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While strides are being made to end the HIV epidemic, it is still considered a โ€œworsening public health crisis in the United States.โ€ It has also proven to disproportionately affect Black Americans.

Darwin Thompson, director of public affairs at Gilead Sciences, said there is also a disproportionate impact in the southern United States. Information released by Gilead Sciences and Meharry Medical College said โ€œsouthern states accounted for 51 percent of new HIV diagnoses in 2020.โ€ย 

โ€œTo add onto these troubling statistics, Black Americans make up 42 percent of new HIV diagnoses. A higher proportion than any other racial or ethnic group,โ€ said Thompson.

In Tennessee, Thompson said Black Americans accounted for 58 percent of new HIV diagnoses. He also said there has been a โ€œsharp increaseโ€ in legislative attacks against the LGBTQ+ community and other groups that are more affected by HIV.

Thompson said while HIV is no longer considered a โ€œdeath sentence,โ€ a new โ€œequity-drivenโ€ approach is required to address the social and cultural issues that contribute to the spread of the disease. โ€œMany people who live in the southern U.S. face a multitude of serious societal and systemic challenges that fuel the epidemic including the burden of poverty, stigma, prejudice, low health literacy, and lack of insurance and access to care,โ€ said Thompson.

In hopes of collaborating with community-based organizations, Gilead launched its COMPASS initiative in 2017 for โ€œHIV advocacy focused on evidence-based policies.โ€ One of the partners of the COMPASS initiative is Relationships Unleashed, a nonprofit organization based in Memphis.ย 

Gwendolyn Clemons,ย  executive director of Relationships Unleashed, said the mission of the organization is personal to her, as she lost her sister, who died a year after being diagnosed with HIV. โ€œThe lack of education and understanding of HIV in the Black community, along with stigma associated with it, both exist in our community,โ€ Clemons said.ย 

Clemons said Shelby County has one of the highest new infection rates for HIV. In March, the Flyer reported that Shelby County ranked number three in โ€œincidence rates of new HIV infections in the United States,โ€ and the disease disproportionately affected those in minority populations.

โ€œOne area in particular that we found problematic in Memphis, was the continuous rise of new HIV diagnosis in Black, same-gender loving men, and Black cisgender women,โ€ said Clemons. โ€œThe city that we love so much has continuously been ranked in the top 10 of diagnoses for years.โ€

James E.K. Hildreth, president of Meharry Medical College, said the problem of HIV has never been โ€œstrictly medical.โ€ He said that a broader approach is required, specifically honing in on community leaders and organizations and the role they play in ending the virus.

โ€œTo truly end the epidemic, we need community solutions that work in the context of those communities,โ€ said Hildreth. โ€œWe also need to have communities work hand in hand โ€” scientific community and healthcare providers.โ€