Call for National Plan to Fight HIV/AIDS in Communities of Color
Call for National Plan to Fight HIV/AIDS in Communities of Color
Below are some highlights from the press release and the seven point plan presented in the historic policy paper:
Representatives from eight national minority AIDS organizations, along with leaders from over 20 other local faith- and community-based organizations from across the U.S, its territories and Native American tribes, joined forced at the Ford Foundation offices in New York City in an urgent call to create a unified strategy to address the HIV/AIDS epidemic in communities of color.
The eight national organizations were: Asian & Pacific Islander Wellness Center, The Balm In Gilead, Black AIDS Institute, BIENESTAR, National Association of People with AIDS, National Black Leadership Commission on AIDS, National Minority AIDS Council, and National Native American AIDS Prevention Center.
The demands to the Democratic and Republican presidential nominees
come in response to long standing concerns about unmet needs for targeted HIV
research, treatment access, medical care and prevention in communities of color.
A recently-released report from the U.S. Center for Disease Control and
Prevention (CDC) on estimates of new HIV infections in the United States
amplifies the crises faced in communities of color. According to the CDC’s alarming new estimates, communities of color account
for a combined total of 65% of the approximately 56,300 new HIV
infections occurring in the United States. By the CDC’s own admission, this new
estimate is 40% higher than the CDC’s earlier estimate of 40,000 infections per
year. The startling new HIV rates are of special concern for people of color who
are more likely to die from the disease than HIV-infected whites.
AIDS advocates
representing communities of color have long expressed dissatisfaction with the
current lethargic, fragmented and unaccountable U.S. response to the epidemic,
which they point out, is a direct result of the non-existent national
plan.
Leading national HIV organizations and leaders representing communities of
color convened at the Ford Foundation in New York City in August 2008 to
formulate a national HIV response to the new administration that will take
office in January 2009. Pledging to work together to strengthen the HIV/AIDS
response – nationally, and in their own communities – these organizations agreed
on an urgent seven-point action plan.
The action points stipulate first and foremost the urgent need for the next
administration to rapidly initiate a National AIDS Strategy that engages the
entire federal government in the fight against HIV and holds each department
accountable for improved results in communities of color.
Ironically, the U.S.
government requires foreign countries receiving American HIV/AIDS assistance to
have a national strategy for addressing the epidemic, where there is none in
place in our own country.
The action plan also demands that the federal
government improve its inadequate data gathering methods, currently accounting
for only 33 out of the 50 states and 5 dependent territories, excluding other
states and territories severely impacted by the epidemic. This flawed process
results in the underestimation of HIV rates and impedes efforts to allocate
adequate resources to address HIV/AIDS prevention, treatment, and care for all
at-risk Americans.
Public health advocates also stress that the socio-economic drivers of the
epidemic disproportionately impact communities of color. Such factors include
poverty, limited educational opportunities, gender inequities, homophobia, HIV
stigma and inadequate health access.
The needs of communities of color are
further compromised by the current administration’s response to the epidemic
including a derisory allocation of only 4% of HIV-related domestic spending
towards HIV prevention efforts and the flat-funding of the Minority HIV/AIDS
Initiative for the past six years despite increasing rates of transmission in
people of color communities during that time.