Community Corner

Thursday Is National HIV Testing Day

The AIDS Alliance of Northwest Georgia is offering free HIV testing in Cartersville from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.

More than 1.1 million people in the U.S. are living with HIV, but one out of every five of them doesn’t know it, according to the Georgia Department of Public Health

Thursday, June 27, is National HIV Testing Day. While Georgians throughout the state can get free HIV tests at select Walgreens stores, county health departments and other Greater Than AIDS partners, the AIDS Alliance of Northwest Georgia, which assists about 110 HIV/AIDS patients, is offering free HIV testing in Cartersville on National HIV Testing Day from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m., The Daily Tribune News reports.

The nonprofit, which serves 10 counties and offers services, such as housing and transportation, in addition to support groups and prevention education also conducts free HIV testing each Tuesday from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. at its Cartersville office in the old train depot at Friendship Plaza, according to its website.

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HIV testing is a critical part of stopping the spread of the virus and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says testing should be a part of routine health care, according to the Georgia Department of Public Health press release. A panel of doctors and scientists recently recommended that all Americans between age 15 and 65 get tested for HIV, regardless of their risk of infection. HIV testing would help increase detection and decrease the stigma associated with HIV and being tested, according to the panel. HIV testing during pregnancy also is important because antiviral therapy can improve the mother’s health and greatly lower the chance that an HIV-infected pregnant woman will pass HIV to her infant before, during or after birth. 

Testing is a critical part of the fight against HIV in Georgia. At the end of 2010, there were 18,535 Georgians living with HIV and 23,451 with AIDS. The state ranks sixth in the nation for the number of AIDS cases reported through the end of 2009.

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"Getting Georgians tested and linking HIV-positive patients with treatment is essential to reducing HIV transmission in Georgia,” Georgia Department of Public Health Commissioner Brenda Fitzgerald said in the release. “An HIV-positive person is 96 percent less-likely to pass the virus to others if they're adhering to an appropriate treatment regimen.”

If people test positive for HIV, they can take care of themselves. Proper medical care and treatment help people with HIV live longer healthier lives and reduces the chances of passing HIV to others.  People who test negative for HIV can take steps to stay negative by not having unprotected sex or engaging in other risky behavior like needle sharing. 


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