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AIDS is an acronym for acquired immune deficiency syndrome, a health condition that leads to the deterioration of the immune system and is caused by infection with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). AIDS is not a disease per se but rather a health syndrome that results in a weakened immune system, mostly due to the destruction of CD4 + T-cells, and that in turn results in susceptibility to numerous pathogens (viral, bacterial, fungal, and protozoal) that may lead to opportunistic infections and death. Individuals with AIDS are highly susceptible to these lifethreatening pathogens and to certain types of cancer.

The number of individuals living with HIV and deaths due to AIDS increases daily, and because not all cases of HIV infection or AIDS are reported, official statistics are usually estimates rather than counts of reported cases and may vary by agency. According to the World Health Organization, in 2005 about 1.2 million Americans were infected with HIV, up from 1.1 million in 2003, and in 2005 about 16,000 died from AIDS (UNAIDS/WHO, 2006, Annex 2). The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) estimates are slightly different: just under 1 million cases in the United States in 2005 and just over 17,000 deaths from AIDS (CDC, 2005). Recent data suggest that AIDS disproportionately affects communities of color, including African American and Latinos/Latinas. According to the CDC, in the United States, as of 2005, there were approximately 400,000 AIDS cases among African Americans, 387,000 among whites, and 156,000 among Latinos. The case rate per 100,000 population in 2005 was 75.0 for black non-Hispanics, 26.4 for Hispanics, 10.0 for American Indian/Alaska Natives, 7.5 for white nonHispanics, and 4.9 for Asian/Pacific Islanders (CDC, 2005).

According to the UN estimates, across the world in 2005, there were 38.6 million individuals living with HIV/AIDS and approximately 2.8 million deaths. The UN report says 38.6 million were living with HIV in 2005, of whom 4.1 million were newly infected. There were 2.8 million deaths. The majority of the cases worldwide (36.3 million) are adults. Additionally, approximately 4.1 million people were newly infected in 2005. The vast majority of these cases (24.5 million, or approximately 63%) are in subSaharan Africa, where in recent years there has been an annual death rate from AIDS of 2 million people. In Asia (not including Oceania), there are approximately 8.3 million cases, 1.6 million in Latin America, and 1.5 million in eastern Europe and central Asia. North America and western Europe together have about 2 million cases. In addition to countries in sub-Saharan Africa, countries of the former Soviet Union, including Russia, and Asian Pacific nations such as Thailand are experiencing vast increases in new HIV infections.

Table 1 Regional Statistics on HIV/AIDS
People Living With HIVNew Infections, 2005AIDS Deaths, 2005Adult Prevalence(%)
Sub-Saharan Africa24.5 million2.7 million2 million6.1%
Asia8.3 million930,000600,0000.4%
Latin America1.6 million140,00059,0000.5%
North America and Western and Central Europe2 million65,00030,0000.5%
Eastern Europe and Central Asia1.5 million220,00053,0000.8%
Middle East and North Africa440,00064,00037,0000.2%
Caribbean330,00037,00027,0001.6%
Oceania78,0007,2003,4000.3%
Total38.6 million4.1 million2.8 million1%
Source: UN/WHO (2006, figure 2.3). Available from http://data.unaids.org/pub/GlobalReport/2006/200605-FS_globalfactsfigures_en.pdf.

Figure 1 A Global View of HIV: 38.6 Million People Living With HIV/AIDS

None
Source: UN/WHO (2006, figure 2.4).

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