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More than 100
Organizations Call for a National AIDS Strategy to end the epidemic in the United States
Strategies to address the nation’s largest public health
challenges, including AIDS, should be part of Presidential candidates’ national
health plans
WASHINGTON, Sep. 17, 2007 -- More than 100 organizations from across
the country are calling for the next President to commit to ending the AIDS
epidemic in America.
They have requested that every Presidential candidate commit to developing a
results-oriented national AIDS strategy designed to significantly reduce HIV
infection rates, ensure access to care and treatment for those who are infected
and eliminate racial disparities. The
groups issued a “Call to Action” that has been presented to all Presidential
candidates. The Call to Action and a list of supporters is available at www.nationalaidsstrategy.org.
“More
than 1.7 million HIV infections and over half a million deaths into the
domestic AIDS epidemic, our government still does not have a comprehensive plan
to respond effectively,” said Rebecca Haag, Executive Director of AIDS
Action. “The
wealthiest nation in the world is failing its own people in responding to the
AIDS epidemic at home. Our country must develop what it asks of other nations
it supports in combating AIDS: a comprehensive national strategy to achieve
improved and more equitable results.”
The Call
to Action asserts that the lack of an outcome-based response to HIV
domestically has lead to unacceptable results: half of people with HIV are not
in care, there is a new infection every 13 minutes, infection rates have not
fallen in more than 15 years, and dramatic racial disparities are becoming even
more pronounced.
“America’s
response to AIDS is not serving those most in need,” said Phill Wilson,
Executive Director of the Black AIDS Institute.
“We cannot make significant progress on national AIDS statistics unless
government and community efforts better respond to the needs of Black America,
and we need a comprehensive national strategy to get there.”
“We need
a plan, not a patchwork,” said Julie Davids, Executive Director of Community
HIV/AIDS Mobilization Project (CHAMP). “We
need to move from a response to AIDS that is often bureaucratic to one that is
evidence-based and outcomes-oriented; a response that reaches everyone at risk
of infection or needing care.”
The Call
to Action statement states that to be successful a national AIDS strategy
should:
- Improve prevention and
treatment outcomes through reliance on evidence-based programming
- Set ambitious and credible
prevention and treatment targets and require annual reporting on progress
towards goals
- Identify clear priorities for
action across federal agencies and assign responsibilities and timelines
for follow-through
- Include, as a primary focus,
the prevention and treatment needs of African Americans, other communities
of color, gay men of all races, and other groups at elevated risk
- Address social factors that
increase vulnerability to infection
- Promote a strengthened HIV
prevention and treatment research effort
- Involve many sectors in
developing the national strategy: government, business, community, civil
rights organizations, faith based groups, researchers, and people living
with HIV/AIDS
Mark
Cloutier, the Executive Director of the San Francisco AIDS Foundation notes the
“enormous human and economic costs resulting from the lack of a focused
response to HIV/AIDS domestically.
Without action there will be more unnecessary deaths, billions of
dollars in increased health care expenses and a significant loss of
productivity in our economy. A more
effective national response to HIV/AIDS is a critical part of building a
stronger and more responsive health care system for all Americans.”
Pernessa
Seele, founder and CEO of The Balm In Gilead, said, "The legacy
of the next Executive Office resident will be determined by what she or he
says and does to move communities and this country from where we are - in
crisis because of HIV/AIDS - to where we want and need to be - a world leader
in the advancement of research, testing, treatment and eradication of
HIV/AIDS at home and abroad."
"It is unconscionable that the United States, which has all the necessary
resources to end the AIDS epidemic, does not have a comprehensive plan to stop
AIDS deaths, reduce infections, and get people the medical care that they
need," said Robert Bank, Chief
Operating Officer of Gay Men's Health Crisis, (GMHC) in New York.
“We want
the American public to know that the knowledge and strategies needed to end the
nation’s HIV/AIDS crisis already exist,” said David Ernesto Munar, vice
president at the AIDS Foundation of Chicago. “Strong national leadership can
change the course of the epidemic.”
AIDS
advocates and leaders all over the country are currently contacting their
colleagues in civil rights, social justice, and health care organizations
urging their endorsement and support.
All organizations
and individuals concerned about America’s
AIDS
crisis are encouraged
to sign the Call to Action at www.nationalaidsstrategy.org
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