| Invest in Evidence-Based HIV Prevention Programs |
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Advocates supports a global HIV prevention strategy that is comprehensive, evidence-based and provides young people with accurate information about how to protect themselves from contracting HIV. For the first time, a generation of young people is coming of sexual and reproductive age with no experience in a world before HIV/AIDS. For those who can access anti-retroviral medications, HIV has been transformed from a virtual death sentences to a chronic illness. However new infections, especially among young people, continue to outpace the rate of new patients accessing antiretroviral therapy. The need for increased emphasis on sound, evidence-based prevention policy in the global response to AIDS has never been so clear. End the HIV Travel BanFor over 20 years, the United States has included HIV on its list of “communicable diseases of public health significance,” which automatically denies infected individuals entry into the United States. Congress originally passed this law at a time when there was only limited understanding of how HIV was transmitted and homosexuality was still grounds for inadmissibility to the United States. Over the past 20 years, the ban has discriminated and stigmatized people living with HIV and AIDS. Update: Victory! In July, 2008, Congress took the first step towards eliminating this discriminatory ban by including language lifting the statutory ban in the reauthorization of the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief. In October, 2009, President Obama announced that the travel ban would end in January 2010. Draft new, evidence-based PEPFAR Guidance
Update: In December of 2009, the Office of Global AIDS Coordinator (OGAC) released a new five-year strategy for PEPFAR’s second phase. While this strategy called for comprehensive and correct knowledge of HIV transmission among youth, new Country Operational Plan guidance for 2011 still segments information with comprehensive approaches limited to sexually active or high-risk youth. For more information, please see “Investing in Young People: Solving the Sustainability Challenge in PEPFAR” and “Improving U.S. Global HIV Prevention for Youth: A Critique of the Office of Global AIDS Coordinator’s ABC Guidance.” |








