Continuing to Fight the HIV/AIDS Epidemic
This has been an important month in the fight against HIV/AIDS: not only did we welcome people from around the world to the United States for the first time in 22 years to participate in the 2012 International AIDS Conference, but is it also the second anniversary of the release of the National HIV/AIDS Strategy. Last week, the Office of National AIDS Policy (ONAP) released the second annual report on the progress made toward achieving the Strategy’s primary goals.
As a result of the Strategy, we are we are working together and making smarter investments than ever before. It has focused and intensified Federal prevention and care resources in communities where HIV is most heavily concentrated.
President Obama has also made critical investments to expand access to HIV treatment and care. Since the President took office, domestic HIV/AIDS funding has increased by approximately $2.5 billion, and in his Fiscal Year 2013 Budget the President proposed $22 billion dollars for domestic HIV/AIDS programs.
The Affordable Care Act has already provided millions of Americans increased access to HIV testing, and will extend coverage to 30 million more Americans, including tens of thousands of people living with HIV. The Act also prohibits lifetime dollar limits on benefits, phases out annual dollar limits, and ensures no one is denied coverage based on HIV status.
Recently the Administration announced nearly $80 million in grants that will end current State AIDS Drug Assistant Program waitlists so that all people living with HIV/AIDS have access to live-saving health care and medications. Additionally, the Food and Drug Administration recently approved the first rapid HIV home test kit and Truvada, the first drug shown to reduce the risk of HIV prevention, for use as a preventive measure for people at high risk of acquiring HIV through sexual activity.
As our understanding of the HIV epidemic continues to grow, these investments, guided by the National HIV/AIDS Strategy and strengthened by the Affordable Care Act, have put us on the right path to meeting the strategy's goals and moving towards an aids free generation.
President Barack Obama talks with Grant Colfax, Director of the Office of National AIDS Policy, in the Red Room before the White House International AIDS Conference reception, July 26, 2012. (Official White House Photo by Pete Souza)
Grant Colfax is the director of the Office of National AIDS Policy.
White House Blogs
- The White House Blog
- Middle Class Task Force
- Council of Economic Advisers
- Council on Environmental Quality
- Council on Women and Girls
- Office of Intergovernmental Affairs
- Office of Management and Budget
- Office of Public Engagement
- Office of Science & Tech Policy
- Office of Urban Affairs
- Open Government
- Faith and Neighborhood Partnerships
- Social Innovation and Civic Participation
- US Trade Representative
- Office National Drug Control Policy
categories
- AIDS Policy
- Alaska
- Blueprint for an America Built to Last
- Budget
- Civil Rights
- Defense
- Disabilities
- Economy
- Education
- Energy and Environment
- Equal Pay
- Ethics
- Faith Based
- Fiscal Responsibility
- Foreign Policy
- Grab Bag
- Health Care
- Homeland Security
- Immigration
- Innovation Fellows
- Inside the White House
- Middle Class Security
- Open Government
- Poverty
- Rural
- Seniors and Social Security
- Service
- Social Innovation
- State of the Union
- Taxes
- Technology
- Urban Policy
- Veterans
- Violence Prevention
- White House Internships
- Women
- Working Families
- Additional Issues