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HIV Infections Surge Among Latinos as National Progress Stalls

While overall U.S. HIV infections dropped 19% between 2010 and 2022, diagnoses among Latinos climbed 12%, fueled by a decade of structural neglect. A new study from Johns Hopkins researchers warns that this widening health disparity represents a cascading disaster that threatens the nation's goal of ending the epidemic.

Bio & NewsJune 25, 20261,034 reads0

The report, published in the journal AIDS, highlights a 2023 spike where Latino diagnoses jumped 8% in a single year—the sharpest increase of any demographic group. Among Latino men who have sex with men aged 25–34, infections surged by 95%. Researchers argue these trends stem from systemic failures, including limited access to life-saving PrEP, inadequate reimbursement for newer treatments like lenacapavir, and a lack of culturally tailored outreach.

Policy decisions are exacerbating the crisis. Proposed Medicaid cuts and reduced eligibility for the Ryan White HIV/AIDS Program threaten care for the majority of Latinos living with the virus who rely on public insurance. In Florida alone, tightened thresholds for drug assistance put 16,000 people at risk of losing access to antiretroviral therapy. Vincent Guilamo-Ramos, lead author and director of the Center for Latino Adolescent and Family Health, contends that the current "invisibility" of the Latino community in national health policy prevents accountability. With federal surveillance data delayed due to workforce reductions, the study warns that failing to address these specific barriers will continue to derail national efforts to eradicate the virus.

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