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Rethinking the AIDS Emergency and the U.S. Response
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In July, I spent two long days with Kenyan health professionals working to hold back the tide of HIV/AIDS in their country. They were encouraging couples to be tested and counseling them about how to care for one another when only one has tested positive for HIV. They were training new nurses to provide family planning counseling in programs designed to prevent HIV transmission from pregnant women to their newborn children. They were providing comprehensive care from medication to prenatal care to family planning. I think often of the waiting rooms in Kenya and the hundreds of women, frequently with children in tow, who had traveled some distance to seek help in managing their lives with a measure of health and dignity that HIV too often takes away.
Wednesday, the House took a big step toward increasing the United States' commitment to ending the suffering caused by AIDS in Africa. It reauthorized the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR), which will provide $50 billion over the next five years-the largest aid package from any country directed at a cluster of diseases -- HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, and malaria.
PEPFAR is a landmark initiative. But like all major investments, it is time to reassess the portfolio so we spend U.S. tax dollars as wisely as possible to end the HIV pandemic. I am angry with those who compromise without a single thought to what it is like for those waiting women facing the truths of sex, reproduction, and HIV. I insist that, with courage and vision, $50 billion can stretch much farther and truly restore U.S. leadership in responding to HIV/AIDS.
By the end of the five years, at the 10-year anniversary of PEPFAR, Americans will have provided $80 billion to this "emergency." Fast forward to 2013. If current trends continue, what will we have accomplished with the legislation currently under consideration?
See more stories tagged with: africa, aids, healthcare, pepfar, hiv/aids, reproductive justice, global gag rule
Beth Fredrick is the executive vice president of the International Women's Health Coalition
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