The average American has just a 1 percent risk of ever being infected with the AIDS virus, but gay and bisexual black men have a 50 percent risk, according to new federal data.
A quarter of Latino gay and bisexual men will be infected over their lifetimes, the new analysis from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention finds.
And by region, the South, from Texas to Florida, has a higher rate of HIV infection than the rest of the country.
“Gay and bisexual men continue to be most affected by HIV in the U.S. At current rates, one in six men who have sex with men (MSM) will be diagnosed with HIV in their lifetime, making them 79 times more likely than heterosexual men to be diagnosed with HIV in their lifetimes,” the CDC team led by Kristen Hess reported.
“People who inject drugs are also at increased risk.”
The report, released at the Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections in Boston, is the first to take a look at any given person’s lifetime risk of becoming infected with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) that causes AIDS.
“Overall, the estimated lifetime risk of being diagnosed with HIV was 1.05 percent, meaning that approximately 3 million Americans (or 1 in 96 people) will be diagnosed with HIV in their lifetime,” CDC said in a statement.
“Among males the estimated risk was one in 62, and among females it was one in 221. At every age, males had a higher estimated lifetime risk than females.”
RELATED: Drug-releasing ring protects women from HIV
In many other parts of the world the sexually transmitted infection hits young women the hardest. HIV is also spread in blood, from mothers to their babies and in shared needles.









