In the news ... 2008
Leaders come together to
pursue a
National AIDS Strategy
by Dana Van Gorder
May 8, 2008
On April 9, 2008, 42 leaders in the domestic response to HIV/AIDS
met at the Ford Foundation in New York City to discuss development
of a National AIDS Strategy (NAS) for the United States. Dana Van
Gorder, Project Inform’s Executive Director, participated
in the meeting. The NAS effort was initiated by the AIDS Action
Council, AIDS Foundation of Chicago, Balm in Gilead, Black AIDS
Institute, Community HIV/AIDS Mobilization Project, Gay Men’s
Health Crisis, and the San Francisco AIDS Foundation.
In the months
leading up to the meeting, a Call to Action for a NAS
had received the support of over 200 organizations and hundreds
of individuals (www.nationalaidsstrategy.org).
Two of the three leading Presidential candidates had pledged to
develop an NAS if elected.
The Call to Action identifies
the need for an outcomes-oriented NAS that is designed to bring
national HIV incidence rates down, increase access to HIV-related
care, and reduce HIV-related racial disparities. It urges development
of a NAS that is coordinated across federal agencies and includes
measurable goals and accountability mechanisms.
The meeting at the Ford Foundation was organized
in order to broaden engagement in the NAS concept and to discuss
how to move forward with the proposal. Attendees did not attempt
to develop the NAS, but discussed potential goals for a NAS, elements
needed to make a NAS successful, and next steps for advancing the
concept.
Meeting
attendees noted that the NAS effort should both lead to development
of a Strategy that promotes a more effective and accountable federal
response to HIV/AIDS, and also serves as an opportunity to bring
needed attention to the domestic HIV epidemic. They acknowledged
that several other initiatives and plans have been proposed to
improve the domestic AIDS response, and that a NAS should be informed
by and be complementary to these proposals.
There was general agreement
that the NAS should be owned by the federal government (which
would be responsible for reporting on progress towards NAS goals
and coordinating the work of federal agencies), but that the AIDS
community should help outline the framework for the Strategy and
that multiple stakeholders should be engaged in NAS planning and
implementation.
Next steps include:
- Broadening engagement in the NAS effort among the AIDS community,
policy makers, private industry, media, and the public.
- Working towards development of a guidance document for the
next Presidential Administration that makes recommendations for
the structure and process of developing an NAS.
Project Inform believes deeply in the need for a meaningful national
strategy to guide well-coordinated plans to increase the number
of HIV-positive Americans who know of their HIV status; increase
the number of people with HIV who receive care and treatment; eliminate
disparities in clinical outcomes for HIV-positive women and people
of color; assures access to HIV care and treatment programs for
all HIV-positive Americans; and reduces to nearly zero the number
of new HIV infections occurring annually in the US.
We
also believe that, after 8 years of neglect by the Bush Administration,
the development of a National AIDS Strategy can serve both as a
much needed vehicle to remind the nation that a massive amount
of work and resources are still needed to end the domestic epidemic,
and as a stimulus to increased activism in support of a heightened
response to the domestic epidemic.
For both of these reasons, Project
Inform intends to remain at the table to help lead the development
of the National AIDS Strategy. We will keep our constituents informed
about this ongoing effort, and are eager to engage you to support
it.