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On World AIDS Day, Minority AIDS Council Presses Congress to Address HIV/AIDS Disparities
Thursday, November 30, 2006On World AIDS Day, Minority AIDS Council Presses Congress to Address HIV/AIDS Disparities
Leaders of the National Minority AIDS
Council will take their campaign to Capitol
Hill today to gain support for new strategies
in combating the AIDS epidemic.
As
the international community observes World AIDS
Day on Dec. 1, NMAC will host a reception for
Congressional leaders and present a study with
five key recommendations to decrease the health
disparities among blacks with
HIV/AIDS.
“We must have a
systematic approach to addressing the
epidemic,” Damon Dozier, NMAC's director of
government relations and public policy,
told BlackAmericaWeb.com. So
many of the problems in society and in the
black community are connected in some ways to
the disparities among those with AIDS/HIV, he
said.
“If you find poverty, you find HIV/AIDS. If
you have lack of access to medical care, you
find HIV/AIDS. If you have problems with
substandard housing, you find HIV/AIDS,” said
Dozier.
Congressional help and
support, as well as the backing of leaders on
the local and state level, is needed to address
the recommendations in the report by Columbia
University professor Robert Fullilove,
according to Dozier.
Those
recommendations are:
- Eliminate the marginalization of, and stigma and discrimination against black gay and other men who have sex with men.
- Reduce the impact of incarceration as driver of new HIV infections.
- Reduce the role of injection drug use in sustaining the AIDS epidemic.
- Expand proven HIV prevention, diagnosis and care programs.
- Stabilize communities by increasing affordable housing.
Since the beginning of the HIV/AIDS
epidemic 25 years ago, blacks have been over
represented among those living and dying with
AIDS, according to NMAC. The disease continues
to affect blacks more than any other racial or
ethnic group in the United
States.
While blacks account for
only 13 percent of the U.S. population, they
account for more than half of all new HIV/AIDS
cases. More than 200,000 blacks have died with
AIDS, and at least a half of those living now
with HIV are black.
“AIDS is a
black disease, but people don’t want to accept
that fact,” Phill Wilson, executive director of
the Black AIDS Institute, told
BlackAmericaWeb.com. “The silence is
killing us.”
According to the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention,
blacks who test positive for HIV are seven
times more likely to die from it than
whites.
Black people represent
more than 600,000 of the 1.1 million living
with AIDS. “As black America goes, so goes
America,” Wilson said.
Too often
HIV/AIDS is viewed as a disease that mainly
impacts heterosexual women, but that’s not
correct, says Jasmyne Cannick, a California
based columnist and activist.
“At
the end of the day, we see that it is
African-American heterosexual women and
African-American men who are gay or bisexual
who are impacted by the disease,”
Cannick told
BlackAmericaWeb.com.
In
the black gay community, the disease is kept
quiet by some who are infected because they
fear others will not want to associate with
them, said Harmonica Sunbeam, a comedian and
female impersonator who is living with
AIDS.
“I think in the gay
community they just don’t want to know. They
would rather deal with the unknown and face
consequences later instead of going ahead and
addressing it before it happens,” Sunbeam told
BlackAmericaWeb.com.
She has
lived with the disease several years and works
to educate others about prevention.
HIV/AIDS activists have picked up
key support in recent months throughout the
black community, with leaders such as Rev.
Jesse Jackson, Sen. Barack Obama, Julian Bond
and the Rev. T.D. Jakes renewing their
commitment to help fight the disease and raise
community awareness.
Now that
support needs to catch on among all U.S.
leaders, they say.
“This war is
not in Iraq, it’s right here,” Cannick said.
“We are talking about a fight for our
lives.”
Wilson said his
organization will continue to work with others
to gain support for initiatives addressing AIDS
in the black community.
"We have a
new Congress, and we have a responsibility to
communicate to them what our priorities should
be," Wilson said. Funding for AIDS/HIV
programs, research and care is "of critical
importance to us."
“For too long, the domestic AIDS portfolio
has been flat. At the same time, the number of
HIV/AIDS cases continues to increase, and that
means there are fewer dollars available and
preventive efforts are hampered,” Wilson told
BlackAmericaWeb.com. “We’ve been waiting over a
year for reauthorization of the Ryan White Care
Act,” which provides support for many with
HIV/AIDS.
Fullilove, author of
the NMAC’s report and the five recommendations,
said it’s time to move beyond asking each year
why statistics consistently show an increase in
HIV/AIDS cases in the black community.
“Our analysis identifies the forces that drive the epidemic in black America," said Fullilove, "and recommends proven, practical and affordable strategies that government must implement without delay to protect the health of African-Americans."
