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Health And Nutrition

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Free STD Testing Sites

Rapid testing, Annonymous testing and Oral testing
Click to find a test site in your area

The 5 ways to contract HIV are:
  1. Unprotected sexual intercourse with an infected partner
  2. Through performing or receiving oral sex
  3. Sharing needles or other contaminated injection or skin-piercing equipment
  4. Through blood and blood products, for example, infected transfusions and organ or tissue transplants
  5. Transmission from infected mother to child in the womb or at birth and breast feeding
To help reduce your risk of becoming infected with HIV one should:
  1. Use latex or polyurethane condoms during every act of sex including during oral sex
  2. Use male or female condoms along with your chosen contraceptive
  3. Limit the number of your sex partners
  4. Avoid having sex with partners who have risky behaviors (including other sex partners)
  5. Get tested for HIV with your partner to ensure that you are both uninfected
  6. Avoid using skin-piercing instruments that have not been disinfected
  7. Avoid sharing needles, IV drugs, and drug paraphernalia
  8. Practice universal precautions at all times (for health care workers)
How to Prevent HIV Infection
  1. Speak openly with partners about safer sex techniques and HIV status.
  2. If you don't know your status, get an HIV test to protect yourself and others.
  3. Get tested with your partner as a way of saying "you care and want both of you to stay healthy."
  4. Use a latex condom with each oral, anal or vaginal sexual encounter. Those with latex allergies should use latex-free condoms.
  5. Do not share needles or syringes if you inject drugs. If you do inject drugs, seek professional help to kick your habit.
  6. HIV infected pregnant women should get into regular prenatal, intrapartum and postpartum care.
  7. HIV infected women should not breast feed.
HIV Signs and Symptoms
Often people who are HIV infected have few or no symptoms. Other times, symptoms of HIV are confused with other illnesses such as the flu. If a person were to have symptoms they would include:
  1. Swollen lymph nodes in the neck, groin or under the arms
  2. Diarrhea
  3. Unexplained weight loss
  4. Fatigue
  5. Fever, chills or sweats (especially at night)
  6. Visual changes
  7. Frequent pneumonias or shortness of breath
  8. Rash
  9. Flu-like symptoms

HIV Statistics

For African American men who have sex with men HIV prevalence is estimated at 55% overall (SFDPH 2001a). Among anonymous testers, prevalence was 9.7% (SFDPHb). Another study found a 29% prevalence (Catina et al 2001). Collectively, this data suggests that African Americans have the highest prevalence of any MSM population.

The HIV/AIDS infection rate among Black men is 6 times that of white men and the rate among Black women is 16 times that of white women

The number of men with AIDS per 100,000 population includes:
 
Blacks - 125
  Hispanics - 58
  Whites - 18
  American Indian/Alaska native - 16
  Asian/Pacific Islander - 9

The number of women with AIDS per 100,000 population includes:
  Blacks -50
  Hispanics -17
  American Indian/Alaska native - 4
  Whites - 2
  Asian/Pacific Islander - 1

AIDS now accounts for 1 in 3 deaths among Black men aged 25 to 44

More children with AIDS are Black than all other race and ethnic groups combined

Every day in the U.S. about 100 people of color become infected with HIV

More than two-thirds of all women in the U.S. who are infected with the AIDS virus are Black

Blacks represent 57% of all new AIDS cases in the United States, though comprising only 13% of the population

AIDS is the leading cause of death of Blacks, age 25-44

AIDS is the leading cause of death for Black women


Other Health Related Sites

Aid Atlanta, Inc
http://www.aidatlanta.org/

National Black Justice Coalition
http://www.nbjcoalition.org/

National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day
http://www.blackaidsday.org/

Black AIDS Institute
http://www.blackaids.org

My Brothaz Home
http://www.mybrothazhome.org

The Know is Spreading
http://www.spreadtheknow.com/

Know HIV/AIDS
http://www.knowhivaids.org/

People of Color in Crisis
http://www.pocc.org/index.html

Be Your Dawgs Best Friend
http://www.beyourdawgsbestfriend.com/

Gay Men's Health Crisis
http://www.gmhc.org/index.html

National Coalition of Anti-Violence Programs
http://www.ncavp.org/

We Are Part of You
http://www.wearepartofyou.org/index.html

Housing Works Inc.
http://www.housingworks.org

UNDER THE STAR! INTERNATIONAL, INC
http://www.underthestar.org

Diabetes: African Americans Deadly Foe

Diabetes is having a devastating effect on the African American community. Diabetes is the fifth leading cause of death in African Americans and their death rates are twenty seven percent higher than whites.

Over 2.8 million African Americans have diabetes and one third of them don’t know they have the disease. In addition, twenty five percent of African Americans between the ages of 65 – 74 have diabetes and one in four African American women, over the age of 55, have been diagnosed with the disease

The cause of diabetes is a mystery, but researchers believe that both genetics and environmental factors play roles in who will develop the disease.

Heredity

Researchers believe that African Americans and African Immigrants are predisposed to developing diabetes. Research suggests that African Americans and recent African immigrants have inherited a "thrifty gene" from their African ancestors.

This gene may have enabled Africans to use food energy more efficiently during cycles of feast and famine. Now, with fewer cycles of feast and famine, this gene may make weight control more difficult for African Americans and African Immigrants.

This genetic predisposition, coupled with impaired glucose tolerance, is often associated with the genetic tendency toward high blood pressure. People with impaired glucose tolerance have higher than normal blood glucose levels and are at a higher risk for developing diabetes.

What is Diabetes?

Diabetes, commonly know as “sugar diabetes”, is a condition that occurs when the body is unable to properly produce or use insulin. Insulin is needed by the body to process sugar, starches and other foods into energy. Diabetes is a chronic condition for which there is no known cure; diabetes is a serious disease and should not be ignored.

Diabetics often suffer from low glucose levels (sugar) in their blood. Low blood sugar levels can make you disorientated, dizzy, sweaty, hungry, have headaches, have sudden mood swings, have difficulty paying attention, or have tingling sensations around the mouth.

Types of Diabetes

Pre-diabetes is a condition that occurs when a person's blood glucose levels is higher than normal but not high enough for a diagnosis of type II diabetes. Pre-diabetes can cause damage to the heart and circulatory system, but pre-diabetes can often be controlled by controlling blood glucose levels. By controlling pre-diabetes you can often prevent or delay the onset of Type II diabetes.

Type I or juvenile-onset diabetes usually strikes people under the age of 20, but can strike at any age. Five to ten percent of African Americans who are diagnosed with diabetes are diagnosed with this type of the disease. Type I diabetes is an autoimmune disease where the body produces little or no insulin and this type of diabetes must be treated with daily insulin injections.

Type II or adult onset diabetes is responsible for ninety to ninety-five percent of diagnosed diabetes cases in African Americans. Type II results from a condition where the body fails to properly use insulin. According to the American Diabetes Association, “Type II is usually found in people over 45, who have diabetes in their family, who are overweight, who don't exercise and who have cholesterol problems.” In the early stages it can often be controlled with lifestyle changes, but in the later stages diabetic pills or insulin injections are often needed.

Pregnancy related diabetes or gestational diabetes can occur in pregnant women. Gestational diabetes is often associated with high glucose blood levels or hyperglycemia. Gestational diabetes affects about four percent of all pregnant women. The disease usually goes away after delivery, but women who suffer from gestational diabetes are at a higher risk for developing diabetes later in life.

Symptoms of Diabetes

The most common symptoms of diabetes include:

excessive urination including frequent trips to the bathroom
increased thirst
increased appetite
blurred vision
unusual weight loss
increased fatigue
irritability

Complications from Diabetes

Diabetes can lead to many disabling and life threatening complications. Strokes, blindness, kidney failure, heart disease, and amputations are common complications that effect African Americans who have diabetes

Kidney Disease

“Diabetes is the second leading cause of end stage kidney disease in African Americans, accounting for about thirty percent of the new cases each year,” says the National Kidney Foundation of Illinois. Up to twenty-one percent of people who develop diabetes will develop kidney disease.

Amputations

Diabetes is the leading cause of non-traumatic lower-limb amputations in the United States. More than sixty percent of non-traumatic lower-limb amputations in America occur among people with diabetes and African Americans are almost three times more likely to have a lower limb amputated due to diabetes than whites. According to Center for Disease Control (CDC), about 82,000 non-traumatic lower-limb amputations were performed among people with diabetes in 2001.

Blindness

African Americans are twice as likely to suffer from diabetes related blindness. Diabetics can develop a condition called “Diabetic Retinopathy”, a disease affecting the blood vessels of the eye, which can lead to impaired vision and blindness. Diabetes is the leading cause of new cases of blindness in people from 20 – 74 years of age and up to 24,000 people loose their sight each year because of diabetes.

Heart Disease

People with diabetes are up to four times more likely to develop heart disease as people who don’t have diabetes. Atherosclerosis (hardening of the arteries) is more common in diabetics and can lead to increased risk of heart attacks, stroke, and poor circulation throughout the body.

Diabetes Risk Factors

You have a greater risk for developing diabetes if you have any of the following:

Obesity
Family history of diabetes
Pre-diabetes
Low physical activity
Age greater than 45 years
High blood pressure
High blood levels of triglycerides
HDL cholesterol of less than 35

Previous diabetes during pregnancy or baby weighing more than 9 pounds

Diabetes has had a devastating effect on the African American community; it is the fifth leading cause of death and second leading cause of end stage kidney disease in African Americans.

African Americans suffer from complications from diabetes at a much higher rate than the rest of the population. African Americans are three times more likely to have a lower limb amputated because of diabetes and twice as likely to suffer from diabetes related blindness.

If you have any of the diabetes risk factors you should contact your physician and have a blood glucose test. Also discuss with your physician lifestyle changes you can take to lower your chances of developing diabetes.

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