AIDS in the black community: The plague, the politics, the people

Abstract
This paper was originally developed by Calu Lester, the founder of KWICFAN, which took a novel approach to grass roots AIDS education in the black community. Calu died of AIDS before completing the work and the paper was completed by Larry L. Saxxon, who was both a friend of Calu's and an AIDS program consultant. The paper presents a critical perspective of black America's response to the AIDS epidemic. The findings are frightening. Denial within the black community, coupled with a lack of support from the agencies responsible for funding AIDS education, has created a potential epidemiological nightmare. IV drug use continues to be a critical problem of frightening magnitude, allowing an efficient vehicle of HIV transmission. Most sadly of all, the social conditions that create and perpetuate the problematic drug abuse patterns still continue in black America. Black people are clearly becoming the new face of AIDS.

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