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Indiana HIV outbreak, hepatitis C epidemic sparks CDC alert

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — An Indiana county is experiencing nearly daily increases in new HIV infections tied to intravenous drug use, and health officials hope the situation prompts other states to closely track their hepatitis C and HIV rates to identify potential clusters of the diseases.

Indiana state health officials said Friday that the number of positive HIV tests so far this year has jumped to 142 in Scott County, which saw just three new HIV cases between 2009 and 2013, and has never seen more than five cases in a year, health officials said.

The new number includes 136 confirmed cases and 6 preliminary positives in the county, about 30 miles north of Louisville, Kentucky.

“We literally have new cases being reported every day,” said Dr. Jerome Adams, the state’s health commissioner.

Dr. Joan Duwve, chief medical consultant for the Indiana State Department of Health, said four out of five people infected in the outbreak have acknowledged using injectable drugs, mostly the painkiller Opana.

Federal health officials helping to contain the outbreak issued an alert to health departments nationwide on Friday, urging them to take steps to identify and track HIV and hepatitis C cases in an effort to prevent similar outbreaks elsewhere.

The CDC recorded a 150 percent increase in acute hepatitis C cases from 2010 to 2013, said Dr. Jonathan Mermin, director of the National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD and TB Prevention. Health officials say high rates of hepatitis C are a key indicator of needle-sharing and a potential HIV outbreak.

“The situation in Indiana should serve as a warning that we cannot let down our guard against these deadly infections,” Mermin said.

The advisory urges health departments to review recent data on HIV and hepatitis C diagnoses, overdose deaths, drug arrests and admissions for drug treatment to identify communities at risk for unrecognized clusters of HIV and hepatitis C infections.

Hepatitis C, which is most commonly spread through the sharing of drug needles, can lead to liver cancer and and is the leading reason for liver transplants. The virus also can trigger damage in other parts of the body, though it can take decades for symptoms to emerge. HIV spreads among drug users mainly through unprotected sex and the sharing of needles.

Indiana typically sees about 500 new HIV cases a year, health officials have said. The Scott County outbreak is just the “tip of the iceberg” of a national opiate abuse problem that puts people at high risk of infectious diseases, Mermin said.

Adams said the state has spent more than $2 million on efforts to fight the outbreak, which include testing, awareness campaigns, a limited needle-exchange program and an outreach center that allows people to sign up for health insurance and other services.

Fashion and Sheryl Crow raise money for Down Syndrome awareness in D.C. (Video)

WASHINGTON - There was lots of vamping on the catwalk at the Ritz Carlton in D.C. Wednesday night. A fashion show featuring more than two dozen models with Down Syndrome, many of them children, took center stage. The show was part of a benefit for the Global Down Syndrome Foundation, which is working to raise awareness about the disorder and gather more funding for research. "We don't get our fair share of funding in terms of the National Institutes of Health research dollars," said the Foundation's Executive Director Michelle Sie Whitten. She said there appears to be a link between Down Syndrome and Alzheimer's disease. "I believe that if we study people with Down Syndrome, that we will have a better, faster path toward treatments or even a cure to Alzheimer's," said Whitten. Once the fashion show was over, singer-songwriter Sheryl Crow took the stage and performed several of her hits, including "All I Wanna Do." "Everybody looks so pretty tonight," she told the crowd. "Loved the fashion show. Loved it." It's not known yet what causes Down Syndrome, which the Centers for Disease Control estimated in 2011 affects one in 691 babies born in the U.S. See highlights of the fashion show in the video below: Follow @WTOP and @WTOPliving on Twitter.
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