National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day (NBHAAD), observed annually on February 7, is a chance to get more involved in getting the word out that HIV is preventable and treatable.  On NBHAAD and every day, public health must come together to prioritize the health concerns of Black people.

Blacks/African Americans experience higher rates of HIV than any other race, comprising 42% of all new HIV diagnoses in the U.S. in 2018. One contributor to the inequities in both HIV and COVID-19 among Black/African Americans is medical mistrust. For example, Black people, specifically Black cis and trans women, experience compounded discrimination in healthcare settings based on both their race and gender, which has in part led to diminished access to and knowledge of highly effective tools to prevent and treat HIV.

Despite a high need for focused resources, the public health system has too often left behind Black people in services and outreach designed to reduce the transmission of HIV. Rates of HIV among Black cisgender women are 14 times higher than in white women and 5 times higher than Latina women, and an estimated 44% of Black transgender women are living with HIV.

Meanwhile, prevention strategies such as pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) have mostly benefited white men who have sex with men, who were six times more likely to receive PrEP than Black people of any gender in 2016. The impacts are clear: from 2014 –2018, HIV rates among white cis men fell at twice the rate of Black cis men. These examples of widespread inequities in HIV prevention are clear calls to public health officials, scientists, policymakers, and community leaders everywhere to take action against the systematic barriers to prevention and treatment continuing to drive today’s HIV epidemic.

On NBHAAD, National Association of County and City Health Officials is the Washington (NACCHO) calls on local health departments across the county to adopt comprehensive HIV prevention, testing, and treatment strategies that center Black individuals and communities. Ending the HIV epidemic is not one-strategy-fits-all: public health departments need to partner with communities to understand and collaboratively address the health needs of Black people of all genders and sexualities.

According to naccho.org; hivinfo.nih.gov