HIV/AIDS on the
rise among older adults
Newswise — Even in the Age
of Information myths and misconceptions
abound about HIV/AIDS prevention and
transmission. But, according to UNC
Charlotte Associate Professor of Sociology
Diane Zablotsky, the most damaging response
to HIV/AIDS is silence. Silence has
contributed to an upsurge of HIV cases among
individuals 50 and older over the course of
the epidemic.
Currently, about 19
percent of all people with HIV/AIDS in the
United States are age 50 and older. This
number reflects a combination of people over
50 who have been recently diagnosed with
HIV, as well as people who have been living
with the virus for decades since improved
treatments are helping people with HIV live
longer.
According to a 2005
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
report, individuals over 50 remain a
relatively small segment of those at-risk
group for sexually transmitted diseases,
with four times as many HIV diagnoses
occuring in people ages 25 to 44. However,
by the end of 2007, approximately 131,742
Americans aged 50 and older were diagnosed
with AIDS.
But a confluence of
conditions has created an environment for
HIV to flourish in a traditionally low-risk,
and therefore overlooked, population.
“Historically when you
looked at AIDS diagnoses people 50 and older
accounted for 10 percent of all diagnoses,”
Zablotsky said. Midlife and older adults
have always been present in the epidemic. By
2007, they made up 12.5 percent of all
Americans diagnosed with AIDS.
There are approximately 72
million Baby Boomers (individuals born
between 1946 and 1964) in the United States
today. Americans who make it to age 65 will
live longer on average than their
counterparts in the industrialized world,
and many will remain sexually active well
into their golden years thanks to
pharmaceuticals (think Viagra) and other
health technologies.
Many older Americans come
out of lengthy marriages or relationships
and re-enter the dating scene. Some are
uneducated about HIV/AIDS or have antiquated
views about the virus. A huge group of the
over-50 crowd never got sexuality education
in school.
Evidence suggests women,
who can expect to live an average of five
years longer than men, are especially
vulnerable. In an analysis of National
Health Interview data, Zablotsky found that
almost half of women over age 50 were
totally uninformed about HIV, compared with
only 14 percent of younger adults.
In the early days of the
epidemic, Zablotsky explained, blood
transfusion was the primary mode of HIV
transmission in older people. Currently, the
primary mode of transmission for both older
men and older women is through sexual
activity.
While working at the
National Institutes of Aging, Zablotsky
published one of the first papers on the
issue.
“When I first started my
work, when we were trying to explore the
situation with HIV generally, our first
approach was to alert people that this
[HIV/AIDS] was something that people across
the life course need to know about,” she
said.
Though the health
community has made strides in tailoring
education messages, Zablotsky noted, most
funding for preventive education in the last
20 years has targeted traditionally
high-risk populations, often excluding older
adults because of assumptions about their
behaviors.
Zablotsky said prevention
begins with open conversation, as well as
the acknowledgment that humans are sexual
beings across the life course. Labels and
stigma associated with sexually transmitted
disease remain barriers to conversation, but
Zablotsky said fewer people might tune out
messages that frame sexual health as a
lifelong wellness issue.
“What we need to talk
about is how you make choices to stay well,”
Zablotsky said.
Research conducted by AARP
indicates that older patients feel uneasy
discussing sexual behavior with their
physicians. Conversely, many young doctors
are uncomfortable talking about risky sexual
behavior with people old enough to be their
parents or grandparents.
“One of the things that
has been part of the discussion is how we
can ask about risk factors when we do other
types of screenings. The big thing is to
keep asking people about their behaviors
regardless of age,” Zablotsky said.
These conversations do not
have to take place within the confines of
the doctor-patient relationship.
Increasingly, public health professionals
and advocates are encouraging teens and
their parents to sit down and talk to their
elders about HIV prevention.
Seventy-two-year-old HIV
prevention advocate Jane Fowler made
headlines with just such a suggestion.
Fowler, who was diagnosed with HIV in her
50s, said people need to get over their
embarrassment and start talking. She
encourages doctors, friends, kids,
grandchildren, and everyone else to check on
the HIV prevention knowledge, motivation and
skills of their elders.
Zablotsky concurs. “As a
sociologist my goal is make conversations a
part of our everyday activity,” she said.
“The risk does not disappear if we fail to
discuss it.”
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