The City looks at its AIDS programs
By Tanya Pampalone, Examiner Staff
San Francisco Examiner
Thursday January 10, 2002
The scrutiny of HIV prevention programs became the focal point of a
Department of Public Health news conference to introduce a new informational
AIDS publication Wednesday -- in the wake of reports of an increase in local
infection rates.
Questions about what types of HIV prevention programs are appropriate and
useful were raised, in response to the federal obscenity ruling of programs
run through the local nonprofit, the Stop AIDS Project.
The Examiner reported last week that the nonprofit group embarked on an
advertising campaign to clear their name following a report that puts all
federally funded AIDS organizations under a financial microscope.
Steve Gibson, a member of the DPH's HIV Prevention Planning Council, who led
the press conference, defended the usefulness of local HIV prevention
efforts.
He said the programs are working, despite a two-fold increase in infection
rates among gay men in San Francisco over the past few years. Gibson, who is
also the program director of the Stop AIDS Project, attributed the rise in
infections to the higher number of men living with HIV in San Francisco.
Decrease in condom use has also been cited, due to the mistaken belief that
AIDS drugs alone can combat the virus.
DPH officials hope the 7,000 new glossy magazine-style publications titled
"The AIDS epidemic is not over" will help educate affected communities and
influence policy makers and politicians to support AIDS funding.
"It's an easy way for them to understand what is happening with HIV in
San Francisco," said Tracey Packer, DPH's head of planning for HIV prevention.
Statistics showing the rise of HIV in gay men -- one in three are infected in
San Francisco -- and the decrease of the epidemic in injection drug users,
which is attributed to needle exchange programs, dominate the publication
alongside "spokesmodel" stories.
Steve, a 27-year-old volunteer with the Stop AIDS Project and "spokesmodel"
who is featured, sans shirt, in the publication, said gay men in San
Francisco still don't talk about their HIV status -- a hindrance, he says to
good prevention.
"There is still a stigma attached to it," he said. "Even in San Francisco."
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E-mail Tanya Pampalone at tpampalone@sfexaminer.com