Thursday, October 14, 2010

How HIV Prevention Has To Change:

October 14, 2010 - Tom Frieden, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), has included the domestic HIV/AIDS epidemic on his short list of "winnable battles" in public health. We could dramatically reduce the number of new HIV infections in America below the current annual rate of 56,000.  But without important changes in the way our country addresses HIV/AIDS, in five years there may well be more new infections each year, not fewer. 
Any discussion of HIV prevention should start with the good news.  Numerous research studies have demonstrated that HIV prevention can be effective.  Community-driven and publicly funded HIV prevention helped bring the HIV infection rate down dramatically from its peak in the mid-1980s, and prevention programs averted more than 350,000 new infections between 1991 and 2006.1   And yet the HIV infection rate has not fallen in over a decade and is likely creeping upward.  HIV continues to have a devastating impact on the hardest hit communities, including gay men, African Americans, and Latinos.
President Obama’s National HIV/AIDS Strategy, released in July, sets the worthy goal of reducing HIV infection by 25% over five years.  It pledges reforms in the U.S. approach to AIDS, including improved coordination, accountability, and targeted use of resources for populations most at risk.  These are all critically important measures, but alone are not sufficient to reach the President’s Strategy goals.  To do that we’ll need systemic change in HIV prevention.  Here are some of the priorities:
First, increase and make better use of resources.  Domestic HIV prevention receives only about 3% of total federal HIV spending.  A new analysis from David Holtgrave at Johns Hopkins University suggests that increased investments in HIV prevention now will yield savings down the road.2   Funding also needs to be used more wisely, and hard choices need to be made about deploying resources where they can have greatest impact at the Federal, state and local level.  
What is needed: In his FY 2012 budget proposal, the President should make the resource increases necessary to accomplish Strategy goals.
Second, make lower incidence the primary focus.  It sounds obvious, but the goal of HIV prevention should be to bring down the HIV infection rate, also called HIV incidence.  Yet too many publicly funded prevention programs operate on a small scale and do not reach many of those at elevated risk. Four out of five gay and bisexual men report not being reached with individual or group prevention programs in the prior year.3
In one recent CDC survey of gay men sampled in 21 urban centers a shocking 71% of young Black gay men living with HIV were not aware of their status.  
What is needed: Operational plans now being drawn up by federal agencies to implement the National Strategy must detail a process for identifying prevention services associated with reducing HIV incidence and not just HIV risk behavior, as well as for bringing the most effective prevention services to the scale necessary for making a measurable impact on the hardest hit communities. 
Third, address the context of vulnerability.  We have to deliver prevention messages that can help people modify their behavior, along with condoms, syringe exchange, and other proven prevention approaches.  But reducing HIV incidence will also require increasing the reach of comprehensive services including AIDS treatment, frequent voluntary HIV testing, prevention programming for people living with HIV, and supportive services such as housing. 
A person’s risk behavior is very different from their likelihood of becoming infected with HIV.  For example, African-American gay men do not practice riskier sexual behavior than their white counterparts, and have lower risk profiles in some respects.  But an African-American gay man is at far greater risk of becoming HIV positive.  This is due to several factors outlined by Greg Millett and colleagues,4 including higher rates of sexually transmitted infections (STIs) and lower rates of both AIDS treatment and knowledge of HIV status. 
Antiretroviral therapy lowers HIV viral load and evidence suggests it may reduce the likelihood of infecting others, so identifying people living with HIV and giving them the opportunity to receive appropriate care should be a top prevention priority. Yet one out of three people living with HIV/AIDS in America is not in care.5  Greater uptake of treatment and other services depends on innovative approaches to overcoming social barriers to health care utilization, including stigma, racism, and homophobia. 
What is needed: National Strategy operational plans must address HIV prevention as part of a coordinated effort to expand voluntary HIV testing and delivery of AIDS treatment and STI services.  Federal contracts should reflect the critical role of all HIV service providers in linking people with appropriate treatment and prevention interventions, and helping people living with HIV stay in care.  Community prevention providers will continue to have a critical role in prevention services, though in some cases their work would broaden to include helping people access and stay in care, and delivering services on a wider scale. 
HHS has announced a plan to work across its agencies to expand integrated services in areas with high HIV incidence.  It’s an excellent approach that can be the leading edge of a successful Strategy if the program has the necessary resources, brings services to scale, and reaches those who have thus far not received the services they need.
Finally, get the answers we need to have greater impact.  Ultimately a cure and a vaccine are necessary to bring the HIV epidemic to an end, and there is new hope on both these fronts that justifies increased research investments.  But for the near term, we must make better use of the interventions at hand.  Research efforts across the US government need to tell us more about how to expand the reach of comprehensive programming, provide people with services they feel safe and comfortable using, and address the social and structural factors driving vulnerability to HIV infection.  As Tom Coates and colleagues6 have observed, HIV prevention research has paid woefully insufficient attention to assessing programs that can be delivered broadly enough to impact overall incidence, including scaled up individual and small group interventions, and other approaches.  
What is needed: National Strategy operational plans should reinforce the critical coordination and planning role of the Office of AIDS Research (OAR) at the National Institutes of Health and outline specifically what research is needed short and long term to accomplish Strategy goals on time.  
We have the tools to dramatically reduce HIV infection rates, and in fact prevention experts from the CDC and Johns Hopkins University estimate7 that HIV incidence could be reduced by 40% or more in five to ten years.  Now we need the leadership to put these tools to work in a reinvigorated, strategic, and adequately resourced national effort.

Chris Collins is Vice President and Director of Public Policy at amfAR, the Foundation for AIDS Research.  Recommendations for National HIV/AIDS Strategy implementation developed by a group of 21 Strategy advocates are available here. 

Friday, September 17, 2010

The Other City: Movie on HIV: Review




In every city, there’s another city that visitors rarely see. But this other city isn’t just anywhere—it’s in Washington, D.C. The very city that is home to the capitol of the most powerful country in the world has an HIV/AIDS rate that is not only the nation’s highest, but rivals some African countries.
“The Other City” introduces us to the people who live in the shadow of the Capitol but remain almost invisible to the lawmakers and lobbyists who live there. It’s about politics and ideology, corruption and bureaucracy, and an epidemic that grew out of control while few people paid any attention or cared.
HIV/AIDS is wrapped in a thicket of American prejudices and discomfort about homosexuality, race, class, and drugs—all of which fuel opposition to life-saving programs like needle exchange. Federal denial of funding for clean syringe programs has created both a higher incidence of the disease and helped shift its demographic to one that is increasingly poor, black and Hispanic. And as the only city in the nation with no state government, Washington D.C. has suffered in a particularly cruel way from this lack of federal government support.

“The Other City” tells the stories of people who haven’t let lack of government assistance stop them, and have taken matters into their own hands. After contracting HIV from a boyfriend who didn’t disclose he was infected, Jose Ramirez devotes his life to promoting HIV awareness among Hispanic teens. While living with AIDS and fighting desperately to keep herself and her three young children from being thrown out of their home, J’Mia Edwards realizes she can play a role in helping others. A one-time addict now living with AIDS, Ron Daniels saves lives by providing clean needles and helping drug users receive treatment. And finally, the staff of the AIDS hospice Joseph’s House struggles to provide solace to terminal patients’ last days, to deal with their own sense of loss, and their constantly declining funding.
For these activists, remedies can’t be found within the confines of an office or a regular schedule: for some the work encompasses round-the-clock care-giving, and for others a never-ending trek through the squalid drug dens and clandestine park trails where people engage in risky behavior. Informal HIV/AIDS organizations are set up wherever people can congregate to share experiences and offer mutual support. Still, without financial support, large-scale progress is beyond the scope of these endeavors. In this environment, forward movement means providing comfort for the afflicted and saving as many lives as possible.
"THE OTHER CITY” is a tribute to ordinary people struggling to live their lives in dignity, to the compassionate ones who lessen their pain, and to those who stand up to fight the spread of HIV/AIDS every day

SOURCE: THE OTHER CITY

Tuesday, August 17, 2010

Nadja Benaissa infected her boyfriend

SHE is Germany's fallen angel: a pop star named Nadja Benaissa who is accused of infecting at least one lover with HIV.


At a court in Darmstadt, the 28-year-old singer from the girl group No Angels told her infected former boyfriend: "I am sorry from the bottom of my heart."

Her five-day trial is likely to set new standards in dealing with celebrities and to raise legal questions about determining responsibility for the consequences of unprotected sex.

Benaissa was arrested last year and charged with causing grievous bodily harm by having unprotected sex while knowingly suffering from HIV. She faces up to 10 years in jail.

It is not clear how Benaissa contracted AIDS. In a statement, she said: "I had been told that there was an almost zero possibility of infecting anybody or of full-blown AIDS breaking out.

"So I didn't tell my friends. I didn't want my daughter to be stigmatised."

She did, however, tell her fellow band members, who have been called as witnesses. No Angels have been hailed as the most successful girl band in continental Europe, with four No 1 singles and three No 1 albums.


According to the state prosecutor, Benaissa was told of her HIV infection in 1999. She was 17 at the time and is, therefore, being tried by a youth court.

In a television interview in July last year, the singer, who admitted being addicted to crack cocaine when she was 14, talked about living with being HIV positive. "I can't just go anywhere I like and be free and be a normal person. I now have this stamp," she said. "I am actually completely healthy, not sick."

She allegedly slept with three men on at least five occasions between 2000 and 2004 without making her condition known.

One of them, a 34-year-old former boyfriend, was infected in 2004 and was in court as a co-plaintiff. Her defence team will suggest there is no way of establishing whether the virus was passed to the former boyfriend by Benaissa or another of his sexual partners.

AIDS campaigners say it was not the singer's sole responsibility to ensure her partners used protection. "I would like to know from the prosecutor the exact scope of a man's responsibility when conducting unprotected sex," Gisela Friedrichsen, of Der Spiegel magazine, said.

German law considers failure to disclose HIV before sex a crime, but intention to harm must be proven. The verdict is due on August 26.

Source

Monday, August 9, 2010

Obama and AIDS: National HIV/AIDS Policy 2010

OBAMA is THE Orator. He speaks about such a sensitive topic in a diligent way. The way he hypnotizes the crowd on such a topic that the crowd could not utter a word, but just listen to him.
His National HIV/AIDS policy wants ONLY three things
THREE Primary goals for the NHAS he stresses are:
  1.  Reducing HIV incidence (new cases)
  2.  Increasing access to care and optimizing health outcomes
  3.  Reducing HIV-related health disparities





Source

HIV infected man takes a "Diffcult Decision"

Sunday, August 8, 2010

Obama and AIDS

Female Condom: What the heck is that?

Will a new version of the female condom catch on?
Officials in HIV-ravaged Washington, D.C., certainly hope so. They've launched a citywide campaign to get women and their partners to think about giving the new and improved disease- and unwanted pregnancy buster a try.
The original version was a bit of a dud. At about $3.60 apiece, it was expensive.
Some said the material, polyurethane, reminded them of a doctor's examination glove and sounded like a crinkling plastic bag during sex. And some women didn't like the way it looked, as part of it hangs out of the vagina.
The new condom, which was approved by the FDA last year, is made of d nitrile, which is reportedly less noisy. It's also less expensive - about $2 - though that's still more expensive than a male condom. Like the old version, it's a flexible pouch wider than a male condom but similar in length.
According to a new ad campaign being used in Washington to promote the new condom, it has  "pleasure points for her and him - to tease, please and protect."
 Washington, D.C. has one of the highest HIV infection rates in the country. A 2009 study found that about 3 percent of the city's population over the age of 12 has HIV or AIDS. That's a severe epidemic, according to the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which considers an epidemic "severe" when more than 1 percent of residents are affected.
The push involves ads on buses, a website, and the handing out of 500,000 free female condoms at beauty salons, barber shops, churches and restaurants.The condoms are also being sold in Washington drugstores.
The FC is reported to be as effective as male condoms in preventing pregnancy and HIV, and because it covers more area, it may provide broader protection. It can be inserted up to eight hours before intercourse.
Most important, it allows a woman to be in control of whether protection is used.

Source

Vanessa Hudgens enacts HIV infected stripper

Source
Vanessa Hudgens shakes off her Goody Two-Shoes image - to play an HIV-infected stripper in a raunchy stage musical.
The 21-year-old left her Disney role as squeaky-clean Gabriella in High School Musical behind to star as Mimi in the hit show Rent.
And her sexy performance wowed an audience including High School co-star and boyfriend Zac Ephron at Los Angeles' Hollywood Bowl.
 Source