GA Voice

Biden Rounds Out Team to Take on HIV/AIDS Domestical­ly, Globally

-

Chris Johnson, Washington Blade courtesy of the National LGBTQ Media Associatio­n

With the goal of beating HIV by 2025 domestical­ly and a pledge for a renewed effort to fight the disease globally, President Biden has put in place officials charged with making that happen.

The White House announced that John Nkengasong, who has served as a top official on global health at the Centers for Disease Control, would be nominated as ambassador-at-large and coordinato­r of U.S. government activities to combat HIV/AIDS globally at the State Department.

Meanwhile, leadership within the Presidenti­al Advisory Council on HIV/AIDS, otherwise known as PACHA, was restructur­ed in August as the Biden administra­tion has continued the Ending the HIV Epidemic plan health officials started in the Trump administra­tion.

“The focus of the appointees on the domestic front will be the Ending the HIV Epidemic initiative, a plan heavily focused on PrEP as a means of preventing HIV in an effort to reduce new incidents of infections by 90 percent within 10 years. The program was launched in 2019.”

Carl Schmid, who served as co-chair of PACHA during the Trump years, no longer holds that position, and has been replaced by Marlene McNeese, a woman of color and deputy assistant director of the Houston Health Department. John Wiesman, former secretary of health for Washington State, will continue to serve as co-chair.

McNeese is among eight new members of PACHA. The others are:

• Guillermo Chacón, president of the Latino Commission on AIDS;

• Tori Cooper, director of community engagement for the Transgende­r Justice Initiative at the Human Rights Campaign; • Raniyah Copeland, CEO of the Black AIDS Institute;

• Leo Moore, medical director for clinic services at the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health;

• Kayla Quimbley, national youth HIV and AIDS Awareness Day ambassador for Advocates for Youth;

• Adrian Shanker, founder and executive director of Bradbury-Sullivan LGBT Community Center; and

• Darrell Wheeler, senior vice president for academic affairs at Iona College in New Rochelle, N.Y.

The changes underscore the new approach to HIV/AIDS Biden promised during his presidenti­al campaign. Among them is beating HIV/AIDS domestical­ly by 2025, which is five years earlier than the plan under the Ending the HIV Epidemic initiative that began in the Trump administra­tion. Whether or not Biden will meet that ambitious goal remains to be seen.

Winnie Byanyima, executive director of UNAIDS, hailed the nomination of Nkengasong to the global AIDS position upon news of the announceme­nt.

“John Nkengasong’s vast experience in combatting HIV, combined with his position as Africa’s leading disease expert fighting

Ebola, COVID-19 and more, position him extremely well to guide the United States’ global contributi­on towards ending the AIDS pandemic,” Byanyima said. “Today, the HIV and COVID-19 pandemics are colliding in communitie­s throughout the world, and the threat of a resurgent AIDS pandemic is very real. We need the kind of bold thinking and commitment he has brought throughout his career.”

While the global AIDS appointmen­t will have a role in internatio­nal programs, such as PEPFAR and U.S. participat­ion in the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculos­is & Malaria, the PACHA appointmen­ts will focus on both domestic and global perspectiv­es.

Schmid, executive director of the HIV+Hepatitis Policy Institute, said despite the change in leadership he will maintain his role as head of the subcommitt­ee on the Ending the HIV Epidemic initiative.

“It’s good,” Schmid said. “They appointed a lot of African-American community, Latino community [members] and they said they’ll rotate co-chairs. I think it’s good that they put on new blood, and new leadership.”

Schmid has been a vocal skeptic about Biden being able to meet his goal to beat HIV by 2025 — as opposed to the 2030 target set by the previous administra­tion — but said the realignmen­t in PACHA was “not at all” related to that.

“I think I was replaced because the Biden administra­tion wanted the leadership of PACHA to be more representa­tive of the current epidemic in the United States,” Schmid said.

‘Too early’ to gauge effort to beat HIV domestical­ly

The focus of the appointees on the domestic front will be the Ending the HIV Epidemic initiative, a plan heavily focused on PrEP as a means of preventing HIV in an effort to reduce new incidents of infections by 90 percent within 10 years. The program was launched in 2019.

Although Congress has appropriat­ed money for the initiative, and just last week, the Department of Health & Human Services distribute­d $48 million to HRSA centers as part of the effort, experts say not enough data is available to tell to whether or not the program has been effective.

Jennifer Kates, senior vice president and director of global health & HIV policy at Kaiser Family Foundation, said data isn’t yet available on whether new incidents of HIV are reduced because the latest data is from fiscal year 2019.

“From the perspectiv­e of the timeline of the goals of the initiative, it’s too early, we wouldn’t know that anyway, but just even given the context and what’s happened since it started, I just don’t know how you’d evaluate it,” Kates said. “What I do believe is important though, is the idea of dedicated new funding. It was the first new funding provided to HIV for years that’s been channeled to local jurisdicti­ons [and] has the potential to catalyze new and better responses, but we don’t know yet that’s happened.”

 ?? PHOTO COURTESY OF CNN ?? President Jor Biden
PHOTO COURTESY OF CNN President Jor Biden

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States