Rise of HIV cases another effect of opioid epidemic in Appalachia
HUNTINGTON For all of Appalachias much-profiled health concerns, HIV/AIDS has historically not been one of them.
In 2017, when West Virginia flashed in national headlines detailing the carnage of the opioid epidemic, the Mountain State still had one of the nations lowest rates of HIV diagnoses (4.3 cases per 100,000 residents), according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Neighboring Kentucky (7.9 per 100,000) and Ohio (8.8 per 100,000) have fared similarly.
Traditionally, its been a disease contained to the nations urban coasts and Deep South, spread mostly through unprotected sex, the bulk being men having sex with men.
But a recent HIV cluster in Cabell County, along with a scattering of others beginning to crop up across the region, reflects a shift in how HIV is being transmitted potentially devastating for communities already ravaged by the opioid epidemic.
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