We plan to produce a series of public service announcements leading up to the release of the film in July 2018. The PSAs will remind all of us that the war against AIDS is not yet over. Each PSA will focus on a specific issue, emphasizing that it is not too late to address the issue and to end the AIDS epidemic.
Read MoreWith deep gratitude to everybody who made this possible, we are glad to release the video trailer for How We Lost the War Against AIDS. Please take a look and let us know what you think.
Read MoreI was in Paris this week to attend a meeting of the International AIDS Society. I came home feeling like we are both winning and losing the war against AIDS.
The good news is that from a numeric perspective we are making good progress toward the 90-90-90 targets for 2020 set a few years ago by UNAIDS: that 90% of the people living with HIV will know their status; that 90% of them will be on treatment; and that 90% of them will have achieved viral suppression.
Read MoreThe battles in Washington over the future of American health care will have major consequences in the war against AIDS. Both the AHCA bill passed by the House and the bill proposed last week in the Senate include provisions that will have deadly consequences for people living with HIV.
Read MorePresident Trump’s proposed budget marks a dramatic and frightening turning point in the war against AIDS. The budget includes a 20% cut in funding for PEPFAR, the very successful AIDS initiative launched by President George W. Bush in 2003. A recent New York Times article indicated that the proposed cut would cost about a million lives. That was a one-year estimate. If we assume the cut is permanent, and that other countries follow the American lead, then we will lose the war against AIDS. The effects will be catastrophic in human terms. Up to 16 million people may die by the year 2030.
Read MoreIn a companion blog, I pointed out that the long-term effect of President Trump’s proposed cuts in PEPFAR funding will be much larger than the estimated one million lives discussed in a recent New York Times article. If the 20% cut is permanent, and other countries follow the American lead, then up to 16 million people may needlessly die of AIDS-related causes by the year 2030. Predicting the future is always uncertain, especially when dealing with the medical, social, economic, and political complexities of the AIDS epidemic. So let me explain where these numbers come from.
Read MoreAustin proudly boasts the claim of having the longest running AIDS Candlelight Memorial Service in the State of Texas. Unfortunately, the weather this year prevented the event from happening. I had been invited to be one of the speakers, addressing national and international issues related to the AIDS epidemic. I had prepared a mildly theatrical presentation, hoping to both entertain the crowd and draw attention to the critical decisions that will be made in Washington this year. After Sunday’s cancellation, I recorded what I had planned to say.
Read MoreWhy make another AIDS movie? We’ve had several good ones: And the Band Played On, Philadelphia Story, Dallas Buyers Club, a South African one that I particularly like, Life, Above All, and many others. So why make another? The main reason is that the AIDS epidemic has faded from the public consciousness.
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