The Trump administration has dealt a devastating blow to HIV/AIDS healthcare in the US and around the world, leaving millions at risk of infection and thousands more without access to life-saving treatments.
Just as a new shot became available that offers six months of protection against HIV transmission, the US government has gutted AIDS health care at its worst possible time. The cruel reality is that public health workers are reeling from how President Trump has helped HIV circulate in more humans this year than last, disproportionately affecting already marginalized populations.
The cuts were far-reaching yet highly specific, with resources for short- and long-term health research conducted by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), universities, and community groups severely impacted. The administration's decision to cancel over $125 million in National Institutes of Health grants for LGBTQ-focused health research has left a gaping hole in crucial medical research.
The effects are not limited to economic hardship but have also resulted in job losses among humanitarian aid workers, impacting medical care and development programs globally. In South Africa, transgender people lost access to gender-affirming care, leading to forced detransitioning, depression, and even suicide. In Uganda, people living with HIV have been left without condoms, lubricants, medication, or food that was once provided by the US Agency for International Development (USAID).
The gutting of funding for HIV prevention globally has put humanity at risk, undermining a novel chance to curb or even end AIDS. The World Health Organization recommended widespread use of lenacapavir as soon as possible, but Trump's administration "decimated the infrastructure of global HIV prevention programs" by destroying USAID.
The consequences are stark. In Uganda, Universal Love Alliance created a free STI clinic at a sex work motel in Kampala, where it gave condoms and lubricants to 200 sex workers and tested 86 people for HIV. However, most volunteers were filling in for paid workers who used to do this critical job, highlighting the dire lack of trained healthcare professionals.
Lenacapavir's benefits are clear: improving patient outcomes, increasing adherence, and reducing the burden of HIV prevention. But without trusted community health outreach workers to explain and administer it, its potential will be lost forever. The real tragedy is that viruses travel, and Trump's stop-work order has put the entire human race at higher risk for HIV and AIDS.
The Intercept's reporting on this crisis underscores the critical need for press freedom in defending democracy against authoritarianism. As we cover this story, we're not just shedding light on a humanitarian disaster; we're also exposing the machinations of an administration that's undermining global health security.
Just as a new shot became available that offers six months of protection against HIV transmission, the US government has gutted AIDS health care at its worst possible time. The cruel reality is that public health workers are reeling from how President Trump has helped HIV circulate in more humans this year than last, disproportionately affecting already marginalized populations.
The cuts were far-reaching yet highly specific, with resources for short- and long-term health research conducted by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), universities, and community groups severely impacted. The administration's decision to cancel over $125 million in National Institutes of Health grants for LGBTQ-focused health research has left a gaping hole in crucial medical research.
The effects are not limited to economic hardship but have also resulted in job losses among humanitarian aid workers, impacting medical care and development programs globally. In South Africa, transgender people lost access to gender-affirming care, leading to forced detransitioning, depression, and even suicide. In Uganda, people living with HIV have been left without condoms, lubricants, medication, or food that was once provided by the US Agency for International Development (USAID).
The gutting of funding for HIV prevention globally has put humanity at risk, undermining a novel chance to curb or even end AIDS. The World Health Organization recommended widespread use of lenacapavir as soon as possible, but Trump's administration "decimated the infrastructure of global HIV prevention programs" by destroying USAID.
The consequences are stark. In Uganda, Universal Love Alliance created a free STI clinic at a sex work motel in Kampala, where it gave condoms and lubricants to 200 sex workers and tested 86 people for HIV. However, most volunteers were filling in for paid workers who used to do this critical job, highlighting the dire lack of trained healthcare professionals.
Lenacapavir's benefits are clear: improving patient outcomes, increasing adherence, and reducing the burden of HIV prevention. But without trusted community health outreach workers to explain and administer it, its potential will be lost forever. The real tragedy is that viruses travel, and Trump's stop-work order has put the entire human race at higher risk for HIV and AIDS.
The Intercept's reporting on this crisis underscores the critical need for press freedom in defending democracy against authoritarianism. As we cover this story, we're not just shedding light on a humanitarian disaster; we're also exposing the machinations of an administration that's undermining global health security.