Behold the spectacle of the incredible invisible Hispanic woman. She and her sisters walk among us, over 20 million strong, young and old, U.S.-born and immigrant, legal and illegal, yet undetectable to the mainstream eye.This month we heard about the "Hidden Epidemic" -- a major public-health crisis affecting one in every four teen-age girls -- when the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released a study estimating 3.2 million young women between the ages of 14 and 19 are infected with the human papilloma virus, chlamydia, herpes simplex virus and/or trichomoniasis.Media accounts made it clear these shocking numbers, gleaned from 838 randomly chosen study participants, were even worse for black women. A stunning 48 percent of those young women were infected with one or more STDs, compared to 20 percent of white women.And the 20 million Latinas -- just those counted by the U.S. Census' last tally in July 2006, that is -- well, they just don't exist. At least not in this "nationally representative study."Apparently, "insufficient numbers" of Hispanic women were served in the California high-school-based clinics and the New York City clinics studied by the CDC to make any estimates about STD rates among Latinas.Really? The CDC and most media outlets covering the report's release went to great pains to point out the study didn't include any STD prevalence data on teen-age boys, but no one blinked at the glaring omission of the country's fastest growing ethnic group?It's true, the big four STDs are a drop in the bucket compared with major chronic diseases -- such as obesity, diabetes and asthma -- decimating Hispanics. To its credit, the CDC in recent years has painstakingly researched, reported on and reached out -- even in Spanish -- to tell Hispanics how to prevent these illnesses. But leaving Latinas out of this highly publicized report -- "the clearest picture to date of the overall STD burden in adolescent women" -- undermines the CDC's well-intentioned efforts to make us aware these STDs are everywhere, often go unnoticed and undiagnosed, and cut across racial and ethnic lines.According to the CDC's Office of Minority Health, obtaining data for Hispanics is too hard because of "their relatively small numbers in the population and geographic dispersion" -- and the lack of "culturally and linguistically appropriate data collection materials and bilingual interviewers."CDC officials should check out the latest statistics.A Pew Research Center report, "Statistical Portrait of Hispanics in the United States, 2006," found that of the 45 million Hispanics counted, 61 percent were native-born. Of those under 18, 75 percent reported themselves predominantly English-speaking.We could argue about perceived barriers all day. Instead, let me tell you why anyone who isn't a Gomez, Hernandez or Rodriguez should even care about STD rates in Hispanic women.How about this? After 14 years of declining teen-pregnancy rates, between 2005 and 2006 the birth rate for all girls between 15 and 19 rose 3 percent. The CDC estimated the rate for Hispanic girls was 2 percent.Or let's talk about the biggest biggie: HIV/AIDS, which is staging a comeback as a result of the misguided belief it is now curable with drug cocktails. In 2006, the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality found new AIDS cases worsening only among Latinos -- compared with all other racial/ethnic groups. Their cases doubled from 2001 to 2004, with Latinas' new infections jumping from 23 percent to 51 percent in that time period.The bottom line: 20 million Juanas, Rosas and Marias are not invisible. Neither the CDC nor anyone else can afford to ignore the sexual health of 20 million Hispanic women.In fact, lots of them will have sex with Toms, Dicks and Harrys. Or, as I like to think of them, your sons, brothers and fathers. Heck, some of the 20 million might even hook up with your moms, sisters and daughters.And the STDs that'll cross cultural barriers just happen to be colorblind. (Esther J. Cepeda is a director at the United Neighborhood Organization, a Chicago-based nonprofit dedicated to ensuring Hispanics' success in the United States. She may be reached at ecepeda(at)uno-online.org.)(Distributed by Scripps Howard News Service, http://www.scrippsnews.com)
Latest Stories
By JOHN LINDSAY, Scripps Howard News Service
An editorial / By Dale McFeatters , Scripps Howard News Service
By JAY AMBROSE, Scripps Howard News Service
By JIM SOUHAN, Minneapolis Star Tribune
By PENNY MOORE, Scripps Howard News Service
By FRANK A. AUKOFER, Scripps Howard News Service
By FRANK A. AUKOFER, Scripps Howard News Service
By MICHELE LERNER, bankrate.com
By ANN McFEATTERS, Scripps Howard News Service
By PEGGY FLETCHER STACK, Salt Lake Tribune
By DEROY MURDOCK, Scripps Howard News Service
By MARVIN WALBERG, Scripps Howard News Service
By BEN BOYCHUK and JOEL MATHIS, Scripps Howard News Service
By JIM SANDERS, Sacramento Bee
By JEAN GUERRERO, Las Vegas Sun
By SCOTT ADAMSON, Scripps Howard News Service
By RAY McNULTY, Scripps Howard News Service
By BARTON GOLDSMITH, Scripps Howard News Service
By DEBORAH M. TODD, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
By KRISTIN TILLOTSON, Minneapolis Star Tribune
- 1 of 1910
- ››
Sadly, CDC study overlooked Hispanic women
Submitted by SHNS on Fri, 03/21/2008 - 11:55
As student athletes return to competition, their parents likely are unaware that barely a third of America's high schools with a sports program have a full-time professional athletic trainer.
A four-month Scripps Howard News Service review found that for every high school that has one or more athletic trainers regularly assigned to the training room, two other schools rely on a patchwork of coaches trained in first aid and part-time athletic trainers, nurses, emergency medical technicians or team doctors.
Despite dramatic improvements in DNA analysis and other breakthroughs in forensic science, police fail to make an arrest in more than one-third of all homicides. National clearance rates for murder and manslaughter have fallen from about 90 percent in the 1960s to below 65 percent in recent years.
More than 100 people die every day on America's killer roads. The routine act of driving has become the riskiest thing most Americans do. Yet sometimes the deadliest roads seem disarmingly safe -- a small country lane winding gently through rolling hills or a perfectly straight superhighway stretching across a vast desert landscape.
America's wild hog population is exploding and spreading across the country, more than doubling in size and range in the past 20 years. Two decades ago, somewhere between 500,000 and 2 million wild pigs roamed the United States in 17 states. Now the population numbers between 2 million and 6 million in 44 states.
19 comments
2 comments
2 comments
Who's online
There are currently 0 users and 0 guests online.




ShareThis





Latinas and health
seems relevant
Neither the CDC nor anyone
Neither the CDC nor anyone else can afford to ignore the sexual health of 20 million Hispanic women.In fact, lots of them will have sex with Toms, Dicks and Harrys.
Post new comment