Bush Administration
AIDS Policies Continue to Fall Short
March 3
2005
Counterbias.com
Gene C. Gerard
In the president’s State of the Union address this year, he pledged
again to fightthe growing HIV/AIDS epidemic. Mr. Bush asked Congress
to reauthorize the Ryan White CARE Act “to encourage prevention and
provide care and treatment” for those infected with the disease. He
also stated that “we must focus our efforts on fellow citizens with
the highest rates of new cases: African-American men and women.” But
when his 2006 budget proposal was released two weeks later, a very
different picture emerged.
The Minority AIDS Initiative, a program targeting blacks and
Hispanics for prevention and treatment, and the CARE Act, received
no new funding. The budget cuts $14 million from the Housing
Opportunities for People With AIDS program, which provides housing
subsidies for low-income people with HIV/AIDS. Experts have
complained that the homeless and those in unstable home environments
are often unable to obtain medical care and are the first to die
from AIDS.
The Centers for Disease Control Division of HIV/AIDS Prevention was
cut by $4 million. The budget also cuts $45 billion over ten years
from Medicaid. Yet Medicaid is the single largest provider of
medical care to those with HIV/AIDS. Annually, this federal program
provides $5.6 billion in medical services to those with the disease.
Mark Isaac, vice president of the Elizabeth Glaser Pediatric AIDS
Foundation, noted that as a result “programs can expect more
patients and longer waiting lines. As we know, waiting just a few
months for treatment…can literally mean the difference between life
and death.”
This is simply a continuation of Bush administration AIDS policies
that fall short. In his 2003 State of the Union address, Mr. Bush
boldly stated, “I ask the Congress to commit $15 billion over the
next five years, including nearly $10 billion in new money, to turn
the tide against AIDS in the most afflicted nations of Africa and
the Caribbean.” But within a week, his administration was forced to
restate its position, announcing that this proposed funding would
not go to Africa and the Caribbean only, but rather was the total
international budget. Mr. Bush was strongly advised to funnel the
new money into The Global Fund.
The Global Fund was established in 2001 to pool funds from many
nations, organizations, and religious institutions to fight AIDS
more effectively. But much
like his “go it alone” policy in foreign affairs, Mr. Bush has opted
only to give $1 billion to the fund, and the rest is delivered to 15
nations separately, with little coordination. Additionally, a
stipulation requires that the total U.S. contribution to the fund
can never exceed 33 percent of the total, since the U.S. economy is
one-third of the global economy. But contributions are calculated on
the U.S. government’s fiscal year, which ends in September.
Most other governments operate on a calendar year basis. This has
created significant problems for the disbursement of funds. Last
year, $547 million was allocated to the Global Fund. In October,
since other governments still had three months to donate their
portions, the U.S. contribution exceeded the 33 percent
threshold. Consequently, the Bush administration withheld $88
million from the fund. This left many programs unfunded, which could
have prevented 100,000 new cases of HIV and treated 25,000 AIDS
patients.
The “go it alone” policy of the administration was also obvious
during the last World AIDS Conference. Shortly before the
international conference was convened, the administration announced
it would send only one-quarter as many experts as had been sent the
previous year, in an effort to save money. Dozens of scholarly
presentations were withdrawn, and meetings to train Third World AIDS
researchers and encourage international collaboration were
cancelled.
Workshops on sustainable HIV/AIDS treatments and a conference on
using the Internet to promote HIV-prevention were cancelled. A
presentation to advise Third World scientists on how to apply for
grants from the U.S. was cancelled. Peter Piot of the United Nations
AIDS program noted that the lack of participation negatively
affected the conference because “The largest group in the world in
terms of AIDS expertise comes from the U.S.”
The administration’s policy on international AIDS prevention also
misses the mark. A requirement mandates that one-third of the funds
spent on prevention programs, approximately $130 million, can only
promote abstinence before marriage, and cannot support condom usage.
Randall Tobias, U.S. Ambassador for AIDS Coordination, echoed this
in a speech he gave before visiting Africa when he said, “Statistics
show that condoms really have not been effective.” Given that 2.3
million Africans die annually as a result of AIDS, this was
scientifically flawed and morally reprehensible. And it prompted
Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni to deem condoms “inappropriate for
Ugandans,” despite his country having one of the highest rates of
HIV infection in the world.
This policy has caused many African countries receiving U.S. funds
to discontinue distributing condoms to the general public and only
supplying certain demographic groups. Two U.S. contractors that
previously distributed condoms to young people are now only
promoting abstinence programs. And an AIDS education magazine
popular with young Ugandans that previously advocated abstinence and
condom usage, now does not even reference safe sex. However, a study
just released by Texas A&M University concluded that teenagers who
are only exposed to abstinence programs become more sexually active.
The Bush administration has requested $3.2 billion in the 2006
budget for domestic and international AIDS programs. This represents
merely 0.14 percent of the total American budget, and equals only
seven percent of the budget for the Defense Department. Speaking of
those afflicted with AIDS, President Bush said, “There are no
second-class citizens in the human race. I carry this commitment in
my soul.” It’s unfortunate that this is not evident in his policies.