
Both domestically and globally, women contract HIV/AIDS primarily through heterosexual sex. Biological susceptibility, economic instability, gender inequality, and violence are some of the risk factors associated with increased HIV/AIDS rates among women and girls. Lack of integrated prevention and treatment services, ineffective intervention programs, and a dearth of female-controlled prevention methods have contributed to this increased risk. A failure to fully examine the relationship between injection drug use and heterosexual sex has additionally led to increased rates of HIV/AIDS among women.
Women and men experience HIV differently in a number of important ways. In the biological and physiological realms, women are at least twice as likely to acquire HIV from men than vice versa during a single act of intercourse, and there are a number of HIV-related conditions that occur solely or more frequently in women. In the social and cultural realms, women have less economic power than men, are often forced to marry at a young age, and are more likely than men to be victims of sexual violence, including rape—factors that all confer added vulnerability to HIV infection. Thus, efforts to address the increasingly disproportionate impact of HIV/AIDS on women and girls must take into account the complex interplay of biological and social forces that fuel the epidemic.
In order to address the alarming rates of HIV/AIDS among women and girls in the U.S. and internationally, amfAR has launched the Women, Sexual Health, and HIV/AIDS initiative. The primary goal of the initiative is to raise awareness about the HIV/AIDS epidemic among women and girls, and to promote research, education, and policy activities to address it.
http://www.amfar.org
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