
The AIDS Memorial Quilt became a poignant reminder of those who have lost their battle against HIV/AIDS and a centerpiece in HIV prevention messaging. Today, 30 years into the epidemic the quilt, seen here in Atlanta, Georgia, remains one of the largest ongoing community arts projects in the world.
Other News In 2011
In 2011, approximately 28 percent of people living with HIV/AIDS are over the age of 50. By 2017, this number is expected to grow to 50 percent.14
July 13, 2011 marks the first anniversary of the release of the National HIV/AIDS Strategy, which outlines bold steps to addressing the domestic HIV epidemic.
Major advances in therapeutic HIV vaccine research and development were announced at the 6th International AIDS Society Conference on HIV Pathogens, Treatment, and Prevention in Rome.15
2011
30 Years of AIDS: Honoring the Past, Looking Toward the Future
June 5, 2011, marked the passing of 30 years since AIDS was first recognized as a public health concern in a 1981 article published in a Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report1 about a handful of gay men in several large cities who contracted rare infections. Several had died. A year later, the disease had a name—acquired immunodeficiency syndrome, or AIDS—and was on its way to becoming a global pandemic. Today, the disease has claimed approximately 25 million lives worldwide.2
In the United States, more than 600,000 people have died of AIDS as of June 3, 2011, most of them gay men and people of color.3,4 At least 20 percent of the more than 1.1 million people living with HIV in the United States are unaware of their status, fueling the number of HIV infections that occur annually.5,6,7
Despite the losses and continued challenges, the AIDS epidemic has led to innovations in prevention, treatment, and care and new approaches with Federal, State, and local collaboration that enabled communities to cope with the epidemic in ways that met their specific needs. These innovations helped mitigate the impact of the epidemic since it began. The following examples illustrate how the effort to fight the HIV/AIDS epidemic has been like that of no other public health crisis.
- Establishment of and investment in community agencies, across the Nation. Community-based organizations and gay activists helped develop the first support and care protocols for AIDS patients and were integral to initiating HRSA's first AIDS Service Demonstration Grants. Today, a national network of HIV/AIDS clinics and other agencies are providing comprehensive care to people living with HIV/AIDS.
- Increased training for service providers. In 1987 the AIDS Education and Training Centers were launched to increase the number of providers able—and willing—to treat people living with HIV/AIDS.
- Development of AIDS drugs, starting with AZT (zidovudine) in 1986 and then highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) in 1995, which has dramatically reduced AIDS mortality. In 1994, thanks to the ACTG-076 study, AZT was also found to decrease the spread of HIV from pregnant or nursing mothers to infants, and HRSA quickly disseminated the study findings and provisions for administering HAART in HRSA-funded health care programs.
- Technical advances. Recognizing the importance of not only technological advances but also patient access to care, HRSA expanded earlier HIV/AIDS medication assistance under the AIDS Drug Assistance Program on the heels of HAART's development, providing $52 million dollars in 1995 toward getting people the medications they needed. ADAP funding has grown tremendously since then, although needs still exist.
- Federal intervention. The Ryan White HIV/AIDS Program, established in 1990, bolstered the local response to HIV/AIDS nationwide and helped link hundreds of thousands of people living with and affected by HIV/AIDS to core medical and support services. An integrated health system, the Program will be further bolstered by the implementation of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (Pub.L. 111–148) in 2014 and the positive outcomes as a result of the ongoing rollout of the National HIV/AIDS Strategy.8,9,10,11
- Basic research. Recent advancements in research on microbicides, pre- and post-exposure prophylaxis, HIV vaccines, and stem-cell transplants could yield additional treatments in the near future.12,13
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Toward Passage - 1986
HRSA Debuts First
AIDS Program - 1987
AZT Reimbursement
Program Launches - 1988
Pediatric AIDS
Grants Begins - 1989
HRSA Funds Move
Outside Epicenters - 1990
CARE Act Is Adopted,
Named for Indiana Teen -
The Early Years - 1991
HRSA Awards First
CARE Act Grants - 1992
Training Creates Access
to Expert Care - 1993
Largest Epicenters
Now Number 25 - 1994
AZT Is Found to Protect
Newborns From HIV - 1995
The Age of Combination
Therapy Arrives -
Adapting to Change - 1996
CARE Act
Reauthorized - 1997
Programs Unite
Under One Umbrella - 1998
Administration Addresses
Epidemic in Minorities - 1999
Minority AIDS Initiative
is Launched - 2000
Reauthorization Focuses
on People Not in Care -
A New Millennium - 2001
HRSA Publishes Treatment
Guide for Women - 2002
CARE Act Expertise
Goes Global - 2003
Global HIV/AIDS
Program Begins - 2004
HRSA Addresses
Severity of Need - 2005
New Treatment
for Addiction -
New Approaches - 2006
The CARE Act
Makeover - 2007
New Policies—
Waves of Change - 2008
Continuing Work
on Re-entry Programs - 2009
Improving
Performance Data - 2010
20 Years and
a Legacy of Care -
The Road Ahead - 2011
30 Years of AIDS:
Honoring the Past,
Looking Toward the Future - 2012
Care is Prevention
