A special report looks at past, present, and future concerns
REPORT AND PHOTOS BY MATT SHARP, THE REUNION PROJECT
____________________________________________________________________________________
Earlier this year,
I was commissioned to write a comprehensive report about HIV/AIDS
long-term survivors. As a 28-year survivor, and one of a handful of AIDS
activists leading mobilization efforts for survivors in San Francisco,
later nationwide with The Reunion Project, this writing has been my own
inspirational catharsis. But hopefully, The Unanticipated Consequences
of AIDS Survival will engender discussion and stir creation of new
research, new interventions, policy recommendations, advocacy, and
programming before today’s long-term survivors are gone. The full
report, supported by Bristol-Myers Squibb, is scheduled to be launched
on World AIDS Day, December 1, 2016.
I have written an attempt to tell the story and
unpack the recognition and awakening of a considerable proportion of
HIV-positive survivors, mostly in the United States, who for the past
several years have been experiencing unintended negative consequences of
a life with HIV. Their issues consist of co-morbid mental health
conditions, unprocessed grief from decades of back-to-back losses, the
mashup of the physiologic and psychological effects of aging, and
practical day-to-day issues. These consequences are layered,
intersecting, and synergizing, one on top of another, year after year
and together have created a groundswell of concern, now becoming a
wake-up call for HIV/AIDS survivors and the rest of the world.
We know that, tragically, 95.5% of all people with
AIDS did not survive in the first decade. HIV cases were not reported
back then, but were simply estimated. Therefore, it is unknown how many
total HIV/AIDS survivors are with us today. There has not been an
epidemiological accounting of survivors and when they were diagnosed.
There are also untold HIV-negative men and women,
family members, caregivers, and community members who fought for the
lives in their communities while fearing for their own. They are
survivors of a different kind, but have similar unprocessed grief and
trauma. For the sake of issuing a concise report its focus will be on
HIV-positive survivors.
As survivor stories are heard, each one is unique
with bits and pieces that are woeful, sometimes horrific, but always
revealing. Listening and telling these stories is healing and may help
those who were unaware and may have kept issues suppressed, or were
simply isolated and uninvolved.
Discussion, advocacy, further research,
policy direction, and interventions will hopefully develop as more and
more survivors come forward to tell their stories and advocate for
themselves and other survivors.
Through looking back at HIV/AIDS, a context is made
for our survivor history, including an understanding of the issues, the
intensity, and a vivid perspective that many did not witness, or may
not recognize.
Contrasting the early AIDS years with today also
provides an important perspective on how far we have all come. All the
successes certainly provide evidence for survival, and show the extent
of what can be attained if a community comes together. Most survivors
are thankful to be alive, and some have also fared well due to
resilience, successful careers, and continuous social and intimate
relationships. Unfortunately, there is confusion, misunderstanding, and
downright apathy from many who see HIV survivorship as simply a reward
of the benefits from a collective response to AIDS. Survivors tell of
being given a congratulatory nod to finally reaching undetectable viral
loads, but only left to fend for themselves without the intense years of
support they had seen for years from medical providers, policy makers,
and even families. Priorities shifted as AIDS deaths decreased, leaving
many survivors with inadequate psychosocial support follow-up.
For the past several years, survivors in some
jurisdictions such as San Francisco have been mobilizing, socializing,
participating in advocacy councils, lobbying city government for
policies and funding, participating in research and helping to develop
research, and essentially creating new hope for themselves and their
peers, and all people with HIV who will live long lives.
Social media has had a tremendous impact on
survivor mobilization. There have also been many print, film, and media
stories from AIDS organizations and websites, national broadcast
stations, many Facebook group pages, and four major documentary films
that have opened in film festivals and other showings. Of course the
internet is awash with stories and film clips on HIV/AIDS survivors.
Survivors all over the country are reading and
hearing the news, they are getting involved by coming together to
socialize and share their stories, or are helping to make changes in
their communities. Some are stepping up to advocate for policy changes
that will help to provide services, especially in urban centers, where
the majority of survivors live. Survivors are spawning research that is
looking at the positive and negative consequences, the impact, and the
connotation for longer, healthier, happier lives.
The report will also highlight some of the longest
standing survivor mobilization and advocacy groups across the country.
In spite of the cards they were dealt, long-term HIV-positive survivors
are living into their senior years, a kind of miracle no one expected to
come out of the devastation of AIDS. Now that a considerable amount of
time has passed many want to just make some sense of it all, and are
beginning to come together to try and pick up the pieces of an
interrupted life full of sickness, death, and unparalleled emotional
strife.
MATT SHARP
is a long-time HIV/AIDS activist and a member of the The Reunion
Project’s national organizing committee. The Reunion Project is funded
by an educational grant from Bristol-Myers Squibb and in partnership
with TPAN, the publisher of POSITIVELY AWARE.
Read more articles from PA, here.
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