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Latino HIV Crisis

The Center for Latino Adolescent and Family Health (CLAFH)

While our overall success in curbing the U.S. HIV/AIDS epidemic is commendable, Latino HIV health and health care inequities stand out as a national failure that must be addressed urgently.

In 2019, CLAFH sounded an alarm about Latino HIV health, naming it an Invisible Crisis. Despite efforts to raise awareness and political will to address the problem, rates of new infections among Latinos have escalated and health outcomes for Latinos living with HIV are worse than other racial and ethnic groups. We will never be able to achieve our nation’s goal of ending the epidemic if we continue to ignore the unjust and avoidable health inequities facing Latinos—the largest minoritized racial and ethnic group in the U.S. and growing.

The societal and public health failure to adequately address this now historic Invisible Crisis is unacceptable. Now more than ever, CLAFH is committed to ending the Latino HIV health crisis through new research, patient care models, workforce training programs and policy advocacy.

CLAFH recently mapped out a new approach to end the Latino crisis in the New England Journal of Medicine. Our multisectoral call to action for researchers, public health practitioners, clinicians, policymakers and other community and private-sector actors is organized into six action areas:

  • Raising visibility
  • Conducting meaningful Latino community engagement
  • Improving public health responses
  • Strengthening HIV service delivery
  • Addressing structural drivers
  • Fostering research and evidence generation

We must act now with a combination of existing and new approaches to achieve the kind of HIV prevention and care improvements for Latinos that we are seeing with other populations. CLAFH is currently working on a new approach to make HIV prevention and care services more acceptable and effective for Latinos. Our CDC-funded Project Confianza is a study focused on five cities with among the highest new HIV infections among Latino MSM, and examines ways to reduce medical mistrust among Latino MSM to improve the trustworthiness of the HIV prevention and care system.

Resolving the root causes of the Latino HIV Crisis will take a collective effort. To end the historic and ongoing Invisible Crisis, we must address the structural drivers of HIV among Latino communities and engage a diverse set of stakeholders to rethink and improve our national response to this crisis. Please join us. Bookmark this site to stay abreast of our efforts and learn how you can be part of the solution.

December 1st marks World AIDS Day, a time to reflect on progress in the fight against HIV and to recognize where we must focus our efforts. While new HIV infections in the United States decreased overall by 19% from 2010-2022, they increased by 12% among Latinos during the same period. This Invisible HIV Crisis among Latinos, who account for one in three of all new HIV infections in the U.S., threatens to undermine overall progress.

At the Center for Latino Adolescent and Family Health (CLAFH) and the Institute for Policy Solutions, we are taking this year’s World AIDS Day theme—“Collective Action: Sustain and Accelerate HIV Progress”—to heart. We are calling for a multisectoral response to the Latino HIV Crisis, starting on December 1st and continuing into the year ahead. Our toolkit contains new information and resources that can help you do your part in ending the Latino HIV Crisis.

RESOURCES

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