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AIDS
Action Council Says More Work to be Done with HIV/AIDS Appropriations; Promises
to Work with Congress
Calls
Today’s House Subcommittee Appropriations Recommendations Promising Yet Still
Inadequate to Meet Growing Epidemic
WASHINGTON, June
7, 2007 – Today the Labor, Health and Human Services and
Education Subcommittee of the House Appropriations Committee recommended small
increases for certain HIV/AIDS programs and flat funding for others. AIDS
Action Council views the recommended funding as an improvement in some areas
over previous years yet inadequate overall.
“While
we at AIDS Action Council appreciate that this reverses the reduction in
HIV/AIDS federal funding in recent memory, it’s still not enough to keep pace
with the growing infection rate, especially in communities of color, or to
address the treatment and care needs of people living with HIV/AIDS in our
country,” said Rebecca Haag,
Executive Director, AIDS Action Council. “We’ve always maintained that
current funding amounts are not sufficient to ensure that life-saving drugs and
medical treatment is available to all who are infected. Appropriations
have fallen far short over the last several years while the epidemic is growing
with an estimated 40,000 new HIV infections every year. The reality is we
need significantly more funding. We reinforce our previous call for full
funding and our prior promise to work with Congress to make sure that
additional resources are made available. Today’s measure is a promising
start; however, it falls short of meeting the challenges of a still growing
domestic HIV/AIDS epidemic. We need to do more.”
There
are an estimated half a million people in the U.S. who are infected with HIV but
are not in medical care. Half of that number, an estimated 250,000
people, is unaware of their HIV status. People under 25 years of
age account for approximately half of new HIV infections.
“With
the continuing vulnerability to HIV infection and STDs among adolescents and young
adults, it is outrageous that the subcommittee is recommending a $27.8 million
increase for the repeatedly discredited abstinence-only programs. This
dismisses science-based evidence that these programs lack effectiveness.
The recommended funding increase for domestic HIV prevention leaves woefully
little for intervention programs that are urgently needed to lower high rates
of new infections among women and gay and bisexual men of color. The
President has rightfully called for a significant increase in our commitment to
the global HIV/AIDS pandemic. We cannot leave people living with HIV/AIDS
or those at risk here in our own country behind,” Haag added.
AIDS Action strives to end the HIV epidemic by advancing public
policies that prevent new infections, provide care for people living with HIV,
and support the search for a cure. AIDS Action
serves as the national voice for AIDS service organizations, health
departments, and a diverse network of community-based organizations across the U.S.
that provides services for people living with or affected by HIV infection.
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