A new study reveals
that for black clergy members, traditional barriers to talking about HIV
prevention are giving way to faith-friendly messages about getting tested for
HIV and staying on treatment. The study, recently published in the prestigious journal
Public Library of Science,
shows that black community religious leaders now see battling AIDS as a social
justice issue compatible with their religious teachings. The study results come
at a time of immense hope for turning the tide against the HIV epidemic. As a
result, more and more black clergy are joining the fight to help put an end to
AIDS.
"We in public health
have done a poor job of engaging African-American community leaders and
particularly black clergy members in HIV prevention," says Dr. Amy Nunn, lead
author of the study and assistant professor of medicine at Brown University.
"There is a common miss-perception that African American churches are unwilling
to address the AIDS epidemic. The paper highlights some of the historical barriers
in effectively engaging African American clergy in HIV prevention and provides
recommendations from clergy for how to move forward."
The study consisted of
interviews and focus groups with 38 African-American pastors and physicians and
public health researchers from Philadelphia, a city with an exceptionally high
racial disparity of HIV infection. Seven in ten new infections in the city are
among black residents.
Until participating in
the research, many clergy members were unfamiliar with the severity of the HIV
epidemic within their communities. With 32 million lives already lost due to
HIV and grim statistics underlying grim health prospects for many in the black
community, nearly all of the studies 27 male and 11 female clergy said they
could, and would discuss and promote HIV testing and treatment.
This seems fitting
considering that according to CDC, African Americans are 14% of the US
population but are 44% of new HIV infections. One in four African Americans
will contract HIV within their lifetime. A recent study also showed that
new-infection rates among black women in some U.S. cities are as high as in
parts of sub-Sahara Africa. Infection rates in the U.S. are also alarmingly
high among black men who have sex with other men. And with 20% of the more than
one million people with HIV/AIDS in the U.S. not knowing they have it, there is
a ticking time-bomb hidden within already deeply impacted communities.
Across the country,
black houses of faith are now trying to fight back, both in the pulpit and out
in the community.
In Chicago, the AIDS
Foundation of Chicago and the interfaith coalition, Faith Responds to AIDS, are
holding forums on the epidemic as well as performing HIV testing in dozens of
predominantly black churches throughout the city.
The Dallas County
Health and Human Services Department, The Dallas Examiner, and several of the
cities black churches are engaged in a city-wide effort to call attention to
the disease.
Meanwhile, the
organization The Balm In Gilead has set a goal of engaging 1000 houses of
wordhip to participate in HIV testing events during the month of June. June
27th is National HIV Testing Day.
With Secretary of
State Hillary Clinton, the NIH's Tony Fauci, along with other HIV experts
declaring that an end of AIDS may be in sight, the "test and treat" message,
when delivered by local clergy, provides a needed boost to decades of
marginally effective HIV prevention efforts.
Without the full
support and efforts of community religious leaders and their places of worship,
it is feared that the extraordinary scientific breakthroughs of the past
several years won't be utilized within black communities and that the epidemic
will spin further out of control. One especially important study showed that
putting infected people on treatment can dramatically reduce the transmission
of HIV to others by 96-percent. Other studies have revealed that taking a daily
HIV antiviral pill can help stop those at high risk from becoming infected with
the virus. Known as "HIV Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis", or "PrEP", a pill will
probably be approved for that purpose this Fall. In addition, HIV infection
testing kits for home use will soon be available making it easier to test for
the virus anytime, anyplace.
"For decades, we’ve
focused many HIV prevention efforts on reducing risky behavior," says Dr. Nunn.
"Focusing on HIV testing and treatment should be the backbone of HIV prevention
strategies and efforts to reduce racial disparities in HIV infection. Making
HIV testing routine is the gateway to getting more individuals on treatment.
African American clergy have an important role to play in the routinization of
HIV testing."
With these new tools,
black clergy members feel now is the time for action. However, these religious
leaders acknowledged there are barriers. Particularly challenging for them is
discussing human sexuality in a church or mosque.
"One time my pastor
spoke to young people about sex, mentioning using protection," states one
clergy member in Dr. Nunn's study. "I was sitting in the clergy row; you could
feel the heat! I was surprised he said that. Comments from the clergy
highlighted that they were opposed to that topic. It’s a tightrope walk."
Clergy members also
face the challenge of talking about minimizing risk behaviors along with
discussing abstinence.
"It’s my duty as a
preacher to tell people to abstain," added another pastor, "but if they’re
still having sex and they’re getting HIV, there has to be another way to handle
this."
One method church leaders
are trying is to make the issue less about sex and more about society. To place
the HIV/AIDS epidemic in a non-judgmental social justice context rather than a
behavioral one. So church leaders emphasize that having an HIV test is
important to both the immediate and the greater community at large. Doing so
may reduce both the stigma and the spread of this deadly virus.
"One thing that we
could do immediately is to encourage our congregations — everybody — to get
tested. We’re not dealing with risk factors and we’re all going to get tested
once a year," another pastor told the researchers. "That’s the one thing that
we could do that doesn’t get into our doctrine about sexuality."
Many religious leaders
are also encouraging discussion of HIV beyond primary worship services, such as
in ministries and out into the community. For example, dozens of Philadelphia
church and community leaders will soon participate in an HIV prevention
campaign that includes door-to-door testing in neighborhoods with the highest
infection rates.
"Religious leaders
are, in fact, willing to engage in a dialogue and HIV prevention, if you do it
in a culturally appropriate and faith-friendly way," says Dr. Nunn.
End AIDS: Join the Fight,
Spread the Word
- Ask
your faith institution to help create community awareness on the
importance of testing and then treating for the virus and efforts to End
AIDS by incorporating that into sermons, testimonies, ministries. Add same
to weekly bulletins and onto your church, temple, or mosque’s website.
- Create
a video for your website and the wider internet (you tube, etc.): Use a
digital camera, a plain background, and just share your thoughts and your
own efforts on ending AIDS.
- Host
an HIV testing event. Contact your local health department or AIDS service
organization for testing kits and personnel.
- Engage
and mobilize faith institutions and reigious leaders outside your own
place of worship.
- Demonstrate:
Get thee to Wahsington D.C. on July 24th when a major END AIDS
demonstration will take place during the Internation AIDS Conferencene.
More at WeCanEndAIDS.org
- The
POZ Army wants you! Whether you have HIV or not, get involved and stay
informed on all that is being done to end AIDS. Join the army at wwwpoz.com/pozarmy/
Balmingilead.org also provides culturally
appropriate tools for faith institutions to implement their own strategies for
Ending AIDS. Other support may be provided by state and local health
authorities and AIDS service organizations. And don't forget National HIV Testing Day on June 27th.