Today, I was told that they are not prepared to deal with the volume of 6,000-8,000 condoms a week. I find this hard to believe. My organization, with an annual budget of maybe $150,000 and no paid staff managed for years to fulfill the community needs and never say "we have no condoms." And yet the the DC government with paid staff and much greater resources advertises free condom distribution and can't fulfill its commitment. Is rationing condoms any way to prevent HIV?
9.26.2008
DC Condom Rationing ALERT!
Today, I was told that they are not prepared to deal with the volume of 6,000-8,000 condoms a week. I find this hard to believe. My organization, with an annual budget of maybe $150,000 and no paid staff managed for years to fulfill the community needs and never say "we have no condoms." And yet the the DC government with paid staff and much greater resources advertises free condom distribution and can't fulfill its commitment. Is rationing condoms any way to prevent HIV?
9.24.2008
Report Faults District's HIV/AIDS Awareness
The District government improved its performance in battling HIV/AIDS, but the mayor needs to strengthen DC's public awareness campaign to combat the epidemic, according to DC Appleseed's HIV/AIDS in the Nation's Capital (Report Card No. 4: January 2008 to September 2008). Appleseed portrays a government that's just beginning to grapple with the scope of the crisis. It credits the District for making progress in needle exchange programs, expanded testing, and education efforts in schools. The government created a top leadership team at the DC HIV/AIDS Administration and expanded testing programs in city jails.
Appleseed urged Mayor Adrian Fenty to embark on a campaign -- in the African American and Latino faith-based communities -- to reduce the stigma associated with the disease. Most new AIDS cases in DC are found in older people who may have been spreading the disease for years. Appleseed is waiting for new statistics to determine whether past efforts had any impact.
Improvements since the third report card, which was issued in December 2007, include several grade changes: routine HIV testing went from a B-plus to an A-minus, syringe exchange services also went from B-plus to A-minus, substance abuse treatment went from C-plus to B, and AIDS education in DCPS went from D to C.
9.23.2008
DC HIV Prevention Community Planning Group Needs Volunteers
The application can be downloaded here: http://doh.dc.gov/hiv.
For more information contact donald.babb@dc.gov.
9.22.2008
Songs for Life: December 1st, 2008
Proceeds from the concert will be donated to the Whitman Walker Clinic, Us Helping Us, and Metro TeenAIDS. The performance will be held at the Sidney Harman Hall Center for the Arts, 610 F Street, NW (Gallery Place Metro) from 7:00- 9:00 PM.
For Tickets and Information, call 703-708-5008 or www.dcdd.org.

9.19.2008
Update on DC HIV Prevention Community Planning Group Meeting 9/11/2008
The CPG bylaws were updated to increase the membership of the Operations Committee by two members; Ron Simmons and Cyndee Clay were voted onto the committee. It will be determined who will serve the 1-year and who will serve the 2-year term at the next CPG meeting.
HAA submitted the Interim Progress Report to the CDC on time along with a letter of concurrence from the CPG.
The membership committee announced that the CPG is recruiting for new members!! Although all interested persons are encouraged to apply, persons of specific interest include professionals (i.e., behavioral scientists, epidemiologists, etc), MSMs and IDUs. Community members (who are not employed with a HAA funded agency) and youth are also sought for membership on the committee. For more information and to apply, please click the link at the end of the post(MembershipApplication.doc).
Prioritization Update: HAA reports that the Resource Inventory tool is near completion and should be submitted to the CPG by the end of the week for review/questions/comments before being sent out to agencies. The RI is very comprehensive and will include information for prevention as well as care & treatment. The total resource inventory process is scheduled to be completed by the end of this year. HAA has also requested that the Data Committee submit the the request for the data needed to complete prioritization to HAA as soon as possible; the data committee should have a survey instrument completed by the end of the month. The survey will be sent to CPG members, alternates, and community members for input on the populations that should be included in the prioritization.
The next meeting of the CPG will be held on November 13, 2008 at 5:30PM at 64 New York Avenue NE in the 5th floor conference room.
MembershipApplication.doc
9.17.2008
Seeking 2009 Sponsors to 'Fight HIV in DC'
On World AIDS Day, we plan to re-launch www.fighthivindc.org as a project of The DC Center. As many of you know, I became acting Executive Director of The DC Center this past April. Working on HIV/AIDS is a natural fit for The DC Center; and by joining forces, Fight HIV in DC will have access to more resources including The DC Center’s David Bohnett Cyber Center, which will soon expand to include digital video and media capabilities. It will also allow us to seek funding for Fight HIV in DC to support this important work and to expand our HIV/AIDS efforts to include online and offline activities.
As we move forward, I ask for your support to make this happen. I invite you to become a 2009 sponsor of the www.fighthivindc.org website. Sponsors will be announced when we re-launch the website, and featured prominently on the website from December 1st, 2008 to November 30th, 2009.
This is an opportunity for you to support the fight against HIV/AIDS in the District, but also this is a tremendous opportunity to reach a specific and important audience: the HIV/AIDS community in Washington, DC.
Please click here to download the sponsorship information and consider sponsoring www.fighthivindc.org in 2009. Your support is greatly appreciated.
9.16.2008
HIV Vaccine Awareness Day: May 18th, 2009
Scientists have been searching for a vaccine to prevent HIV infection since the virus was first identified in 1983. Each clinical trial brings us one step closer to finding an effective vaccine. More than 25,000 HIV-negative individuals have participated in both government- and privately sponsored HIV vaccine trials.
HIV Vaccine Awareness Day is a day to educate our communities about the efforts to find a preventive HIV vaccine and to recognize and thank the thousands of volunteers, health professionals and scientists who are conducting and participating in HIV vaccine research.
Sign up for this event on Facebook

9.14.2008
HIV/AIDS Over 50: October 5th
HIV is a virus that does not discriminate. Nearly one in 10 District residents aged 55 and older have HIV or AIDS. From 2001-2006, 245 new cases of HIV were reported among District residents aged 55 and older. There was an overall increase of 21% in newly report cases over that period of time.
- Dr. Shannon Hader, DC Department of Health HIV/AIDS Administration, will discuss HIV prevention issues for those 50 and older.
- Dr. Linda Green, Prince George’s Hospital Center, will discuss HIV/AIDS treatment for those 50 and older.
download the flyer for this event

9.13.2008
National Women and Girls HIV/AIDS Awareness Day 2009
Women and girls can take action in the fight against HIV/AIDS in a variety of ways such as getting tested for HIV, practicing safe methods to prevent HIV, deciding not to engage in high risk behaviors, talking about HIV prevention with family, friends and colleagues, empowering oneself, and providing support to those living with HIV/AIDS.
For more information click here.

9.12.2008
Happy Hour Benefits Transgender Health Empowerment
The Cherry Fund will be hosting a happy hour on Wednesday, October 1st at Topaz Bar beginning at 6:30 PM. Topaz Bar is located at 1733 N Street, NW.
There is a $10 donation at the door, and all proceeds will benefit Transgender Health Empowerment. your donation includes 2 Complimentary Snow Queen inspired drinks, Complimentary appetizers, Cherry Tee and 2 Disc CD. The Cherry Fund will also be raffling off event & theater tickets. So come by and raise a glass in support of our community!
The mission of T.H.E. Inc. is to enhance the quality of life of the diverse transgender populations we serve by advocating for and supporting a continuum of health and social services. In fulfilling our mission, we seek to unify and empower the transgender, lesbian, gay, and bisexual communities.

Quality of Life Retreat December 1-4, 2008.
The Quality of Life Retreat program began in 1988. Since then over sixty retreats have been conducted.
The retreats are a connecting and coping experience for persons living with HIV/AIDS. It is a chance to get away, to get together, to interact and to learn the techniques and attitudes that are effective in dealing with the issues of long-term survival.
The program includes workshops that focus on self-acceptance, spiritual empowerment, stigmas, mental health, and maintaining quality of life. There will be workshops, entertainment, singing, prayer, and a healing services. Participants support each other through a Prayer-Buddy System. The group may also design a Talent Show. The retreat is limited to 40 participants and is offered to persons living with HIV/AIDS. The program is ecumenical and opent to individuals of all faiths, religions, and beliefs.
The retreats have four objects:
- To provide a safe, loving environment in which participants can be fully themselves, free of fears and inhibitions, and can deal openly with their deeest concerns.
- To offer spiritual, practical, educational and health resources to those whose lives have been, are and will be affected personally by HIV infection.
- To listen to what HIV infected persons have to say about their journeys.
- To offer and develop a viable model of how the religious community can make a compassionate and effective response to this crisis.
The next retreat will take place December 1st through the 4th at the Washington DC Retreat House, which is operated by the Sisters of the Franciscan Order.
For more information visit www.qualityofliferetreatshiv.org

9.09.2008
Sheryl Lee Ralph To Organize Protest at Lincoln Memorial
Sheryl Lee Ralph has worked closely with the National Minority AIDS Council and organized numerous fundraisers including her well known annual event, Divas Simply Singing. She has performed her one woman show about HIV/AIDS, Sometimes I Cry, here in DC and around the country.
Ralph will take her activism to new territory on September 27th, however, as she stages a sit-in to call the federal government to take action on the HIV/AIDS epidemic in the African American community. The National Ledger reports:
Ralph who has traveled to several southern African countries to present HIV/AIDS workshops and presentations, with the support of PEPFAR is distressed by the lack of similar effort to eradicate AIDS in Black American communities.
“I am happy there is PEPFAR but how many times does the CDC have to report that over half of all new HIV infections are occurring among African Americans before we do something about it? HIV/AIDS threatens the very future of Blacks right here in America.“
Ralph hopes she will be joined in D.C. by anyone who is willing to take a stand or a seat and demand change when it comes to the health of all Americans. “The time is now! If we don’t stand up for ourselves who will? AIDS affects us all!”
9.07.2008
DC Cowboy Calendar Benefits AIDS Foundation
The DC Cowboys are once again releasing a calendar along with a companion DVD. This year, 50% of the proceeds of the calendar will benefit the Paul Malerba Foundation for HIV/AIDS services. The Paul Malerba Foundation assists non-profit organizations in caring for patients who have HIV/AIDS by providing financial assistance for medical care, mental health and educational services to low income, underinsured/uninsured persons living with the disease.
To purchase your calendar and support the Paul Malerba Foundation, visit http://www.dccowboys.org/page.aspx?Store.
AIDS Walk Washington: October 4th, 2008
View and share pictures from AIDS Walk Washington on The Flickr AIDS Walk Washington Group.

8.26.2008
DC Needle Swap Saving Lives
There are multiple factors that produced our high HIV/AIDS rate, and it'll take multiple factors to bring it down, says Smith. The reasons include unstable leadership at DC's HIV/AIDS prevention office -- which had 12 directors in 20 years. The District has a high population of black and gay residents, who have high rates of infection. Intravenous drug use is the second most common way HIV is spread in DC, after unprotected sex, according to a HAA report released last year. DC needle exchange advocates say the ban left them without an important tool in a city where roughly 10,000 residents are thought to be injection-drug users.
PreventionWorks! had to scrape by mostly on private donations, but now the District increased the group's budget by $300,000 over three years. That's the largest share of nearly $700,000 the District is allocating annually for needle exchanges. Other organizations receiving help include those that work with specific high-risk groups, such as prostitutes and the homeless. The White House Office of National Drug Control Policy argues the programs may actually increase disease-infection rates because they fail to curb risky behaviors associated with needle-sharing.
8.21.2008
Faces of an Epidemic
Continue reading this article in the Washington Post.
8.18.2008
HIV Prevention Community Planning Group (CPG)-August Meeting Review
At the July CPG meeting, the bylaws were changed, resulting in the eradication of all standing committees and the installation of an Operations Committee. At the August meeting two members were voted on two the operations committee: Melina Afzal and I, Zenovia Wright. A motion was made to increase the size of the Operations Committee from five members to seven; this motion will be discussed and voted on at the next meeting of the CPG. Should this motion be approved, the two other CPG members who were nominated for the Operations Committee (Ron Simmons and Cyndee Clay) will be considered to fill the two remaining spots on the committee. Melina Afzal will serve a one-year term on the Operations committee and serve as chair of the ad-hoc Membership Committee. I will serve a two-year term and chair the ad-hoc Data/Prioritization Committee. Ad hoc committees are open to input and participation from all CPG and community members. Meeting dates and times TBA.
HAA was recently notified that the CDC Interim Progress Report is due from HAA on 8/22/08, approximately three weeks earlier than normal. As HAA is in the process of reviewing an RFA, they cannot identify how funds will be distributed throughout the city, however they can report that there are more funds available this year ($2mil compared to last year’s $1.4mil), and that they are looking at all target populations as well as some special populations. The report will also discuss the progress being made; final funding decisions will be made by October 1. The CPG authorized the Operations committee to review the IPR on its behalf and provide HAA with a letter of concurrence, non-concurrence or concurrence with reservations. HAA will provide a draft to the CPG by 8/22. The Operations committee will meet on 8/26 and notify HAA and the CPG of its decision.
The next meeting of the full CPG will be held on September 11, 2008 at 5:30 PM at 64 New York Ave NE. All are welcome to attend.
8.08.2008
Increase in New HIV Infections at Whitman-Walker
"There have been 266 new HIV diagnoses in the first half of 2008, a 232 percent from the number of cases in the first half of 2007, according to the clinic. One-third of the newly diagnosed patients have full-blown AIDS, the clinic said. The new infections were found primarily in two groups, gay men and African-Americans, according to the clinic."
8.01.2008
Could the International AIDS Conference Come to DC?
The International AIDS Society does not hold it's conferences in countries that restrict short term entry of people living with HIV/AIDS and/or require prospective HIV-positive visitors to declare their HIV status on visa application forms or other documentation required for entry into the country.
The United States made news around the world in 1989 when Dutch AIDS activist Hans Paul Verhoff was denied entry into the United States because of his HIV status. The ban was codified into as part of the NIH reauthorization in 1993.
But this era has gladly come to an end. Thankfully, the reauthorization of PEPFAR, the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief which was signed into law yesterday. It included a provision to repeal discriminatory HIV travel and immigration law, raising the possibility of the International AIDS Conference coming to the United States.
Could the International AIDS Conference come to Washington DC. Well it won't happen in 2008 when the conference will take place in Mexico city. And it won't happen in 2010 when the conference will take place in Vienna. But it could happen in 2012.
Previous DC HIV/AIDS Director Marcia Martin suggested the conference come to DC should the travel ban be lifted at an event in 2006.
There are many reasons it makes sense to do so. First, with one in 20 DC residents living with HIV, this conference could potentially shine an international spotlight on our devastating HIV/AIDS statistics. Second, with so many decisions that impact HIV/AIDS around the world being made in our nation's capitol, the possibility of bringing HIV/AIDS advocates from around the world to DC has exciting potential. Third, a conference of this size could be a huge economic boost to the District.
As plans are made for the 2012, the International AIDS Society has an opportunity to make a powerful statement by bringing the conference back to the United States for the first time in twenty years. I hope they do so by holding the 2012 conference in the United States, and give serious consideration to holding the conference in Washington, DC.
7.30.2008
AIDS: The Cavalry is Not Coming to Save Us
The world has been very consumed with the devastation of AIDS in Africa. Great! However, there should be a worldwide out-cry that 1 in 20 persons living in Washington, DC, our nation’s capital, is living with the AIDS virus. Over 80% of these persons living with HIV in Washington, DC, are Black Americans.
The HIV prevalence rate in Washington, DC, (5%) is fast approaching the levels of infection in Uganda (5.4%).
read the entire article at Anderson Cooper 360:.
7.18.2008
WWC Seeks Focus Group Participants for Next Week
* 18 – 24 year old gay men
* Single gay men of color
* 24 – 35 year old heterosexual African-American women
* Heterosexual African-American men under the age of 40
The purpose of these focus groups is to talk with people in these target groups to determine what messaging would be most effective as well as determine what vehicle would be best for delivering that message. So, there will be questions about attitudes toward sexual behavior, what things people respond more to; and what type of imagery or wording would get's people's attention or resonates with them, etc. This is completely confidential and participants will be compensated for their time.
If you know of some people who are potential participants, please call Karen Solod during the day at 301-441-4660 or call Kathie at the same number in the evenings during the week or anytime over the weekend and say Whitman-Walker Clinic sent you. If there are any questions, indicate it is for the RT Strategies Focus Groups.
7.17.2008
She Fourteen, She's Dying, and She Still Doesn't Know Why
What makes this case particularly tragic is that the young woman does not even know she is HIV positive. (She was born with HIV, a challenge that continues to plague our city. While there are treatments that prevent HIV positive pregnant moms from passing HIV on to their children in most cases, The District of Columbia also has the highest perinatal HIV transmission rates in the country).
And in this case, her mother has decided not to tell the young woman about her HIV status, and the Doctor is unfortunately obliged to respect her wishes.
I've heard second-hand information about several such cases at both Howard University Hospital and Children's National Medical Center. Despite the fact that young people in DC have the right to confidentially access sexual health services beginning at 13, there are young people aged 13, 14, 15, and even sixteen, that have not been told they are HIV positive.
Sometimes the parents may be concerned about how the children react. Sometimes the parents may be concerned about their own HIV status being revealed to friends and family. Either way, it continues to happen.
In the case of this fourteen year old girl, it seems to me outrageous that she could leave us and never know the truth about her HIV status.
But it is also outrageous to have sexually active teenagers in the District of Columbia who are HIV positive and don't even know it.
Given what we know about young people in DC from the Youth Risk Behavior Survey Data it's quite possible these youth are sexually active for several years before they even find out they are HIV positive. It's hard to believe, but true. And it may be yet another factor contributing to our high HIV/AIDS rates in the District.
Young adults have a right to accurate and honest information about their health and well-being. They should also have a right to know their HIV status.
7.16.2008
Breaking the Silence on HIV
Recently, while boarding the subway, an ad inside of the train car caught my attention. In big black letters the poster read: 1 in 20 people live with HIV. From first glance, one might’ve thought the ad was referring to an African country where HIV is devastating entire families and communities. But the statistics were actually referring to the District of Columbia, my own backyard. After conducting further Google research at home, I learned that Washington DC has the highest AIDS rate among major cities. And what’s even more alarming, 9 out of 10 women who test positive in the District are black.
Continue reading this article at emPower
7.12.2008
really, your kids are having sex. like seriously.
Obviously those kids are sexually active. However, I am forbidden from doing outreach at the school or handing out condoms to anyone under 18. So, when I passed by the school a few weeks ago and saw what I saw, I seriously considered breaking the law.
continue reading this blog post on OC Girl's kick ass blog
7.11.2008
CPG Meeting Recap for 7/10/08
Since the current prevention plan has been extended through 2009, the CPG is taking the opportunity to explore ways to increase the group’s productivity and increase/maintain community input involvement. At last night’s meeting the CPG voted on proposed changes to the Bylaw’s concerning CPG membership.
In short, the Executive Committee proposed the following changes:
The CPG discussed the proposed changes and decided:
- To keep the membership cap at 31 until/unless we could determine a reasonable justification for changing this number. The thinking behind the proposed change is that we could retain CPG members; however some CPG members are concerned that reducing the membership cap could negatively impact the diversity (community representation) of the CPG.
- The CPG decided to eliminate all standing committees, including the Executive committee.
- The CPG approved the installation of an Operations Committee, but with the following changes: Instead of being a body of 7 members, it has been reduced to a body of 5 members, with two members from the CPG instead of 4. Both members will be chosen/nominated by the full CPG.
Also important to note:
At the present time, all future full CPG meetings will continue to begin at 5:30 PM on the 2nd Thursday of the month in which a meeting is scheduled. The meetings are scheduled around times the CPG is needed to perform CDC mandated CPG tasks. Meetings will be held August 14, September 11 and November 13, 2008. In 2009, meetings will be held February 12, April 9, and June 11.
Currently, the Operations committee will meet monthly via conference call at 11:30AM on the first Thursday of each month. Two members from the CPG will be approved at the August 14, 2008 meeting.
As always, the community is welcome to attend all meetings and engage in the community process. Meetings are held at 64 New York Ave NE at 5:30PM in the 5th floor conference room. Thank you.
7.09.2008
National Latino AIDS Awareness Day October 15th
Latinos in the United States continue to be affected by the HIV/AIDS epidemic, accounting for a greater proportion of AIDS cases than their representation in the U.S. population overall, and the second highest AIDS case rate in the nation by race/ethnicity. Studies have shown that Latinos with HIV/AIDS may face additional barriers to accessing care than their white counterparts (read the fact sheet here).
To learn more, visit the National Latino AIDS Awareness Day website at www.nlaad.org.
2008 National Latino AIDS Awareness Day Events
National Latino AIDS Awareness Day Congressional Briefing
Tuesday October 14th
Room 2218 in the Rayburn House Office Building, US Congress, Washington DC
10:00 AM to 11:00 AM
2007 National Latino AIDS Awareness Day Event
click here for a description and photos of 2007 DC NLAAD Events
click here for the list of 2007 NLAAD Events
Add this event on Facebook

7.06.2008
Fight HIV in DC Now on Facebook
Of course, you can still reach Fight HIV in DC on MySpace, Friendster, YouTube, and Flickr.
7.01.2008
DC HIV/AIDS Administration Out of Condoms
A local HIV/AIDS organization that was told they could pick up thousands of condoms this week was told this morning that the HIV/AIDS Administration is cleaned out and will not have any condoms to distribute for at least a week.
The shortage raises questions about the overall distribution of condoms. On two separate occasions in 2006 and in 2007, the HIV/AIDS Administration pledged to distribute a million condoms. As a basis of comparison The New York City Health Department distributes anywhere from three to five million condoms each month.
But while the HIV/AIDS administration pledged on two separate occassions to distribute a million condoms it now seems pretty obvious based on the numbers that they never even had a million condoms to distribute.
6.25.2008
More States Reject Abstinence-Only Federal Funding; No Change in Fenty Policy
Numerous youth organizations in the District of Columbia have asked Adrian Fenty to also reject these funds, but to date there has been no change in the District of Columbia policy. (I personally asked Adrian Fenty to reject these funds at a Gertrude Stein Democrats Meeting on May 14th, 2007)
The Associated Press reports:
Some $50 million has been budgeted for this year, and financially strapped states might be expected to want their share. But many have doubts that the program does much, if any good, and they're frustrated by chronic uncertainty that it will even be kept in existence. They also have to chip in state money in order to receive the federal grants.A total of twenty two states have rejected these funds. Most recently, New York State rejected the funds. In addition two states, Arizona and Iowa, have announced their intention to forgo their share of the federal grant at the start of the fiscal year that begins Oct. 1.
Iowa Gov. Chet Culver, a Democrat, made his decision to leave based on the congressionally mandated curriculum, which teaches "the social, psychological and health gains of abstaining from sexual activity." Instructors must teach that sexual activity outside of marriage is likely to have harmful psychological and physical effects.
This funding comes with strings attached that are simply unacceptable. The messages required by abstinence-only-until-marriage funding are damaging to gay and lesbian youth. Further, they are Ineffective, Unethical, and Poor Public Health.
I sincerely hope that the District of Columbia will listen to the concerns of the community and reject this funding once and for all.
6.18.2008
More Than Half of AIDS-Related Deaths in Washington, D.C., Not Reported
More than half of the AIDS-related deaths that occurred in Washington, D.C., from 2000 to 2005 were missed by the city's system for reporting such deaths, according to an analysis by the district's Department of Health and CDC that was published recently in CDC's Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, the Washington Post reports. The underreporting of AIDS-related deaths suggests that the epidemic "may be taking a far greater toll" on the district than health officials had originally thought, according to the Post.
For the analysis, city health officials worked with CDC to review all death certificates from 2000 to 2005 in an effort to identify deaths that appeared to be AIDS-related. They compared that number with the deaths that had been reported and discovered the discrepancy, the Post reports. According to the analysis, of the 2,460 deaths from AIDS-related illnesses that occurred between 2000 and 2005, 1,337 had not been reported because the city's system for tracking them was "inadequate," the Post reports. Officials launched the investigation because of health officials' increasing concern that they were undercounting the number of district residents living with HIV and those dying of AIDS-related causes, in part because they discovered boxes of unexamined paper records. Shannon Hader, senior deputy of the health department's HIV/AIDS Administration, said the analysis "tells us our surveillance system wasn't complete enough," adding, "We're clearly underreporting."
According to the Post, at least 12,500 district residents have developed AIDS -- one of the highest rates in the country -- and officials estimate that between 3% and 5% of people living in the city are HIV-positive. Hader said that in order to curb the spread of HIV in the district and ensure that HIV-positive people receive appropriate care, the department needs an "accurate count." In addition, the amount of federal HIV/AIDS funding the district receives is based on such estimates, Hader said, adding, "We want everything they owe us."
In response to the findings, Hader said the district has initiated several efforts to improve its reporting system, including a mass mailing in January to about 4,000 physicians and laboratories to try to increase the number of reported diagnoses. Officials also have begun routinely reviewing death records and have launched a campaign to try to identify more people for treatment.
"What we need to do is get more people who don't know they have HIV diagnosed and into care and treatment," Hader said, adding, "Every time you go into a health care provider, they should be offering to test you for HIV. We want to drive down the number of people living with HIV and [who] don't know about it" (Stein, Washington Post, 6/14).
6.17.2008
GLAA 2008 Policy Agenda: HIV/AIDS and Public Health
AIDS AND PUBLIC HEALTH
A. HIV and AIDS
1. Introduction
D.C. has the highest AIDS rate in the United States. It is comparable to the rates in sub-Saharan Africa. In 2002 the rate of reported AIDS cases in the District was 162.4 per 100,000 compared to 14.8 per 100,000 for the United States. In a local study of AIDS cases reported in year 2001, comparing the District of Columbia to cities with populations larger than 500,000, it was found that the District of Columbia had the highest rate, 119 cases per 100,000, of all cities included. This was the highest rate for AIDS in the nation for 2001.9
According to the “District of Columbia HIV/AIDS Epidemiology Annual Report” released in November 2007, almost 70 percent of all AIDS cases between 1997 and 2006 progressed from HIV to AIDS in less than 12 months after the initial HIV diagnosis, primarily due to late testing, compared to 39 percent nationally. While African-Americans are 57 percent of the District’s population, they account for 81 percent of new reports of HIV cases. While African-American women are 58 percent of the District’s female population, they account for 90 percent of new female HIV cases. Heterosexual contact is the leading mode of HIV transmission at 37 percent of newly reported infections, while nationally men who have sex with men lead new transmissions.10
Nationally, the HIV rate among non-Hispanic blacks between 19 and 24 is 20 times higher than among other young U.S. adults, according to a study in the American Journal of Public Health.11
AIDS continues to be the leading cause of death for Black women between the ages of 24 and 34; Black youth represent over 56% of the new HIV/AIDS cases among youth in America; and nearly 50% of Black gay men in the U.S. may already be infected. Despite all of these alarming statistics, HIV/AIDS has only recently been treated as a serious problem in D.C. It was long ignored by D.C.’s politicians, government agencies, press and community.
Since treatments have improved significantly in the past decade, people with HIV are often finding that the disease is manageable. Consequently, many people are not open about their HIV infection and do not agitate to save their lives or the lives of their loved ones. However, the number of people with HIV/AIDS continues to grow. The demands on our public and private healthcare systems will only increase, and the government must get more serious in order to meet them.
Community participation is key to improving the District’s response to AIDS. The various planning bodies—including the Prevention Planning Group, HIV Health Services Planning Council, and the Mayor’s AIDS Task Force—should publish their meeting and minutes on the HAA website. Also, stronger efforts should be made to appoint community members to these bodies who are not board members, employees, or consultants of groups receiving funds, while existing conflict-of-interest provisions (such as in the Ryan White CARE Act) should be enforced.
2. Reforms at HIV/AIDS Administration
We were pleased when the criminal cabal that ran HAA for many years was purged. There had been rampant fraud in contracting and retaliations against honest service providers and staff. The DC Appleseed Center issued a comprehensive report in 2005 that exposed many of the problems that GLAA fought to bring to light.12
The Appleseed report became a blueprint for reform, and report cards have been issued on the city’s progress. Financial and service audits need to continue.
The Council has resumed HAA oversight that was badly neglected under the former Health and Human Services Chair. GLAA had sought the breakup of that committee into two, and since it was done, oversight has greatly improved under Health Committee Chair David Catania, who held 8 hearings on HAA in the Committee’s first year, as opposed to 1 in 6 years previously. We hope that the reforms at HAA will continue and will be closely monitored by the Council and watchdog organizations such as Appleseed and DCPCA.
3. Continued Challenges at HAA
a. HIV surveillance has been changed to a names reporting system, but better privacy protections are needed. D.C. gave up on the Unique Identifiers that we used to protect people’s privacy after our hand was forced by the federal government. The Ryan White Reauthorization Act now bases allocation of funds on both HIV and AIDS cases. However, they will not accept unique identifier systems in counting HIV cases. Nonetheless, states, including the District, must report both HIV and AIDS cases to the CDC with a unique identifier.
The names-reporting system for HIV creates a de facto lifetime registry, which demands stronger privacy protections than we currently have. Our medical privacy laws do not allow for a private right of action, and no individual penalties for a government employee who violates the law. Any penalty would be paid by the D.C. government, and only if the D.C. government chooses to sue itself. Stronger laws are clearly needed.
b. Sero-positive surveys can improve the reliability of epidemiological data. GLAA supports the National Academy of Sciences’ Institute of Medicine (IOM) Report, which recommends “that the CDC create a national system to identify new HIV infections, enabling public health officials to track recent changes in the epidemic. Rather than trying to count every newly infected person, the surveillance system would provide data that would allow the CDC to estimate the number of HIV infected persons by testing a statistically valid sample of those at the highest risk.”13
The District of Columbia should adopt a sero-positive survey as recommended by the IOM, and should encourage the CDC to adopt the IOM recommendations to promote HIV prevention and surveillance.
c. Better program evaluation. HIV prevention programs receive tens of millions of dollars a year in D.C. but have failed to reduce the rate of new HIV infections. Significant studies need to be conducted on the effectiveness of HIV prevention programs. Every prevention program needs to be evaluated for effectiveness and new studies conducted to find programs and messages that work.
d. Housing. The District needs to make the most of funds from the federal Housing Opportunities for Persons with AIDS (HOPWA) program. An oversight hearing of the Committee on Health last December revealed that nearly 300 people are on the waiting list for housing. We can maximize our HOPWA dollars by prioritizing actual housing for PWAs when there are other funding sources for the support services that eat up a third of the District’s HOPWA funds.
4. Testing for Sexually Transmitted Diseases
The fact that HIV has been treated so differently from other infectious diseases has helped to perpetuate the stigma and contributed to its spread. HIV testing should become part of routine physical exams for adults and teens. 25% of people with HIV don’t inform their partners because they don’t know. This lack of knowledge is a leading reason for the spread of HIV.
Under proposed guidelines from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, patients would be tested for HIV as part of a standard battery of tests when they go for urgent or emergency care, or even during a routine physical. HAA is leading an effort to make HIV testing standard in all D.C. run health facilities, and encouraged in private facilities. Eliminating a special consent form would help normalize HIV testing and care. The test should be covered in a clinic or hospital’s standard care consent form. However, patients should be allowed to decline the testing, and should never be required to be tested except in D.C. jails, as noted below.
HAA should maintain anonymous testing sites and educate residents about the difference between confidential and anonymous testing. This is particularly important for non-citizens who are subject to deportation under the federal HIV immigration ban signed into law in 1993.
In June 2006, the D.C. Department of Health launched a campaign “to encourage all DC residents to demonstrate their shared commitment to stop the spread of HIV in our city by getting screened for the virus.” Unfortunately it was poorly executed and relatively few people were tested. The program should include funding for counseling and appropriate referrals for treatment.
HIV testing in D.C. prisons
People held in custody at the D.C. Jail should be protected from HIV transmission by means of automatic testing at intake and segregation of HIV positive inmates into a separate ward. To evaluate the practice, inmates need to be tested when they leave. Reducing or eliminating HIV transmission in the D.C. Jail will also reduce transmission to the partners of released inmates. Segregated HIV positive inmates must be provided all of the medical care and medication required, and not subjected to discrimination or stigmatizing treatment.
5. Post-Exposure Prophylaxis (PEP)
Post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP) for HIV should be provided at all D.C. emergency rooms, urgent care centers and health clinics. The availability of PEP should be publicized and included in student health classes. PEP needs to be started within 72 hours after exposure to HIV to be effective, so people must not be forced to wait for a doctor’s office appointment.
Studies in animals have shown PEP to be up to 100% effective if given within 24 hours and a course of medications is taken for four weeks. It failed half the time if taken three days after exposure or where the course was only for 10 days. HIV is found in the lymph nodes 2-3 days after transmission and after five days in the blood, which is generally seen as evidence of established infection.
6. HIV Prevention
a. Clean needle exchange. Given the clear evidence that syringe exchange programs (SEPs) help prevent blood-borne disease without promoting increased drug use,14
we celebrated when Congress finally lifted its ban on D.C. funding of SEPs in the Fiscal Year 2008 D.C. appropriations bill.
The District estimates that 9,856 residents inject drugs.15
From 1996 to 2000, 31.3% of AIDS cases were diagnosed in heterosexuals with a history of injecting drug use (IDU). An additional 6.5% were diagnosed as related to IDU through sex or childbirth.16
As we look forward to a District-funded SEP, we applaud PreventionWorks! (a 2008 winner of GLAA’s Distinguished Service Award) for operating a life-saving program for more than nine years solely on private donations. Kudos go to D.C. Councilmember Jack Evans for his longstanding leadership on this issue, to D.C. Congresswoman Eleanor Holmes Norton for her stalwart efforts in Congress, and to Congressman José Serrano (D-NY) for the key role he played in the appropriations victory. The continued ban on the use of federal funds for SEPs, which has been in place since 1988, remains a blot on the nation’s health care policy.
b. Condom distribution. The use of condoms is the safest and most effective prevention method for reducing HIV transmission. Condoms and water-based lubricant need to be widely and consistently available throughout the District. DC Appleseed reported that HAA missed its goal of distributing 600,000 condoms in 2004; only 290,000 were distributed. In 2005, the number fell to 125,000. An HAA initiative launched in February 2007 to distribute one million condoms also fell short. In September 2007, the District claimed to have distributed 650,000 condoms, but activist David Mariner wrote that “HAA is counting all the condoms they have given to local agencies, without regard to whether or not they have been handed out to actual people. Boxes and boxes of these ‘distributed’ condoms are actually in storage at local organizations.” HAA should change from its current haphazard approach and begin specifying distribution points at public health centers, hospitals, bars, nightclubs, and social service agencies, to permit better tracking. Lack of access to a condom should never be the reason for not using one.
c. Oppose criminal penalties for HIV transmission. Criminal penalties should not be used to address healthcare issues, as some have proposed. Imposing criminal penalties for knowingly transmitting HIV would have the unintended effect of harming HIV testing and prevention efforts by driving activity underground and encouraging more anonymous sex. It would also increase the stigma of HIV. HIV transmission is a public health issue and needs to be addressed as such.
B. Legalizing Medical Marijuana
GLAA supports legalizing the medical use of marijuana when a patient’s doctor recommends it to combat some of the effects of AIDS, cancer, or other diseases. Initiative 59 passed by 69% and won in every precinct. The Council should oppose penalties against people who use medical marijuana or acquire it for their loved ones. The 1999 report Marijuana and Medicine by the IOM found clear benefits of marijuana for the relief of pain and nausea and an increase in appetite. There is no reason to believe that legalizing medical marijuana in controlled situations encourages drug abuse. Alleviating pain and suffering must not be sacrificed to political posturing and demagoguery.
C. Women’s Health Needs
There are many other medical issues of concern to our community. Lesbians are at particular risk of not receiving early diagnoses of breast and cervical cancers, based on lack of access to and sensitivity of medical providers to lesbian sexuality issues. The city must ensure that its health centers are staffed with people who are aware of and sensitive to such issues. The needs of women with HIV/AIDS must similarly be provided for.
D. Transgender Health Needs
Transgender people in D.C. are disproportionately poor and unreached by our health care system. Incidence of HIV infection is greater than 25%. Prostitution is often a means of survival as discrimination and sex-transitioning keeps many out of stable employment. This is a serious HIV transmission vector that has been neglected by HAA because of the relatively small number of transgender people. HAA must make medical care for this at-risk population a priority.
Transgender people also face discrimination at shelters, in housing and in employment. Police routinely treat transgender people as prostitutes. The spate of murders of transgender people—9 in 2003—has created fear that has not been much eased by the official response. All of these problems have contributed to the further marginalization of transgender people, and limited their access and willingness to seek medical care. A comprehensive approach by the city is needed.
E. Tuberculosis, Hepatitis and Substance Abuse
Drug-resistant tuberculosis (TB) and Hepatitis B and C need to be aggressively stamped out before they become more entrenched among people with HIV/AIDS and their medical care providers.
People with HIV are 40 times more likely to develop active, infectious tuberculosis if exposed to the contagion than are people with healthy immune systems. In 1994 the federal government began offering matching funds to states and territories to help them develop a limited Medicaid benefit for people who are infected with TB. The District should use these funds because current treatment is now funded by limited Ryan White or Alliance dollars. Also, these funds would be beneficial for keeping open the city’s cash strapped TB/STD clinic, which serves as a major point of entry for people newly diagnosed with HIV into the city’s health care system.
Substance abuse ranging from alcohol to crystal meth remains a serious problem in the District and contributes to the spread of HIV and other diseases. GLAA supports continued funding of targeted substance abuse treatment programs.
F. Domestic Partnership Insurance Availability for Small Businesses
Many small businesses in the District have been unable to offer health insurance to the domestic partners of their employees because of the lack of insurance companies offering coverage to employers with fewer than 50 employees. In addition to putting small businesses at a disadvantage in attracting and retaining employees, the lack of access means that people who could have private insurance go uninsured. While D.C. has a low rate of uninsured, anyone without insurance eventually becomes a burden for the District.
On May 12, 2003, District Insurance Commissioner Lawrence Mirel secured an agreement from CareFirst Blue Cross to offer insurance coverage of domestic partners to employers who request it. Unfortunately, other insurers have not kept pace, limiting options for small employers. If other insurers do not extend domestic partner health insurance coverage to small businesses on their own, the District, at a minimum, should use its clout as a major customer to demand this coverage from insurers wishing to do business with the city. Additionally, the Council should pass legislation requiring insurance companies to extend domestic partner health insurance to all size businesses that request it for their employees.
G. Universal Health Insurance Coverage
GLAA supports universal access to health insurance. We commend David Catania for introducing the “Healthy DC Act of 2008,” and we commend his colleagues for incorporating it into the budget. The bill’s requirement of health insurance coverage for all District residents will improve overall health, reduce the cost of medical care, reduce HIV transmission, and improve the health of people with HIV.
6.12.2008
One Day, One Ride, One Cause- August 17
All funds raised or donated by riders go directly to the beneficiaries which are: Building Futures, Children's National Medical Center Teen Life Clubs, Damien Ministries, Food and Friends, MCC-DC Wellness Center, Metro Teen AIDS, Pediatric AIDS/HIV Care, and RISE.
The Ride is being organized by Brother to Brother, Sister to Sister United (BBSSU) with the support of many other groups.
With a minimum of only $100* to raise / donate and a $50 registration fee, you can make a difference in the lives of children, men and women affected by AIDS in the District and the surrounding community; and maybe you can make a difference in your own life.
To register, or find out more, visit www.1day1ride1cause.org

5.29.2008
Vaccine Research Center Launches Mobile Clinic
The Vaccine Research Center's work includes preventive and therapeutic HIV vaccine research. The new mobile clinic will make it easier for folks in the District to be screened for, and participate in HIV vaccine research studies.
The event will be held Friday June 6, 2008 at 11am on the NIH Campus. Exact location will be adjacent to Bldg 40, the Vaccine Research Center. Please RSVP by emailing vaccines@nih.gov or calling 1-866-833-LIFE (5433)

5.27.2008
National Black AIDS Awareness Day 2009
Here in Washington, DC there is no question that African Americans are disproportionately impacted by HIV/AIDS. According to our recent surveillance report, African Americans make up about 55% of the DC population, but constitute 80% of District residents living with HIV. Further, of the 842 cases of HIV/AIDS among men who have sex with men from 2001 to 2006, 63% were among black men.
National Black AIDS Awareness Day is a great opportunity to raise awareness of how HIV/AIDS impacts Black gay and bisexual men. If you're interested in helping organize a National Black AIDS Awareness Day event in Washington DC, please let me know.
To learn more about the National Black AIDS Awareness Day, visit www.blackaidsday.org.
For information on 2007 National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day Events in DC, click here.
Add this event on Facebook

5.19.2008
DC HIV Vaccine Awareness Day 2008
Scientists have been searching for a vaccine to prevent HIV infection since the virus was first identified in 1983. Each clinical trial brings us one step closer to finding an effective vaccine. More than 25,000 HIV-negative individuals have participated in both government- and privately sponsored HIV vaccine trials.
HIV Vaccine Awareness Day is a day to educate our communities about the efforts to find a preventive HIV vaccine and to recognize and thank the thousands of volunteers, health professionals and scientists who are conducting and participating in HIV vaccine research.
To see pictures from the reception, click here.
Learn more at www.bethegeneration.org.
5.07.2008
Talk About HIV/AIDS in the District
You are invited to a forum to discuss these and other issues on Thursday May 15, 2008, from 11:30 am to 3:30 pm. Please pass on this information to any friends who are living with HIV/AIDS.
The discussion will be held at the Charles Sumner School Museum at 17th and M Streets, NW. It is about 3 blocks north of the Farragut North Metro Station and a block from Connecticut Ave. and the #42 bus line.
Incentives and a light lunch will be provided to participants. Please call 202.449.7741 to reserve a space. Sponsored by the DC HIV Prevention Community Planning Group and the DC Delegation of the Ryan White Planning Council.

5.06.2008
Are Preventive and Therapeutic HIV Vaccines on the Horizon?
The forum takes place on Friday, May 16, 2008 at 6:00 PM, at the Academy for Educational Development (AED), Greeley Hall, 1875 Connecticut Ave., NW. Reception to follow.
Please RSVP to: Sterling Washington, (202) 446-1100 x1123 swashington@uhupil.org.

5.05.2008
A Message from Mark Fischer
The Planning Council serves Washington, DC as well as multiple counties in Northern Virginia, Suburban Maryland and West Virginia. These jurisdictions comprise the Statistical Metropolitan Area (SMS) as defined by the Census Bureau. Based upon the number of people living with HIV/AIDS in the SMA it became an Eligible Metropolitan Area (EMA) as defined by the Ryan White Care Act of 2006 (and the previous multi-year Ryan White Acts).
Requirements for administration of federal Ryan White funding require each EMA to have an all-volunteer Planning Council that is responsible for needs assessment and funding allocation.
The selection of provider agencies is made based upon the plan developed by the Planning Council. There is a governmental agency in each jurisdiction that selects providers, dispenses funding and monitors performance. In Washington, DC, that role is carried out by the HIV/AIDS Administration (HAA) in the DC Department of Health.
The Planning Council members represent and reflect the diversity of our communities. In addition, the Planning Council uses professionally conducted surveys, focus groups, community forums and other means to seek substantial community input.
My purpose in posting this message is to assure all that I am anxious to secure input of service needs and service availability that any of you may have to share.
If you or someone known to you is having difficulty obtaining HIV/AIDS related services, I would be able to help direct you to an appropriate source. Washington, DC offer one of the most comprehensive sets of HIV/AIDS support services of any city in the nation. There is no need for anyone to go without such assistance.
Please contact me directly via email at fischerwdc@msn.com with any input you may have to offer. If appropriate, include your contact information (telephone and best time to call) along with a brief summary of your input. I will respond in a timely manner.
The full Planning Council meets monthly on the fourth Thursday of the month at 64 New York Avenue, NE in the Fifth Floor Conference Room from 5:30 to 8:00 PM. The public is welcome to attend. The next meeting is Thursday, May 29, 2008 (actually the fifth Thursday this month). The HIV/AIDS Administration main telephone number 202.671.4900 if you need to verify future meeting dates.
Again, I welcome the opportunity to serve our region in addressing the very pressing challenge represented by HIV/AIDS and to work with any of you if you feel I may be able to offer assistance.
Mark Fischer
fischerwdc@msn.com
Dorchester House
PS The Planning Council and its members DO NOT have any role in selecting provider agencies or in resolving complaints or concerns about their performance. Those matters are handled by the administrative agency in each jurisdiction. In DC, that is HAA for which contact information was given above.
5.01.2008
Save the Date: Reflections of Life and Hope
This unique event will combine an art exhibition with live music and performances, bringing our community together to celebrate life and hope in the midst of an ongoing struggle against HIV/AIDS in the District of Columbia.
You can find out more about Andromeda Transcultura Health at www.andromedatransculturalhealth.org. For more infomation about this event, e-mail Antonio Pineda.

3.18.2008
National HIV Testing Day

3.05.2008
FREE RETREAT February 7th-9th
Healthy Relationships is a program for small groups off people living with HIV/AIDS. Knowing that the lives of persons living with HIV/AIDS are stressful, this retreat aims to build coping skills to reduce stress. Some of the skills involve:
- Solving problems
- Making decisions
- Negotiating choices
- Disclosing HIV status to family and friends
- Disclosing to sex partners
- Building healthy and safer relationships
call 202-446-1100
or
Ken Pettigrew
Kpettigrew@uhupil.org
Kenya Hutton
Khutton@uhupil.org