, scuttling vital benefits that made the treatments more affordable and accessible.

These decisions affect all people at risk of HIV and do particular harm to young men (23 percent of all new male diagnoses), young people who identify as women (13 percent of new female diagnoses), and young people who are Black, Hispanic/Latinx and LGBTQ.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), young people’s likelihood of getting HIV is higher because they don’t know their own or their partners’ HIV and STD status, are unaware of protective therapies like PrEP use drugs and alcohol, and they experience sexual violence.

Many of these causes can be traced back to the stigma around HIV and sexual behaviors.

Decades of research quantify the impact of HIV stigma. Multiple studies identify it as a limiting factor in HIV testing, prevention and treatment. Other investigations show that stigma has a unique effect on young people, including their ability to get and stay with treatment to stay physically healthy, and to seek mental and behavioral support to stay emotionally healthy. Stigma also informs how schools, friends, family and others view HIV and people living with it, weakening connections and eroding support so important to all of us, and particularly crucial for young people and those living with chronic illness.

To reduce youth incidence of HIV, I urge policymakers and practitioners to:

Taking on these factors is critical to keeping young people safe and healthy by reducing the spread of HIV. Let this National Youth HIV and AIDS Awareness Day be the catalyst for creating interventions that let youth grow up without HIV. We must not let our country’s youth down.

Vincent Guilamo-Ramos is the dean of the Duke University School of Nursing and Bessie Baker distinguished professor of nursing. He currently serves as a member of the HHS Presidential Advisory Committee on HIV/AIDS (PACHA).