AHF: House AIDS Bill Abandons People with AIDS, Will Cost Millions of Lives.Bill Triples Funding, Yet Only Raises Treatment Goal 50% WASHINGTON -- AIDS Healthcare Foundation The AIDS Healthcare Foundation is a non profit, Los Angeles-based AIDS treatment and advocacy center. Their official founding pledge is to "provide cutting-edge medicine and advocacy, regardless of ability to pay. (AHF AHF antihemophilic factor (coagulation factor VIII). AHF abbr. antihemophilic factor AHF, n the abbreviation for antihemophilic factor. See also factor VIII. ) today called on Congress to reject a House bill to reauthorize the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief The President's Emergency Plan For AIDS Relief (PEPFAR/Emergency Plan) is a commitment of $15 billion over five years (2003–2008) from United States President George W. Bush to fight the global HIV/AIDS pandemic. (PEPFAR PEPFAR President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief ), the United States' global AIDS treatment plan. The bill, which will be marked up by the Committee on Foreign Relations Foreign relations may refer to:
an·ti·ret·ro·vi·ral adj. treatment by half, and makes no provision for HIV testing in order to locate those with the virus and get them into treatment. With over 33 million people living with HIV/AIDS HIV/AIDS Human Immunodeficiency Virus/Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome worldwide, these changes to the structure and funding priorities of PEPFAR will set back efforts to control the virus, consigning tens of millions of people to death, creating hundreds of thousands of AIDS orphans in the process. "We strongly oppose the current version of the House bill to reauthorize PEPFAR, which provides crucial funding for AIDS prevention, care and treatment around the world," said Michael Weinstein Michael L. "Mikey" Weinstein is an attorney, businessman and former Air Force officer. He is founder and president of the Military Religious Freedom Foundation and author of With God on Our Side: One Man's War Against an Evangelical Coup in America's Military , President of AIDS Healthcare Foundation. "This bill's requirement to support lifesaving antiretroviral treatment for only three million people (the current program aims to provide treatment to 2 million) and provide only basic non-medical AIDS care for 12 million others over the next five years is grossly inadequate. This bill will allow billions of dollars to be siphoned off by bureaucracies and corrupt governments around the globe, and will undermine the entire global AIDS effort. I strongly urge the Committee on Foreign Relations and Congress to reign in this porous, poorly crafted legislation to ensure that we do not roll back the progress that we have already made in the global fight against AIDS through PEPFAR." "By failing to focus on providing AIDS treatment, this bill is a death sentence for millions. By seeking to do so many worthy things -- nutrition aid, legal empowerment of women, care for orphans and vulnerable children -- it virtually guarantees that none of it will be done right, and none of these problems will be significantly alleviated, much less solved. And it will come at the expense of millions of lives. We know this: without access to antiretroviral treatment, AIDS is a fatal disease," said Tom Myers, AIDS Healthcare Foundation's General Counsel. "As a result, PEPFAR will fall far short of its intended goal -- if not outright fail in its attempt -- all but guaranteeing the perpetuation of the global AIDS crisis." PEPFAR was the result of President Bush's groundbreaking 2003 State of the Union pledge to bring two million HIV HIV (Human Immunodeficiency Virus), either of two closely related retroviruses that invade T-helper lymphocytes and are responsible for AIDS. There are two types of HIV: HIV-1 and HIV-2. HIV-1 is responsible for the vast majority of AIDS in the United States. positive Africans and others into treatment and prevent seven million new HIV infections via a five-year, $15 billion US-funded program. It currently operates in 15 focused countries and claims to support antiretroviral treatment for 1.4 million people worldwide. |
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