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Thursday, October 20, 2011

HIV/AIDS Bill Addresses Need But Has Downside

Twenty years ago next month, Magic Johnson shocked the sports world and fans around the globe when he humbly revealed that he had tested positive for HIV after engaging in multiple heterosexual relations outside his marriage. Today, Mr. Johnson and countless others are sustained by antiretroviral drugs, other treatments and health regimens.

This week, another champion in the battle against HIV and other sexually transmitted diseases, D.C. Council member David Catania, singled out baby boomers and other older Americans as a demographic desperately in need of HIV/AIDS intervention.

On Tuesday, Mr. Catania introduced the Senior HIV/AIDS Education and Outreach Program Establishment Act of 2011, which calls for the D.C. Health Department to development partnerships that would provide peer-to-peer programs at nursing and retirement homes as well as government-run facilities that cater to the over-50 crowd.

At first blush, Mr. Catania’s proposal appears spot-on: Nationally, adults 50 or older rose from 19.2 percent of new AIDS cases in 2005 to 26.4 percent in 2009. In the District, 7.4 percent of residents age 40 to 49 and 6.1 percent of those 50 to 59 are living with HIV/AIDS.

“Providing appropriate HIV information to this population requires certain sensitivities,” said Mr. Catania, at-large independent. “This program will fill an important information gap in the District’s health-education and risk-reduction efforts and provide desperately needed information on HIV transmission to a demographic increasingly at risk.”

The development of programs tailored to this aging demographic could be a smart new health care tool alongside HIV/AIDS prophylactics and pharmaceutical advancements.

But the general public, in its eagerness to fight the good fight against HIV/AIDS, mustn’t turn a blind eye to the fact that the Catania bill includes offering a government-dictated curriculum, workshops and presentations at faith-based facilities.

That aspect in and of itself is odorous.

That Mr. Catania’s bill targets the Viagra generation as the District finally begins to stare at its shameful highest-in-the-nation HIV/AIDS rate of 3.2 percent is worthy of deliberations, but those discussions must be transparent, too, because anytime and every time a lawmaker proposes a measure with religious undertones, the public’s eyes should open wide.

America, after all, is grounded in the ethos of freedom of religion and the free exercise thereof.

The Friends of AIDS Foundation is dedicated to enhancing the quality of life for HIV positive individuals and empowering people to make healthy choices to prevent the spread of the HIV virus. To learn more about The Friends of AIDS Foundation, please visit: http://www.friendsofaids.org.

TOGETHER WE REMAIN STRONG!