Wednesday, June 01, 2005

African HIV Subtypes Identified in Minnesota Population

Steve Baragona:

Public health researchers in Minnesota recently identified 83 persons infected with subtypes of HIV-1 that are not common in the United States, according to a report published in the June 15 issue of The Journal of Infectious Diseases, now available online.

Viral subtype identification may be important because subtypes may differ in terms of the efficacy of potential vaccines, diagnostic testing for HIV infection, and monitoring of the health of HIV-infected patients. The report, by Tracy L. Sides, MPH, and colleagues of the Minnesota Department of Health and the HIV Program at Hennepin County Medical Center, emphasizes the need for better surveillance of HIV-1 subtypes to determine their prevalence.

For the first two decades of the AIDS epidemic in the United States, HIV-1 subtype B has been the predominant isolate throughout the country. In recent years, non-B HIV-1 subtypes have been spreading in parts of Europe. As Sides and colleagues explained, however, the prevalence of subtype B and other subtypes in the United States is not known, because subtype testing is not conducted with routine HIV/AIDS surveillance.

In 2003, the Minnesota Department of Health piloted HIV-1 subtyping with routine surveillance to describe and monitor non-B-subtype HIV-1 isolates. In Minnesota, African-born persons make up less than one percent of the population, but in 2002 accounted for 21 percent of the state's new cases of HIV infection. Accordingly, Sides and colleagues conducted targeted surveillance of 98 African-born HIV-infected patients to determine the existence and variety of HIV-1 subtypes. They also conducted surveillance on 28 non-African patients to monitor the introduction of non-B subtypes into Minnesota.

All of those infected with non-B subtypes were African immigrants attending health clinics in the Minneapolis-St. Paul area. Of the 98 African-born HIV-1-infected patients, 87 were successfully subtyped and 95 percent of these were infected with non-B subtypes. Seven different subtypes were identified, all consistent with strains endemic to the patients' regions of birth. Of the non-African HIV-1-infected patients, 25 were successfully subtyped and all were infected with subtype B.

The researchers believe that their results underestimate the prevalence of non-B subtypes in Minnesota because recent immigrants are less likely than assimilated immigrants to have access to the American health care system. Since their estimates are based solely on patients from health care facilities, they probably missed recent immigrants with HIV infection.

Why on earth is the government allowing HIV-infected immigrants into the United States?

2 Comments:

At 1:54 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

www.vnnforum.com

Banned at work as "Hate & Discrimination", as more or less expected after reading your post.

Just like amren, BTW. Also Vdare at one time, although I did decide to complain about that and get it unblocked.

 
At 1:43 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

The most "benign" explanation for the genocidal race-replacement policy in the US is a coalition of naive Christians who look upon every homo sapiens on the planet as a potential brother or sister in Christ and economic reductionists who see all the peoples of the world as essentially interchangable economic units. Then there is the cultural dominance of the "multiculturalists" who believe all the cultures of the world are equal except that of the evil European. For the equally suicidal policies of Europe delete the Christain factor.

 

Post a Comment

<< Home


View My Stats