Strategy Promises to Reduce New Infections and Expand Care
AIDS Project Los Angeles today offered strong support for the Obama Administration’s newly-introduced National HIV/AIDS Strategy, calling the plan a significant step in advancing the
“We congratulate the president and his staff at the Office of National AIDS Policy (ONAP) for this achievement,” said APLA Executive Director Craig E. Thompson. “We have been fighting AIDS in the
The Strategy, unveiled at the White House today, enumerates a short list of major goals for the next five years, including: reducing the rate of new HIV infections, expanding access to care for all people living with HIV/AIDS, and ending the stigma and healthcare disparities that contribute to the epidemic.
he plan was crafted by the Director of ONAP, Jeff Crowley, in collaboration with a broad range of community organizations and government agencies, as well as significant input from people living with HIV/AIDS.
The Strategy does not call for increased funding, but instead indicates money will be redirected to areas with the greatest need and population groups at greatest risk, including gay and bisexual men and African-Americans. Gay men currently account for over half the new infections each year.
“We must have adequate, targeted resources to implement the plan,” Thompson said. “Failure to achieve the goals set forth in the Strategy will cost us much more than what it will cost now to get the work done.”
Currently, an estimated 1.1 million people are living with HIV/AIDS in the
“The President today said the Strategy will one day make the
ABOUT AIDS PROJECT LOS ANGELES (APLA)
AIDS Project Los Angeles, one of the largest non-profit AIDS service organizations in the