June is Pride
Month, a time to celebrate and support the LGBTQ community, a population
heavily impacted by HIV. In 2019, gay and bisexual men represented 56% of the
1.2 million people living with HIV in the United States; transgender women and
Black and brown Americans are also disproportionately affected. Here’s a
roundup of recent headline-making challenges and reasons to wave your rainbow
flag.
Politics
Don’t say gay
or trans. Homophobia, racism, stigma and
discrimination put queer people at higher risk of acquiring HIV and not getting
the care they need. So the growing popularity of anti-LGBTQ bills is alarming.
Legislation usually targets queer youth, such as the so-called Don’t Say Gay
law in Florida and numerous bans on transgender student athletes and
gender-affirming care for youth.
Equality wins. Gender-neutral passports are now available. Also, thanks to lawsuits
filed by service members living with HIV, including Sergeant Nick Harrison, a
federal court struck down the Pentagon’s discriminatory HIV policies—service
members can no longer be discharged or denied promotions because they have HIV.
Health Care
PrEP for all. The Biden-Harris administration’s proposed budget for 2023 included
not only a funding boost to the Ending the HIV Epidemic in the United States
initiative but also the investment of $9.8 billion to expand access to PrEP, or
pre-exposure prophylaxis, which refers to pills or injections taken to prevent
HIV. The queer advocacy group PrEP4All—including Kenyon Farrow—applauded the
move but called for strategic planning that serves populations with limited
access to PrEP.
Gay blood
drive. Currently, a man cannot donate blood if
he has had sexual contact with another man in the past three months, even if
he’s monogamous. Would a questionnaire better assess a potential donor’s risk?
The ADVANCE (Assessing Donor Variability and New Concepts in Eligibility) study
hopes to find out, and eight LGBTQ community centers are participating in the
research.
Measuring
queer health care. The LGBTQ advocacy group Human Rights
Campaign released its 15th annual Healthcare Equality Index. The results?
“Diverse health care facilities across the U.S. are making tremendous strides
toward LGBTQ+ patient-centered care,” the index notes. “In unprecedented
numbers, they are changing key policies, implementing best practices and
training their staff.”
Entertainment
Television is
more queer and less HIV-friendly. For example,
of the 775 regular characters on scripted prime time TV shows in the 2021–2022
season, 92 (11.9%) were LGBTQ—a record high, according to the LGBTQ advocacy
group GLAAD. Representation also climbed on cable series. However, the number
of characters living with HIV decreased from three main characters (all
on Pose) to two minor ones: Michael on the final season of
Netflix’s Dear White People and Sai on NBC’s Ordinary
Joe.
From stage to
screen. Playwright Donja R. Love, who graced the
cover of last year’s POZ 100 issue, wrote and directed the Black LGBTQ digital
series i need space, which you can watch (free!) on Broadstream.
Told through short video chats, which include a transgender man living with HIV
(played by Ja’Mel Ashely), the seven-episode story, Love says, “explores loss,
loneliness, love and healing.”
Rock stars of
HIV fundraisers. Sir Elton John’s 30th annual Academy
Awards Viewing Party—cohosted by Billy Porter, Eric McCormack, David Furnish
and Lady Gaga—raised a record-breaking $8.9 million for the Elton John AIDS
Foundation. And Lil Nas X has now raised over $500,000 through a “baby
registry” linked to his debut album, Montero, to help the Gilead
COMPASS Initiative fight HIV in the South. Bravo!
SOURCE: POZ DOT COM
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