San Francisco Chronicle

AIDS event returning to S.F. in 2020

- By Erin Allday

The Internatio­nal AIDS Conference will return to San Francisco in 2020, 30 years after the event — the world’s largest HIV/AIDS meeting — was last held in the Bay Area, organizers announced Tuesday.

After the 1990 conference in San Francisco, the United States barred all travel into the country by people with HIV. The policy was widely criticized by global leaders in HIV and public health, and the Internatio­nal AIDS Society refused to hold the conference in the U.S. while the ban was in place.

In 2010, the travel prohibitio­n was lifted. Two years later, the conference returned to the U.S., taking place in Washington, D.C. The 2020 meeting will be hosted by San Francisco in partnershi­p with Oakland.

“It’s been all over: South Africa, Amsterdam coming up this summer. It’s been in Morocco, it’s

been in Australia,” said Rep. Barbara Lee, D-Oakland, who introduced the legislatio­n that ended the ban. “I’ve been pushing for it to come to the Bay Area, because this has been the epicenter (of the AIDS epidemic) for so long.”

The last conference in San Francisco was tumultuous. Protesters in black stormed the meetings at Moscone Center to protest the ban, which had just been introduced.

At the time, HIV was viewed as a death sentence. There were no drugs to treat the virus, and people who were infected almost inevitably developed AIDS and died. Many of the conversati­ons at the internatio­nal meetings revolved around the furious hunt for drug therapies and how best to care for people with HIV and AIDS in the meantime.

In the decades since, antiviral medication­s have been developed that now make HIV a chronic but survivable disease, and also help prevent new infections. The global conversati­on has shifted toward finding a cure, and toward making sure people have access to care. In San Francisco and many other cities, campaigns are under way to stop the spread of HIV.

“It’s certainly time for San Francisco to be so proud to be hosting this conference,” said Dr. Diane Havlir, chief of the division of HIV/AIDS at San Francisco General Hospital, who co-chaired the conference in Washington, D.C.

She said HIV is still “arguably the most important epidemic of our time,” affecting 37 million people worldwide living with the disease, plus another 2 million people newly infected every year.

“We have these aspiration­s. We want to halt new infections, keep people with HIV living healthy lives and ultimately cure the disease,” she said. “All those make for just a fantastic gathering and meeting.”

The Internatio­nal AIDS Conference, which is held every other year, typically hosts about 15,000 attendees, including scientists, doctors and other health care providers as well as patients and patient advocates. This year’s meeting in Amsterdam is July 23-28.

The 2020 meeting will take place July 6-10, with events in San Francisco and Oakland, said Joe Hollendone­r, chief executive of the San Francisco AIDS Foundation, which helped lead the bid to bring the conference back to the Bay Area.

Lee said one advantage of bringing the conference back to the Bay Area is that local HIV/AIDS leaders — in particular from communitie­s of color that are hardest hit by HIV — who haven’t been able to afford going to meetings in other countries will be able to join the global conversati­on for the first time in decades.

“There’s a whole history of why this is an important conference for people of color, who don’t get a chance to travel to the internatio­nal conference­s,” Lee said. “I know people in the Bay Area, they’re going to be really excited.”

“I’ve been pushing for it to come to the Bay Area, because this has been the (AIDS epidemic’s) epicenter for so long.” Rep. Barbara Lee, D-Oakland

 ?? Amy Osborne / Special to The Chronicle 2016 ?? The AIDS Memorial Grove’s Circle of Friends in Golden Gate Park features names of people touched by AIDS. The Internatio­nal AIDS Conference hasn’t been held in S.F. since 1990.
Amy Osborne / Special to The Chronicle 2016 The AIDS Memorial Grove’s Circle of Friends in Golden Gate Park features names of people touched by AIDS. The Internatio­nal AIDS Conference hasn’t been held in S.F. since 1990.

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