President Barack Obama (Pic by The White House, via Flickr)
President Obama announced today that $50 million in additional funds will be going toward treatment and care for people living with HIV/AIDS in the U.S.
Obama said during âThe Beginning of the End of AIDS,â an online conference organized by ONE International, âa grassroots advocacy and campaigning organization that fights extreme poverty and preventable disease, particularly in Africaâ:
Today, Iâm announcing some new commitments. Weâre committing an additional $15 million for the Ryan White program that supports care provided by HIV medical clinics across the country. Letâs keep their doors open so they can keep saving lives. And weâre committing an additional $35 million for state AIDS Drug Assistance Programs. Now, the federal government canât do this alone. So Iâm also calling on state governments, pharmaceutical companies, and private foundations, to do their part to help Americans get access to all the life-saving treatments.
Florida has the longest AIDS Drug Assistance Program waiting list in the United States. According to National Alliance of State and territorial AIDS Directors, âas of November 17, 2011, there were 6,595 individualsâ (.pdf) on ADAP âwaiting lists in 12 states.â More than 3,200 of those people live in Florida.
ADAP provides life saving medications for the treatment of HIV and AIDS for people who cannot afford to pay because they are unemployed, uninsured or underinsured. States have implemented a variety of cost containment measures that include waiting lists since 2010, when ADAPs began facing an ongoing funding crisis.
âWith bipartisan support, we reauthorized the Ryan White CARE Act,â Obama said today. âAnd, as I signed that bill, I was so proud to also announce that my Administration was ending the ban that prohibited people with HIV from entering America. Because of that step, next year, for the first time in two decades, we will host the International AIDS conference. So weâve done a lot over the past three years.â
The president added: âWe know that treatment is also prevention. And today weâre setting a new target of helping six million people get on treatment by the end of 2013. Thatâs two million more people than our original goal.â
The Centers for Disease Control and Preventionâs Vital Signs November report issued this week indicates that in the U.S. alone âabout 1.2 million people are living with HIVâ and âabout 240,000 donât know they are infected.â
Vital Signs adds that âeach year, about 50,000 people get infected with HIV in the US. Getting an HIV test is the first step to finding out if you have HIV and getting medical care.â
The National HIV/AIDS Strategy, approved in 2010, highlights among other measures the need for increasing access to treatment and focusing on HIV prevention programs.
Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., spoke at the ONE conference panel, saying HIV/AIDS âis a good example of how government can work with other institutions in society and around the world to be a positive difference maker.â
Rubio added Democrats and Republicans agree that âthe U.S. was a great country in the 2oth centuryâ and âsome of the debate thatâs happening now is whether the United States will remain a great country in the 21st century.â
The senator acknowledged that âwe need to recognize that there are still thousands of people in the United States on waiting lists to receive medication, certainly in my home state of Florida that is the case.â
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