Why President Donald Trump's World AIDS Day Statement Falls Flat

President Donald Trump (Photo: Kevin Lamarque / Reuters)
President Donald Trump (Photo: Kevin Lamarque / Reuters)

In honor of World AIDS day, President Donald Trump released a statement Thursday reaffirming the nation’s “ongoing commitment to end AIDS as a public health threat.”

But Trump’s actions since becoming president suggest that finding a cure for HIV/AIDS is not a priority: In March, for example, he proposed cutting funding for the National Institutes of Health — the largest public funder of medical research around the globe — by about 22 percent.

While Congress was able to beat back that proposal and slightly increase spending on biomedical research, this budget boost can only help the NIH hold steady, not break new ground, when it comes to finding cures for diseases like AIDS.

As it stands, the NIH approved only about 19 percent of new research project grant applications last year. For HIV/AIDS research specifically, funding has held steady at around $3 billion for the past three years but is expected to drop to $2.5 billion by 2018.

The state of affairs is discouraging for AIDS researchers and the scientific community in general, said Warner Greene, co-director of the University of California, San Francisco Center for AIDS Research.

“We’re in jeopardy of losing an entire generation of young scientists,” Greene said Tuesday at UC San Francisco’s annual HIV Cure Summit. “We cannot recover from that.”

The funding crunch pits disease communities against each other, explained Judith Auerbach, an independent science and policy consultant at UC San Francisco’s school of medicine. Given HIV’s reputation as a chronic but manageable condition, it’s at a higher risk than other diseases of taking a research funding cut.

“You start getting into the disease vs. disease argument, both within the NIH and research and advocacy community,” Auerbach said. “My disease kills more people than your disease, ergo I deserve more funding than you do.

“HIV/AIDS is always the first thing on the top of the hit list. There’s a sense that we’ve taken care of it.”

The GOP is also pushing a tax bill that would severely burden people pursuing masters and doctorates by forcing them to count their waived tuition as taxable income. So for a Ph.D. student whose tuition is waived but who earns a $30,000 stipend working at the university’s lab, taxes would have to be paid not just on the stipend but also on the university’s annual cost of tuition, increasing the doctoral student’s yearly tax bill by thousands of dollars. About 60 percent of graduate students who have waived tuition are pursuing degrees in science, technology, engineering and math, Vox reports. The tax hit would be another blow to the scientific community.

Trump’s repeated attempts to repeal or weaken the Affordable Care Act would also worsen the quality of life for people who already have HIV.

Thanks to the ACA, people with pre-existing conditions, including HIV, were no longer dropped from health insurance coverage. It also allowed 32 states, where 62 percent of all people with HIV live, to expand Medicaid coverage that would cover HIV treatment. Finally, it mandated free coverage of HIV testing for most new health insurance plans. The more people get diagnosed and get into treatment to manage the virus, the sooner their viral loads can drop to “undetectable” levels, making it almost impossible to pass it along to someone else.

About 1.1 million people in the U.S. are living with HIV. While diagnoses are declining in the U.S., certain populations are at a higher risk of infection: gay and bisexual men, people who inject drugs, African-Americans and Latinos. Trump did not mention any of these groups in his World AIDS Day statement.

Trump says he wants to help make sure AIDS is no longer a public health threat, but to do so would mean funding more research, making it easier, not harder, to become a scientist, and supporting the people who already have HIV.

Until we see those changes, his administration’s World AIDS Day statement rings hollow.

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5:42 AM: Denver, Colorado

Davinna Conner: "At the park with my great niece. Showing everyone that joy doesn't stop. Live life to the fullest. Stop HIV stigma."
Davinna Conner: "At the park with my great niece. Showing everyone that joy doesn't stop. Live life to the fullest. Stop HIV stigma."

8:00 AM: Khayelitsha, South Africa

Generation Ubuntu: "Each day our kids start class with their Adherence Chant. 'On Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday too, I take my medicine when it's due. Thursday, Friday come along, I take my medicine to make me strong. On Saturday, Sunday it's fun to play, I take my medicine every day.'"
Generation Ubuntu: "Each day our kids start class with their Adherence Chant. 'On Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday too, I take my medicine when it's due. Thursday, Friday come along, I take my medicine to make me strong. On Saturday, Sunday it's fun to play, I take my medicine every day.'"

10:00 AM: Duluth, Minnesota

Erick Santiago: "Even though HIV hit me like a truck, it hasn’t stopped me from enjoying life and to keep working hard! I have been seven months sober -- no drinking or anything. It’s always a challenge, but we are all stronger than we believe!"
Erick Santiago: "Even though HIV hit me like a truck, it hasn’t stopped me from enjoying life and to keep working hard! I have been seven months sober -- no drinking or anything. It’s always a challenge, but we are all stronger than we believe!"

12:00 PM: San Francisco, California

Hank Trout: "I am a 27-year long-term survivor, diagnosed in 1989. Have lived in San Francisco since 1980, the last 11 years with my fianc&eacute; Rick. I write features and a bi-monthly column, For the Long Run, for<i> A&amp;U: America's AIDS Magazine</i>. I have taken upon myself to ensure that the history of the continuing AIDS crisis is told accurately and passionately."

12:05 PM: Sofia, Bulgaria

Andrew Espinosa: "HIV will never stop me from traveling! This is me at Alexander Nevsky Cathedral. I&rsquo;m excited to be here for the 2016 European AIDS Treatment Group General Assembly with my HIV/AIDS activist friends!"
Andrew Espinosa: "HIV will never stop me from traveling! This is me at Alexander Nevsky Cathedral. I’m excited to be here for the 2016 European AIDS Treatment Group General Assembly with my HIV/AIDS activist friends!"

1:15 PM: Houston, Texas

Sam: "Me and the Road Dog, doing what we do."
Sam: "Me and the Road Dog, doing what we do."

2:00 PM: San Diego, California

Mark Holmes: "I&rsquo;ve been HIV-positive over&nbsp;32&nbsp;years; undetectable 10 years. Stigma? I know it&rsquo;s out there, but have never let it stop me. I just turned 63, and learned to skydive last year, with 120 jumps under my belt. Skydivers get it; life&rsquo;s to be lived."
Mark Holmes: "I’ve been HIV-positive over 32 years; undetectable 10 years. Stigma? I know it’s out there, but have never let it stop me. I just turned 63, and learned to skydive last year, with 120 jumps under my belt. Skydivers get it; life’s to be lived."

2:35 PM: Hayward, California

Ralph Thurlow and David Spiher: "Ralph has had AIDS for 15 years, and an HIV/AIDS dementia diagnosis for three&nbsp;years. David has been HIV-positive since December 1985, and has had AIDS since January 1989. Ralph's home healthcare worker wasn't able to show up or call in time to arrange other plans,&nbsp;so Ralph is at&nbsp;my office as I do my development job."

4:00 PM: Los Angeles, California

Faith Landsman: "Los Angeles Women's PrEP Network&mdash;getting stuff done!"
Faith Landsman: "Los Angeles Women's PrEP Network—getting stuff done!"

4:16 PM: New York, New York

Peter Fahrni: "As someone who is HIV-negative, I can only fathom the hurtful, dehumanizing stigma faced by many in the HIV community, but I do experience the reactions of some of my friends when they learn I&rsquo;m on PrEP. There is nothing wrong with actively participating in matters impacting my health."
Peter Fahrni: "As someone who is HIV-negative, I can only fathom the hurtful, dehumanizing stigma faced by many in the HIV community, but I do experience the reactions of some of my friends when they learn I’m on PrEP. There is nothing wrong with actively participating in matters impacting my health."

5:29 PM: Boston, Massachusetts

Christina Carta: "Picking up my son from college. It&rsquo;s been 22 years since I tested HIV-positive. I never thought I would see today. I&rsquo;m healthy,&nbsp;alive, and enjoying each day."
Christina Carta: "Picking up my son from college. It’s been 22 years since I tested HIV-positive. I never thought I would see today. I’m healthy, alive, and enjoying each day."

5:35 PM: Scottsdale, Arizona

Heidi Simon: "60 years of POSITIVE LIVING&nbsp;ready to take on any mountain! Blessed to have family, friends, and much love in our lives!"
Heidi Simon: "60 years of POSITIVE LIVING ready to take on any mountain! Blessed to have family, friends, and much love in our lives!"

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This article originally appeared on HuffPost.