NEW YORK (PIX11) – HIV cases are rising in New York City, according to a report by the NYC Department of Health. The study states these new cases disproportionately impact Black and Latino communities.
The study released Monday reports 1,791 new diagnoses were made in 2024, with 86% involving Black or Latino individuals. Additionally, new diagnoses in the city have either increased or remained stable for the fourth consecutive year, unlike a decline in new cases that was seen before 2020, the study reported.
“In the last three decades, we’ve made immense progress toward ending the HIV epidemic in New York City, with new diagnoses down more than 70 % since 2001. Yet this progress has stalled as new diagnoses have increased or remained stable for the fourth year in a row, while life-saving federal funding for ending the epidemic is in jeopardy,” said Acting Health Commissioner Dr. Michelle Morse.
The new report shows an increase in HIV diagnoses as the federal government proposes shutting the CDC’s Division of HIV Prevention and cutting $755.6 million in HIV prevention funding.
If enacted, NYC would lose over $41 million used to identify new HIV cases.
Poor communities
The HIV surveillance report also highlighted ongoing racial and ethnic disparities in new HIV diagnoses. This is likely caused by systemic factors such as poverty, housing, and healthcare inequities, the report noted.
HIV impacts residents in neighborhoods with higher poverty levels, with 42% of new HIV diagnoses occurring in poverty-stricken areas. The Bronx, Brooklyn, and Queens are boroughs that experienced over 20% of new HIV cases, according to the report.
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New HIV cases by borough
Borough
New cases
Percent
Manhattan
329
18.4
Brooklyn
501
28.0
The Bronx
394
22.0
Queens
364
20.3
Staten Island
39
2.2
Over 100,000 people currently live with HIV throughout the five boroughs, according to New York City Health and Hospitals.
Most new HIV cases for 2024 were among men who have sex with men, according to the study.
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Matthew Euzarraga is a multimedia journalist from El Paso, Texas. He has covered local news and LGBTQIA topics in the New York City Metro area since 2021. He joined the PIX11 Digital team in 2023. You can see more of his work here.
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