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Arizona Researchers: US HIV-AIDS Epidemic Started In New York City In Early 1970s

new york city skyline
(Photo by graphicstock.com)
New research indicates that the AIDS-HIV epidemic’s genesis in the United States was in New York City — and not San Francisco.

Research at the University of Arizona has uncovered the earliest stages of the HIV-AIDS epidemic in the United States. The research shows the virus first took hold in New York City.

UA evolutionary biologist Michael Worobey and his team conducted genomic analysis of blood samples from eight patients. The samples, collected in the late 1970s, showed genetic diversity, evidence that the virus was circulating well before published reports in 1981 describing HIV.

“So it’s sort of direct evidence of many years of circulation of this virus in the United States before HIV and AIDS were finally recognized," said Worobey.

Worobey said his research indicates that the epidemic’s genesis was in New York City — and not San Francisco.

"We can date the jump into the U.S. at about 1970 or 1971. And you see a very telltale pattern of extensive genetic diversity in New York City.”

The researchers also said the person identified as “patient zero,” as having brought AIDS to North America, was wrongly identified.

The report was published Wednesday in the journal Nature.

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Sara Hammond was a reporter at Arizona Public Media in Tucson from 2015 to 2018.