Kaiser Daily HIV/AIDS Report
Thailand Becomes Model in Fight Against HIV/AIDS in Asia; XV International AIDS Conference Will Highlight Country's Successes
Leadership Summit at XV International AIDS Conference Cancelled Due to Lack of Attendees
Burma Makes 'Belated' Attempt To Address HIV/AIDS Through $88M Program, Financial Times Reports
San Francisco Chronicle Begins Five-Part Series Examining AIDS in India
U.S. Trade Officials Seek To Strengthen Patent Protection for Brand Name Drugs, Including HIV/AIDS Treatments, Wall Street Journal Reports
New Mexico Gov. Richardson Orders Shift of $2.6 Million in State Funding to Restore HIV/AIDS Services
Arts Program To Be Held in Conjunction With XV International AIDS Conference; Includes Film Festival, Other Programs
Los Angeles County, Calif., Should License Gay Bathhouses, Sex Clubs, Los Angeles Times Editorial Says
Kaiser Daily HIV/AIDS Report Summarizes Opinion Pieces on Bush Administration's Domestic, International AIDS Policies
Global Challenges
Five Million New HIV Cases Reported Worldwide Last Year, UNAIDS Report Says
[Jul 06, 2004]
Five million new HIV cases were reported worldwide last year -- the most cases reported in any single year since the beginning of the epidemic -- according to the 2004 UNAIDS Report of the Global AIDS Epidemic released by UNAIDS in advance of the XV International AIDS Conference, the AP/CNN.com reports (AP/CNN.com, 7/6). The report, which illustrates the most recent global HIV/AIDS trends, for the first time includes revised HIV prevalence for previous years based on improved methodology and more comprehensive country surveillance data (UNAIDS release, 7/6). For countries with generalized epidemics -- where HIV prevalence among pregnant women exceeds 1% -- overall HIV prevalence is calculated from data on women tested through prenatal care centers. The data then is adjusted and updated based on studies of HIV prevalence in specific populations. Countries with low-level or concentrated epidemics -- in which transmission is assumed to occur mainly among men who have sex with men and sex workers and their clients -- estimates are made for each group and then combined to obtain an estimate of the total number of HIV-positive people. However, many countries have started large-scale household surveys, which can offer more precise estimates than prenatal testing data. In addition, many countries have generated more precise data after attending workshops run by UNAIDS, UNICEF, the World Health Organization and CDC. Therefore, the changes in the 2003 data largely reflect improvements in the validity of the estimates, according to UNAIDS (Kaiser Daily HIV/AIDS Report, 6/30). The report shows that the number of people living with HIV increased from 35 million in 2001 to 38 million in 2003. The report also shows that nearly three million people died from AIDS-related causes in 2003 (UNAIDS release, 7/6). In addition, almost 50% of new HIV cases worldwide were among people ages 15 to 24, and women comprised almost 50% of people living with HIV, the report says (Bloomberg News, 7/6). Africa Sub-Saharan Africa remains the most affected region in the world with approximately 25 million people living with HIV/AIDS, Reuters reports (Reaney, Reuters, 7/6). According to the report, an increase in AIDS-related deaths and a continued increase in the number of new HIV cases have led to a stabilization of HIV prevalence in the region. The region -- which accounts for 10% of the world's population but more than 65% of the world's HIV/AIDS cases -- saw three million new HIV cases and 2.2 million deaths in 2003. The report says that there is "no such thing as the 'African' epidemic" because the continent has "tremendous diversity ... in the levels and trends of HIV infection." For example, six countries have adult HIV prevalence rates below 2%, compared with six other countries with prevalence rates greater than 20%, and Botswana and Swaziland have HIV prevalence rates above 35%, according to the report. In addition, women are more likely than men to become infected with HIV at an early age. The country ratios of young HIV-positive women to young HIV-positive men range from 20 women for every 10 men in South Africa to 45 women for every 10 men in Kenya and Mali (UNAIDS executive summary, 7/6). Asia Asia accounts for 60% of the world's population and has experienced some of the "sharpest" increases in numbers of HIV cases, the report says, Reuters reports. Asia has 7.4 million HIV-positive people, which could have "global implications," according to Reuters (Reuters, 7/6). In Asia, the epidemic is still "largely concentrated" among injection drug users, men who have sex with men, commercial sex workers, and clients of sex workers and their sexual partners, according to the report. The report says that HIV prevention programs aimed at these groups are "inadequate, partly because of stigma and discrimination." Although some Asian countries -- including Thailand and Cambodia -- have launched efforts to fight HIV/AIDS among those high-risk groups, "there is no room for complacency," the report says, concluding that if other Asian countries "fail to target populations at higher risk, the epidemic will affect much greater numbers of people in the general population" (UNAIDS executive summary, 7/6). UNAIDS Executive Director Peter Piot said, "Asia is now where Africa was 15 years ago," adding, "The growth of the epidemic is going to depend to a large extent on how the countries react. Will they wait, like Africa, until there is massive mortality because the epidemic is largely invisible, or will they act now?" (Reuters, 7/6). Eastern Europe, Central Asia The report also says that Eastern Europe and Central Asia are seeing "fast growing" epidemics, BBC News reports (BBC News, 7/6). The report shows that about 1.3 million people in the region are living with HIV/AIDS, compared with 160,000 HIV-positive people in 1995. In addition, more than 80% of HIV-positive people in the region are younger than age 30 (AP/CNN.com, 7/6). The most affected countries in the region are Estonia, Latvia, the Russian Federation and Ukraine; however, Belarus, Kazakhstan and Moldova also are experiencing increases in numbers of HIV cases. The driving force behind the epidemic in the region is injection drug use, particularly in Russia (UNAIDS executive summary, 7/6). Latin America, Caribbean There are about 1.6 million HIV-positive people in Latin America. The epidemic is mainly concentrated among high-risk groups, including injection drug users and MSM, the report says. In addition, the report says that low national prevalence in some countries is obscuring serious epidemics. For example, in Brazil -- the most populous country in the region -- national prevalence is "well below 1%," but prevalence levels among injection drug users are above 60%, the report says (UNAIDS release, 7/6). In the Caribbean, HIV transmission primarily occurs through heterosexual intercourse and is centered on commercial sex workers and their clients. Haiti faces the largest epidemic in the region and has a prevalence rate of 5.6% -- the highest HIV prevalence outside of Africa (AP/CNN.com, 7/6). Funding Funding for HIV/AIDS programs worldwide increased to approximately $5 billion in 2003 from $300 million in 1996, Bloomberg News reports. However, the amount of funding available is less than 50% of what will be needed in 2005 by developing countries for prevention and treatment programs, according to the report, which calls for $12 billion by 2005 (Bloomberg News, 7/6). Although the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, the U.S. President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief and other bilateral efforts have pledged more than $2 billion to increase access to antiretroviral treatment in 34 countries by the end of 2005, $3.5 billion still is needed. The report says that although more funding is available, many heavily affected countries are facing "serious bottlenecks" that are blocking "effective spending," including a lack of human and institutional capacity; stigma and discrimination; inadequate political commitment; "slow transfer of funds" from national to local and community levels; insufficient accounting; and inconsistent funding processes among donors, according to the UNAIDS executive summary (UNAIDS executive summary, 7/6). Piot said, "Despite increased funding, political commitment and progress in expanding access to HIV treatment over the past two years, the AIDS epidemic continues to outpace the global response" (BBC News, 7/6). He added, "The virus is running faster than all of us" (AP/CNN.com, 7/6). The report concludes, "Today we are faced with life and death choices. Without major action, the global epidemic will continue to outstrip the response. But there is an alternative: together we can forge policies grounded in science, not political rhetoric, and embark boldly on ... an agenda for future action based on innovative approaches" (UNAIDS report, 7/6).
NPR's "Morning Edition" on Tuesday included an interview with Piot about the study (Inskeep, "Morning Edition," NPR, 7/6). The complete segment is available online in RealPlayer.
To mark the release of the 2004 UNAIDS report, the Kaiser Family Foundation on Tuesday released two new fact sheets. The first fact sheet, titled "The Global HIV/AIDS Epidemic," contains the most recent data about the impact of the epidemic by geographic region and on women and young people. The second fact sheet, titled "The Global Impact of HIV/AIDS on Youth," shows the most recent data on the impact of HIV/AIDS among young people, particularly those between the ages of 15 and 24. The fact sheet focuses on factors that make adolescents more vulnerable to HIV, key parts of prevention programs aimed at young people and treatment programs.
Thailand Becomes Model in Fight Against HIV/AIDS in Asia; XV International AIDS Conference Will Highlight Country's Successes
[Jul 06, 2004]
Thailand's "aggressive steps" to lower HIV prevalence have become a "model" for fighting the disease in Asia, an achievement that will be highlighted during the XV International AIDS Conference that will be held July 11-16 in Bangkok, Thailand, the Wall Street Journal reports. Thailand has reduced HIV prevalence rates through national initiatives that promote condom use and treatment programs that offer pregnant women access to drugs that prevent mother-to-child transmission. Approximately one million HIV-positive people live in Thailand -- which was one of the first "hard hit" countries to recognize and address HIV/AIDS in the early 1990s -- out of 62 million people in the country. Sex Workers, Vertical Transmission To curb the spread of HIV, the Thai government adopted a policy aimed at commercial sex workers that called for 100% condom use in brothels, according to the Journal. The policy helped to reduce HIV prevalence among "brothel-based" commercial sex workers from 30% in 1996 to 10% currently, according to Anupong Chitwarakorn, a senior preventive medicine expert in the Thai Ministry of Public Health (Chase, Wall Street Journal, 7/6). The government also has "drastically" reduced mother-to-child HIV transmission primarily through a national program launched in 2000, the Associated Press reports. The program offers HIV testing for all pregnant women, antiretroviral drug treatment for HIV-positive pregnant women and their infants and education about the risks of HIV transmission through breastfeeding for women who have recently given birth. Without intervention programs or access to drugs, the risk of mother-to-child transmission of HIV is approximately 25% to 40%, with more than 33% of transmission attributed to breastfeeding, according to the Associated Press (Joshi, Associated Press, 7/4). 'Massive Relapse'? Despite the success of Thailand's initiatives in lowering HIV prevalence rates, experts warn that a "massive relapse" could occur if the country does not "recommit itself to fighting the pandemic head on," according to AFP/Yahoo! News. Adult HIV prevalence has dropped to its lowest level from 2.3% in 1995 -- the "height of the crisis" -- to 1.54% in 2004, and new HIV cases have fallen to 19,000 in 2003 compared with 143,000 in 1991, AFP/Yahoo! News reports. However, "[g]eneral complacency has set in," Sen. Mechai Viravaidya, co-chair of the Community Program Committee for the AIDS Conference, said, adding, "It reflects very clearly that the effort we have put into public education has weakened." Lucita Lazo, East and Southeast Asian program director for the U.N. Development Fund for Women, said, "Thailand has been quite successful in the early stages in licking the problem, but I think success can be your own enemy," adding, "It's time to ring the alarm signals again and ... take more action, particularly promoting the use of condoms" (AFP/Yahoo! News, 7/4).
Leadership Summit at XV International AIDS Conference Cancelled Due to Lack of Attendees
[Jul 06, 2004]
Thailand's government has cancelled a meeting on HIV/AIDS for national leaders that was planned for July 12 on the sidelines of the XV International AIDS Conference in Bangkok, Thailand, because all but one of the invited leaders declined to attend, Reuters reports (Reuters, 7/5). The leadership summit, titled "Leadership on HIV/AIDS," was slated as an event for leaders of HIV/AIDS-affected countries and donor nations to meet and develop strategies for combating HIV/AIDS (Bangkok Post, 7/5). The leaders of 13 countries and U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan were expected to attend the summit, which was scheduled to be hosted by Thai Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra (Kaiser Daily HIV/AIDS Report, 5/27). Charal Trinvuthiphong, director general of Thailand's Disease Control Department, said that a lunch program for leaders and people with HIV/AIDS also was cancelled. Invitations to the summit were sent to the leaders of Botswana, Brazil, Nigeria, Uganda, Rwanda, Canada, China, India, Russia and the European Commission, as well as Annan (Bangkok Post, 7/5). Thailand Foreign Ministry spokesperson Sihasak Phuangketkeow said that instead of holding the summit, Annan and Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni plan to meet with people living with HIV/AIDS on the opening day of the conference, AFP/Yahoo! News reports. Sihasak said that leaders of the other nations were "not comfortable with traveling here at this time" (AFP/Yahoo! News, 7/5). Charal said that some of the issues leaders had planned to discuss at the summit will now be addressed at the Second Asia-Pacific Ministerial Meeting on HIV/AIDS scheduled for July 10-11 in Bangkok (Bangkok Post, 7/5). The ministerial meeting will focus on mobilizing resources, implementing laws and increasing community participation in the fight against AIDS, as well as increasing access to antiretroviral drugs, Thailand's Nation reports (Rungrawee/Duangkamol, Nation, 7/6). The first-ever Leadership Program, which will focus on leadership in the fight against HIV/AIDS and is meant to complement the Scientific and Community Programs of the International AIDS Conference, will continue as planned (XV IAC release, 5/26).
Burma Makes 'Belated' Attempt To Address HIV/AIDS Through $88M Program, Financial Times Reports
[Jul 06, 2004]
Burma through an $88 million program is "belatedly tr[ying], after years of inaction" to reduce the transmission of HIV, the Financial Times reports. The country's military junta during much of the 1990s ignored the epidemic and said that the country's "impeccable morals" would prevent the spread of the disease, according to the Times (Kazmin/Yee, Financial Times, 7/2). However, after HIV-prevalence in the country increased because of poor health care infrastructure and the population's lack of knowledge of reproductive health issues, the junta allowed local and international groups to become more active in fighting the disease (Kaiser Daily HIV/AIDS Report, 5/14). Although condoms are now widely available, treatment remains almost "nonexistent," the Times reports. There are between 330,000 and 620,000 HIV-positive people in the country and adult HIV prevalence is thought to have reached 1.2%, which makes it a generalized epidemic, according to UNAIDS. The United Kingdom, Sweden, Norway, the European Union, the United States, Australia, Japan and several private foundations have contributed $48 million towards the $88 million, three-year HIV prevention and treatment program, the Times reports. The program, which was developed by the United Nations and the junta, is endorsed by Aung San Suu Kyi, an imprisoned pro-democracy opposition leader. Health workers now "face the challenge" of implementing HIV prevention programs in the country, which has poor infrastructure and a variety of ethnic and linguistic groups, according to the Times (Financial Times, 7/2).
San Francisco Chronicle Begins Five-Part Series Examining AIDS in India
[Jul 06, 2004]
Ahead of the XV International AIDS Conference in Bangkok, Thailand, next week, when "[w]orld attention will focus on the threat AIDS poses to Asia," the San Francisco Chronicle on Sunday began a five-part series on AIDS in India. Experts believe that the "key" to HIV/AIDS trends in Asia lie with India, the most populous nation in the world, according to the Chronicle. Summaries of some of the articles in the series, which ends on Thursday, appear below:
- "South Asia's Smoldering Threat": Although most HIV/AIDS patients in India are men, experts believe this trend will shift to women, who "hold a distinctly second-class status in the cultural hierarchy of India" but who also hold leadership positions, the Chronicle reports. The article examines how women in India could become disproportionately affected by HIV/AIDS if the disease takes a course similar to that of Africa (Russell, San Francisco Chronicle, 7/4).
- "The Role of Prostitution in South Asia's Epidemic; Push for Safe Sex in Red-Light Districts": Sex work in Mumbai, India's largest city, poses a "troubling" problem for people involved in HIV/AIDS prevention, the Chronicle reports. India's "red-light districts ... have been engines driving the growth of the epidemic throughout" the country, according to the Chronicle. In 2002, 54% of sex workers in Mumbai tested HIV-positive. The article examines how sex workers are learning to turn down customers who refuse to use condoms (Russell, San Francisco Chronicle, 7/5).
- "Spreading the Message of Prevention, Outreach Workers Hit the Road To Keep Truckers Protected": Many of India's five million truck drivers are on the road away from their homes for one week to three months at a time, and a typical trucker has three to five sex partners each week, according to a survey by the AIDS Prevention and Control Project, the Chronicle reports. The article profiles efforts to educate truckers and their sex partners about HIV prevention (Russell, San Francisco Chronicle, 7/6).
- The fourth article in the series will examine how Indians living with HIV/AIDS gain access to the drugs they need. AIDS spending in India is 11 cents per capita, therefore "luck plays a large role" in determining who gets the medications, the Chronicle reports.
- The last article will examine how the "decisions made by the new government just taking office in New Delhi will largely determine the future course of the AIDS epidemic in India," the Chronicle reports.
Chronicle medical writer Sabin Russell traveled to India for five weeks earlier this year as part of a fellowship from the Kaiser Family Foundation (Russell, San Francisco Chronicle, 7/6).
Drug Access
U.S. Trade Officials Seek To Strengthen Patent Protection for Brand Name Drugs, Including HIV/AIDS Treatments, Wall Street Journal Reports
[Jul 06, 2004]
U.S. trade officials are negotiating a series of agreements to strengthen patent protection of brand name drugs, including antiretroviral drugs, the Wall Street Journal reports. In many countries, including the United States, generic drug makers often win approval for their drugs by proving that the products are equivalent to the brand name drug. However, new agreements sought by the United States would prevent countries trading with the United States from approving for five years generic drug applications if data submitted by the generic companies is based on data originally compiled by the brand name manufacturer. The agreements would in effect grant "temporary exclusivity" to brand name drug makers, the Journal reports. U.S. negotiators have reached agreements that include the new provisions with Jordan, Chile and Singapore. Agreements awaiting congressional approval with Australia, Morocco and the six Central American countries -- Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua and the Dominican Republic -- that are part of the Central American Free Trade Agreement also include the provisions. In addition, U.S. negotiators late last month launched trade talks with Thailand seeking similar patent protections, the Journal reports. Effects Although there is a "wide consensus by the United States and others that essential drugs must be made available at a low cost," the agreements are "either pushing prices up or preventing their fall," Richard Feachem, executive director of the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, said. For example, AIDS drugs purchased with Global Fund money in Jordan, which recently signed the trade agreement, cost about $7,000 per person per year, compared with an average price of $250 to $400 per patient per year in other countries that receive fund grants, Feachem said. However, a spokesperson for the U.S. Trade Representative's Office said that the United States has seen a "blossoming of [Jordan's] pharmaceutical industry" since the agreement. In Thailand, where the government provides treatment to 35,000 people annually with domestically manufactured generic antiretrovirals, the proposed agreement would prevent companies from producing generic copies of more recent brand name drugs, the Journal reports. In response, the drug industry has argued that current practices in many countries "simply make it too easy" for generic drug makers to quickly introduce cheap copies of branded products, thus profiting from costly investments in research made by brand name drug makers. The industry also notes that many brand name drug makers provide low- or no-cost drugs for AIDS and other life-threatening diseases to developing countries, according to the Journal. The generic drug issue is expected to be "high on agenda" of the XV International AIDS Conference that will be held in Bangkok, Thailand, July 11-16, according to the Journal (Chase/Lueck, Wall Street Journal, 7/6).
Politics and Policy
New Mexico Gov. Richardson Orders Shift of $2.6 Million in State Funding to Restore HIV/AIDS Services
[Jul 06, 2004]
New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson (D) on Friday ordered $2.6 million to be shifted to the state's HIV/AIDS programs in an effort to restore some services that were cut because of statewide budget shortfalls, the Albuquerque Journal reports (Jadrnak, Albuquerque Journal, 7/3). The state's HIV/AIDS program is facing an estimated $1.6 million deficit for the current fiscal year and a $2.8 million shortfall for the next fiscal year. Last month, Richardson announced that his office would give $250,000 in federal fiscal-relief funds to the state's HIV/AIDS program to help curb cuts to direct services and to serve as a stopgap for the health department to secure other funding to maintain the program's services (Kaiser Daily HIV/AIDS Report, 6/8). However, under contracts with HIV/AIDS service organizations that took effect on Thursday -- the start of the new fiscal year -- the state stopped covering some services, including dental care, mental health and substance abuse counseling, client transportation and food banks. According to the Journal, it is unclear where the state will find the $2.6 million that Richardson has ordered restored, but James Jiminez, secretary of the state Department of Finance and Administration, said most of the money could be found in cash balances available in the state Department of Health's budget. The funding, if it comes from cash reserves, would be a stopgap measure and would not be available in future fiscal years, according to the Journal (Albuquerque Journal, 7/3). Richardson said that his promise to restore the funding "is not smoke and mirrors. ... We're going to do it." State Health Secretary Patricia Montoya said, "We're very confident we will find" the money, adding that the health department will examine the possibility of cutting administrative, overtime and contract costs. However, Montoya added that there still could be cost-cutting measures that will change the state's "one-stop-shopping" model for HIV/AIDS care, the Associated Press reports (Baker, Associated Press, 7/3).
Media & Society
Arts Program To Be Held in Conjunction With XV International AIDS Conference; Includes Film Festival, Other Programs
[Jul 06, 2004]
The Silabha Art and Cultural Programme, which will include art, modern and traditional dance, film, poetry, magic, games, local storytelling, puppetry, paintings, photography and fashion, will be held July 10-17 to coincide with the XV International AIDS Conference in Bangkok, Thailand, Thailand's Nation reports. The program is meant to bring a "cultural richness and dynamism to the conventionally science-oriented conference," as well as a deeper understanding of HIV/AIDS, Chantawipa Apisuk, who is involved with the cultural program, said, according to the Nation. The program will include works by artists from 29 countries. Highlights include the Africasia program, an exchange program between African and Asian communities to share the "traditional wisdom and contemporary culture they use to fight HIV/AIDS," according to the Nation (Mukdawan, Nation, 7/2). The Silabha Programme also will include an AIDS Film Festival, which will feature more than 22 movies from 13 countries focusing on HIV/AIDS issues, and will open with a screening of the global AIDS documentary "A Closer Walk," the Nation reports (Nation, 7/2). The film, by Academy Award-winning filmmaker Robert Bilheimer, tells the stories of Paul Farmer, a Harvard professor and researcher who runs an AIDS clinic in Haiti; Hassan Semankula, a 15-year-old Ugandan teenager who dropped out of school to care for his family after his parents died of AIDS-related causes; Rev. Emanuel Cleaver, former Kansas City mayor and preacher at St. James United Methodist Church; the Dalai Lama; Irish rock star Bono; and others affected by and working to fight HIV/AIDS (Kaiser Daily HIV/AIDS Report, 6/28). Actor Richard Gere, founder of the Gere Foundation, and actress Ashley Judd, who serves as the Youth AIDS global ambassador, will preside over the festival opening, the Nation reports (Nation, 7/2). Youth AIDS Ambassadors Judd, along with Coco Lee -- the Youth AIDS ambassador for Asia -- will visit Wat Phra Baht Nam Phu in Lop Buri, a temple that offers care for people living with HIV/AIDS, the Nation reports. Judd and Lee also are scheduled to visit Gerda House, a home for AIDS orphans, and attend the opening of "Life Force," a photo exhibition focusing on young people living with HIV/AIDS in Thailand. Judd and Lee also are scheduled to meet with Thai Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, according to the Nation (Tanita, Nation, 7/2). Chumpon Apisuk, coordinator of the arts program, said, "[W]e want to make the arts an innovative and positive tool to approach the difficult issue of HIV and AIDS" to follow the conference's theme of "Access for All." Chumpon added that although academics, advocates and the media will be "debating the issues at the conference, we will let art offer a loud, non-verbal message" (Phatarawadee, Nation, 7/2). Candlelight Ceremony Some nongovernmental organizations have asked conference organizers to replace Miss Thailand as the first person to light a memorial candle at a ceremony to be held during the opening of the conference, the Bangkok Post reports. Nimit Thienudom of the AIDS Access Foundation after a pre-conference meeting said that it would be "more appropriate" for someone affected by HIV/AIDS to light the candle during the ceremony because it is meant to honor the memory of people who have died from AIDS-related causes, according to the Post. The candlelight ceremony is scheduled to follow opening remarks from U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan, Thaksin, Thai Public Health Minister Sudarat Keyuraphan and International AIDS Society President Joep Lange. Sudarat said that she would consider replacing Miss Thailand with an HIV-positive child, according to the Post (Bangkok Post, 7/2).
Opinion
Los Angeles County, Calif., Should License Gay Bathhouses, Sex Clubs, Los Angeles Times Editorial Says
[Jul 06, 2004]
The fact that a debate over whether Los Angeles County, Calif., should require licensing of gay bathhouses and sex clubs "still goes on in the third decade of the HIV epidemic is unbelievable," a Los Angeles Times editorial says (Los Angeles Times, 7/5). Following the release of a federally funded study showing a higher HIV prevalence among men at gay bathhouses compared with other locations in the county, Department of Health Services officials have been considering plans to impose rules on all types of sex clubs, including requiring them to offer condoms, on-site testing for sexually transmitted diseases and information on condom usage. Last month, Los Angeles Public Health Chief Jonathan Fielding recommended requiring licenses for gay bathhouses operating in the county (Kaiser Daily HIV/AIDS Report, 6/28). Lobbyists for the bathhouses and sex clubs call the licensing proposal "extremely discriminatory" and a violation of the civil rights of gay men, the Times says. However, such regulation "is not an assault on civil rights" but "a weapon against a public health crisis," the editorial says. Although licensing is only a "halfway measure and tough to enforce," the five county supervisors "have not uttered a peep of support for even that, holding sex clubs to a lower health standard than nail salons, which are licensed," the Times says. The editorial concludes that "[a]t the very least, county supervisors should hold gay bathhouses to the same standards as gay porn films," which already mandate use of condoms in most productions (Los Angeles Times, 7/5).
Kaiser Daily HIV/AIDS Report Summarizes Opinion Pieces on Bush Administration's Domestic, International AIDS Policies
[Jul 06, 2004]
Several newspapers this week have published editorials and opinion pieces on President Bush's domestic and international AIDS policies. Summaries of the editorials appear below:
- Julie Gerberding, Atlanta Journal-Constitution: Encouraging people to undergo HIV testing is both a "clinical imperative" and a "public health necessity," CDC Director Julie Gerberding writes in a Journal-Constitution guest editorial. Bush and HHS Secretary Tommy Thompson's call for increased testing is a "critical" move in the fight against AIDS, Gerberding says (Gerberding, Atlanta Journal-Constitution, 7/6).
- Boston Globe: Bush's HIV/AIDS policy in developing countries should go "[b]eyond the ABCs of AIDS prevention" to include more information about sexually transmitted diseases and effective prevention measures, a Globe editorial says. In addition, prevention programs should include programs supporting reproductive and general health and economic development -- especially for women -- the Globe says (Boston Globe, 7/6).
- New York Times: By withholding the $34 million appropriated by Congress to the United Nations Population Fund based on the "false accusation" that it supports coerced abortions in China, the Bush administration is endangering programs that "advance poor women's reproductive health, reduce infant mortality ... and prevent the spread of HIV," a Times editorial says. Bush's policy is an "attack" on comprehensive family planning and on women's "sexual and reproductive autonomy" worldwide, the editorial concludes (New York Times, 7/5).
- Washington Times: The global AIDS epidemic has become not only a "humanitarian concern" but a "security threat," a Times editorial says. Bush last week said that HIV helps create "conditions in which terrorism can survive," according to the Times. The editorial concludes that the Bush administration should increase its financial commitments to HIV/AIDS initiatives -- including the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria (Washington Times, 7/6).
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