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- From: bigoldberg@igc.apc.org (Billi Goldberg)
- Newsgroups: sci.med.aids
- Subject: Sentinel Article 11/5/92
- Message-ID: <1992Nov6.121502.8390@cs.ucla.edu>
- Date: 6 Nov 92 04:56:26 GMT
- Sender: usenet@cs.ucla.edu (Mr Usenet)
- Organization: unspecified
- Lines: 106
- Approved: phil@wubios.wustl.edu
- Note: Copyright 1992, Dan R. Greening. Non-commercial reproduction allowed.
- Nntp-Posting-Host: sole.cs.ucla.edu
- Archive-Number: 6419
-
- The following article appeared printed in the San Francisco Sentinel,
- on Thursday, November 5, 1992.
-
- It is being posted here with the permission of the author Charles
- Caulfield.
- ************************************************************************
- Now America Can Respond to AIDS
-
- by Charles R. Caulfield
-
- After 12 years of Republican domination of the White House, people
- living with AIDS related illness can now breathe a sigh of relief with
- the election of the Clinton-Gore ticket. Having been elected on a
- platform that promises the new dawn of America's response to AIDS,
- here's what we can look forward to if the new President keeps his word.
-
- 1. Implementation of the recommendations of the National Commission on
- AIDS.
-
- This will include the formulation of a national policy on AIDS
- prevention and treatment with significant input from all involved
- federal agencies and relevant national organizations and will identify
- priorities and the resources needed to do this. This must begin with a
- sane, unbiased evaluation of what is needed, which is not clouded by
- prejudicial biases on sexuality, drug use or other matters frequently
- viewed as moral issues. Other recommendations include full funding for
- the Ryan White Comprehensive AIDS Resources Emergency Act, the
- implementation of a Nationalized Health Care Plan, greater inclusion of
- under-represented minorities in research protocol access, and the
- removal of all legislative barriers for the purchase of injection
- materials. The Commission also stipulated the need for substance abuse
- treatment on demand for all Americans requiring it, and the removal of
- all barriers to government funding of certain kinds of HIV education,
- services, and research.
-
- 2. The appointment of a National Commissioner on AIDS, or AIDS "Czar."
-
- In a summary of the recommendation of the Treatment Activist Group,
- presented at the VIII International Conference on AIDS, it was stated,
- "The NIH Associate Director for AIDS Research should be given authority
- to allocate resources and programs across institute barriers." At
- present, six separate NIH Institutes conduct AIDS Clinical trials, and
- have not been required to collaborate in any sensible way. This
- appointment will greatly contribute to a gleaning of more medical
- information from each dollar spent. It is hoped by activists that this
- appointment will go to a person who is gay/lesbian, and who is a
- physician in clinical practice in AIDS treatment. This will insure the
- appointment of someone who is in touch with the frustrations our
- community has experienced by governmental blockages to treatment access,
- FDA lethargy and departmental territoriality. He/she must develop and
- implement priorities for treatment research which take into
- consideration the broad spectrum of needs encountered by those living
- with this disease.
-
- 3. Universal Access to health care by all citizens, without regard to
- their ability to pay for it.
-
- This will provide medical care for all Americans, including ongoing
- primary care, prescription drugs and frequent diagnostic monitoring, as
- well as mental health and social services. Currently, people with AIDS
- related conditions who receive Social Security Disability must wait two
- years before they are eligible for Medicare. Those who receive benefits
- exceeding $725 per month in California ($375 per month in some less
- progressive states) must endure this two years without the benefit of
- Medicaid health coverage. This has been one of the greatest disasters of
- the AIDS epidemic. By ensuring that many of these individuals are forced
- to accept suboptimal care for two years, and therefore die before they
- can qualify, the government has been able to avoid the cost of providing
- Medicare services to literally scores of thousands of PWAs over the last
- eleven years. Swift action by Clinton on this promise will eliminate
- this gross inequality in access to medical care for people living with
- HIV.
-
- Belinda Mason, who was a person with AIDS and a member of the
- National AIDS Commission died last year. Before she died she offered a
- plea for compassion in the report of the Commission, in which she
- stated, "I have to say that people living with AIDS and HIV want nothing
- more or nothing less than all of you take for granted today-a place to
- live, the right to have a job, decent medical care, and to live our
- lives out without unreasonable barriers. We're not asking for extras,
- only to be included in what America already delivers to her privileged
- people."
-
- We have a long way to go before we can realize her dream. But after
- 12 years of a presidency which chose to do nothing, to seldom even utter
- the word AIDS publicly for fear of the political consequences, the
- political consequences have now become painfully apparent. We have
- nowhere to look but up from where we have come: 150,000 dead and
- possibly two million infected in this country alone. With the losses the
- gay community has endured during the last eleven years, we cannot afford
- to allow anything other than a steadfast keeping of his promises by the
- new President. Our community's input must and will be sought in his
- achieving of these goals. It's time to get to work. The Reagan-Bush
- years engendered a cannabalistic frenzy by physicians, activists and
- service providers in an attempt to garner the sparse federal dollars
- available to implement their diverse responses to this epidemic.
-
- We will never have the chance, which we now have, to unify and move
- in the same direction toward a humane response to this disease whose
- sole intention is the elimination of the human suffering caused by AIDS.
- We must seize this opportunity to press for the appointment of an AIDS
- Czar who is known to be friendly to our agenda, and keep the pressure on
- so that there will be no variance from the course needed to achieve
- them. For the first time ever, the gay and lesbian community has the
- stated good will of the executive branch of the U.S. government. It's
- the opportunity of a lifetime. We must take it, it's now or never.
-