New Media and the 2010 National Gay Men's Health Summit

Content From: Miguel Gomez, Director, AIDS.gov, and Senior Communications Advisor, Office of HIV/AIDS and Infectious Disease Policy, U.S. Department of Health and Human ServicesPublished: August 03, 20102 min read

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Later this month, the 2010 National Gay Men's Health Summit (GMHS 2010) will take place August 25-30 in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. According to the recently released National HIV/AIDS Strategy, “Gay and bisexual men have comprised the largest proportion of the HIV epidemic in the United States since the first cases were reported in the 1980s, and that has not changed. They still comprise the greatest proportion of infections nationally.” Today, gay and bisexual men of all races are the only group in the United States where the estimated number of new HIV infections is rising annually.

At HIV.gov, we’re committed to addressing this HIV disparity in the LGBT community and the Summit organizers have also contacted other influential LGBT bloggers from sites such as TowleroadExit Disclaimer, Pam’s House BlendExit Disclaimer, The Bilerico ProjectExit Disclaimer, and others to promote the Summit.

The GMHS 2010 organizers are also using email listservs and Ning, a customizable social network site, to help plan the Summit and to keep the conversation going after the conference. “After the last Summit, we established a Ning site to keep the discussion going. I expect that the discussion from the GMHS 2010 summit will see many postings that will be cross-posted to many other sites,” said Landers. In addition to Ning, the GMHS 2010 Facebook pageExit Disclaimer has information about the Summit. Also, during the conference they will be tweetingExit Disclaimer to provide GMHS 2010 updates.

We look forward to following updates from the conference including a presentation by our colleague Christopher Bates, Director of the Presidential Advisory Council on HIV/AIDS!

National HIV/AIDS Strategy

The United States cannot reduce the number of HIV infections nationally without better addressing HIV among gay and bisexual men
  • Gay and bisexual men of all races are the only group in the United States where the estimated number of new HIV infections is rising annually.
  • They are 44 to 86 times more likely to become infected with HIV than other men, and 40 to 77 times more likely to become infected than women.
  • Approximately one-half of the 1.1 million persons living with HIV in the United States are gay and bisexual men, and they account for the majority (53 percent) of new HIV infections each year.
  • High rates of HIV among gay men are found not only in large urban areas. More than half of all AIDS cases diagnosed in the United States are among gay and bisexual men irrespective of town or city size.