President Joe
Biden released a statement Saturday, June 5 recognizing the 40th year of the
HIV/AIDS epidemic, emphasizing the need for continued progress toward
eradicating the virus, and announcing $670 million toward that
commitment.
“Forty years
ago today, five young men in Los Angeles were confirmed as the first known
patients stricken with an illness that the world would later come to know as
AIDS,” Biden said. “In the decades since, more than 700,000 Americans and 32.7
million people worldwide have been lost to AIDS-related illnesses – a
heartbreaking human toll that has disproportionately devastated LGBTQ+
communities, communities of color, and underserved and marginalized people
around the world.”
The president
said on this anniversary the country remembers the lives that were cut short
due the epidemic and their unacknowledged pain. It was also a time, Biden said,
to celebrate “the resilience and dignity” of those living with HIV — 38 million
globally, including 1.2 million Americans.
Biden thanked
the activists, researchers, and medical experts who have pushed for progress on
HIV treatment, research, prevention, and care. The president also acknowledged
the lack of response for years by the government and the stigma those living
with HIV still face.
He cited the
President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, noting the U.S. has supported HIV
programs around the world by investing more than $85 billion since 2002,
including, he said, $250 million toward the effects of COVID-19 on HIV.
Biden said the
funds have gone to save more than 20 million people around the world.
“To help
accelerate and strengthen our efforts to end the HIV epidemic in the United
States, I have requested $670 million from Congress, an increase of $267
million over previous levels, to aggressively reduce new HIV cases by
increasing access to treatment, expanding the use of preexposure prophylaxis
(PrEP), and ensuring equitable access to services free from stigma and
discrimination,” he announced.
The move by
Biden to recognize June 5 stands in contrast to former President
Donald Trump’s actions around HIV/AIDS. In 2017, Trump
fired what remained of the Presidential Advisory Council on HIV/AIDS
after some had quit earlier due to the administration’s health policies.
In addition to
the requested funding, the White House announced the new director of the White
House Office of National AIDS Policy, Harold Phillips.
Under
Phillips’s leadership, the Biden administration will move toward the
president’s commitment of ending the HIV/AIDS epidemic through renewed national
programs and supporting global initiatives, according to the White House.
Phillips
previously worked at the Office of HIV/AIDS and Infectious Disease Policy and
the Department of Health and Human Services as Senior HIV Advisor and Chief
Operating Officer of the Ending the HIV Epidemic initiative. He also served as
Director of the Office of HIV/AIDS Training and Capacity Development at the
Health Resources and Service Administration’s HIV/AIDS Bureau.
The new director
will be instrumental in carrying out the plans Biden has to combat the HIV
epidemic.
“In honor of
all those we have lost and all those living with the virus – and the selfless
caregivers, advocates, and loved ones who have helped carry the burden of this
crisis – we must rededicate ourselves to reducing HIV infections and
AIDS-related deaths,” Biden said. “Despite the progress we’ve made, our work is
not yet finished.”
SOURCE: HIV PLUS MAG
Thank you, Joe. Now... get it done, dear. Lipservice does not policy make.
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