[May 17, 2005]
Dr. Robert Janssen,
director of
CDC's
Division of
HIV/AIDS Prevention
on Thursday during a
Senate Special
Committee on Aging
hearing, told lawmakers that the
number of HIV-positive people
older than 50 is "growing
sharply," the
AP/KPVI-TV
reports (AP/KPVI-TV, 5/12). "One
of the challenges in people 50
and older is the mistaken belief
that they're not at risk,"
Janssen said, adding that many
older people do not see the
"importance of using condoms,"
especially older women who are
not concerned about becoming
pregnant. A lack of awareness
about HIV/AIDS among older
people and stereotypes
associated with this group --
such as decreased sexual
activity -- also might
contribute to the spread of the
disease, according to committee
Chair Gordon Smith (R-Ore.) (Zwillich,
WebMD
Medical News,
5/13). Jeanine Reilly, executive
director of the
Broadway House
for Continuing Care
in Newark, N.J., at the hearing
said some researchers refer to
nursing homes as the "new
breeding ground for AIDS,"
adding that "simple" HIV/AIDS
educational material geared
toward an older population is
needed, the AP/KPVI-TV reports.
She said that older HIV/AIDS
patients also require different
standards of care (AP/KPVI-TV,
5/12). Smith said he likely will
include provisions for improved
HIV/AIDS education for older
people in the Ryan White CARE
Act, which Congress is expected
to reauthorize later this year.
About 28% of HIV/AIDS patients
in the United States are older
than 50, and that figure could
increase to half of all U.S.
patients by 2015, Smith said.
According to CDC data from 32
states, the number of
HIV-positive people older than
50 increased from 40,000 in 2000
to more than 67,000 in 2003 (WebMD
Medical News, 5/13).
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