Cedric Sturdevant, of My Brother's Keeper, features prominently in The New York Times' "America's Hidden Epidemic." Tristan Duplichain |
Excellent coverage by The New York Times versus a misstep by CBS.
June 15, 2017
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Props to journalist Linda Villarosa for bringing mainstream media
attention to HIV among gay and bisexual Black men in the South. Her
recent article for The New York Times, “America’s Hidden HV Epidemic,” takes readers down South where, unknown to many non-POZ readers, HIV remains a dire crisis and progress is slow to come.
Citing
the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Villarosa points
out that if current HIV rates among Black gay and bisexual men persist,
one in two Black gay men will be infected with HIV. That’s nearly double
the rate of infection in the African country of Swaziland, which has
the highest rate in the world, at 28.8 percent. And the South, which
accounts for 54 percent of all new HIV diagnoses in the United States,
has the unfortunate distinction of containing 21 of the 25 metropolitan
areas with the highest HIV prevalence among gay and bisexual men.
The problem? Well, a large part of it is lack of resources. Villarosa explains:
“For
nearly two decades, the United States has focused money and attention
on the HIV/AIDS epidemic elsewhere… While buckets of money went overseas
[to Africa via the George W. Bush–established PEPFAR, The President’s
Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief] domestic funding for HIV/AIDS remained
flat, and efforts to fight the diseases here were reduced to a poorly
coordinated patchwork affair.”
Although, as Villarosa
points out, in 2010, with its National HIV/AIDS Strategy, the Obama
administration took steps to “follow the epidemic” and allocate
resources to key populations, including Black men and women, gay and
bisexual men, and people living in the South, the “patchwork” strategy
for combating HIV in the region prevails.
Mississippi-based
Cedric Sturdevant, whose work Villarosa closely details in her article,
is a vital part of that patchwork. An HIV-positive project coordinator
at the AIDS service organization My Brother’s Keeper, Sturdevant (who
was featured in the January/February 2017 POZ cover story, “Southern Exposure”)
guides Villarosa through rural Mississippi as he delivers medications
to young HIV-positive men and drives some of them to and from medical
appointments, pharmacies and counseling sessions. As he does, the
stories and struggles of young Black gay men like De’Bronski, Jordon and
Jermerious—some of whom Sturdevant calls his “sons”—come to life.
In
her wide-ranging piece, Villarosa eschews facile explanations of both
the causes of and the solutions for the HIV problem. She debunks the
myth—perpetuated for more than a decade—of the “down-low” Black man and
the associated fable of the promiscuous risk-taking Black gay man as
ways of explaining HIV prevalence and points to structural barriers;
lack of access to transportation and information about prevention,
testing and treatment; and a high community viral load (prevalence) as
some of the many reasons HIV in the South in the 2010s looks like HIV
everywhere in the 1980s and 1990s. (Sadly, the recent news
that the Mississippi State Department of Health will no longer offer
free HIV testing and instead will be charging $25 will likely mean fewer
people will get diagnosed and treated, causing the already high
prevalence to spike even further.)
Villarosa even points to the failure of the CDC’s historic June 5, 1981 Morbidity and Mortality Report
to mention a gay Black man among the previously gay white men found to
be sick with the then-mysterious disease. (The report’s lead author,
Michael Gottlieb, explains that he discovered that particular case after
the report on the five white gay men was finalized.)
Villarosa writes:
“Including
gay Black men in the literature and understanding of the origins of the
disease and its treatment could have meant earlier outreach, more of a
voice and a standing in HIV/AIDS advocacy organizations, and access to
the cultural and financial power of the LGBT community that would rise
up to demand government action. But 35 years of neglect, compounded by
poverty and inadequate local health care infrastructure, have left too
many Black gay and bisexual men falling through a series of safety
nets.”
For their part, folks
like Sturdevant will continue to catch in their nets those they can, but
when a young man he has just begun to help dies suddenly, Sturdevant is
forced to acknowledge:
“I
know I can’t be there night and day for everyone. But at this point
now, I feel like I can’t lose another young man to this disease.”
Where Villarosa’s Times piece provides a nuanced and broad perspective on HIV and Black gay men, a recent CBS Sunday Morning segment,
“36 Years and Counting: AIDS in America,” reported by Rita Braver,
represents another misstep by the mainstream media in its HIV coverage.
To be fair, Braver’s segment is only 10 minutes long, but considering
the show’s reach, more time spent on highlighting progress in the fight
against HIV—the concept of treatment as prevention (TasP) is not even
mentioned—setting the record straight on why Black gay men see
higher rates of HIV infection and spotlighting the second and third
generation of activists of color leading the charge against HIV would
have been welcome.
Stating simply that “AIDS prevention
and treatment drugs can be expensive” and “that not everyone has access
to them” without addressing the current administration’s attack on the
Affordable Care Act or the failure of certain states to expand Medicaid
leaves viewers with more questions than answers. Furthermore, in its
contrast of a young white gay man on PrEP with a young Latino gay man
recently diagnosed with HIV, the segment suggests a link between race
and personal responsibility, depicting the latter man—to paraphrase ACT
UP founder Larry Kramer who is featured in the segment—as someone who
has relaxed his sense of responsibility and is having unsafe sex.
Longtime advocate Kenyon Farrow of the Treatment Action Group took the segment and the network to task in an editorial
titled “CBS Sunday Morning Uses AIDS Anniversary to Blame and Shame” on
the website Rewired, calling the report “a lazy narrative.”
Farrow
argues that in featuring Kramer and the predominantly white activists
of ACT UP’s early days, CBS and Braver presented gay white men as the
epidemic’s heroes while gay men of color are depicted as irresponsible.
Stating simply that “the rate of new HIV cases tends to be higher in the
African-American and Latino communities” is just not enough. Farrow
writes:
“The producers at
CBS Sunday Morning could have done a basic Google search to look at what
work is actually happening now and the second and third generations of
Black and brown activists who are helping to shape new strategies to
address HIV as an issue of racial, gender and economic justice, and in
some cases, working closely with first-generation AIDS activists who
aren’t Larry Kramer.”
Regarding the young Latino man diagnosed as HIV positive, Kenyon writes:
“Instead
of using [Pedro] Rios’s intelligence, self-assurance, and positive
outlook as an example of someone whose HIV diagnosis was not a death
sentence or a cause for debilitating shame and self-stigma, CBS uses him
seemingly as evidence to support Kramer’s claim of a new generation of
irresponsibles.”
Farrow
also justly finds fault with the segment’s failure to acknowledge the
“truly groundbreaking work” of campaigns such as New York's “End AIDS
2020” plan as well as public service campaigns that emphasize the
importance of knowing one’s status and maintaining an undetectable viral
load as a means of reducing transmission risk. Farrow concludes his
editorial with a glimmer of the optimism so lacking in the CBS piece:
“Real work is happening, and it doesn’t take much effort to uncover it. All you have to do is care to.”
As
evidenced by the fact that Villarosa’s article reached No. 1 on The New
York Times, 36 years later, plenty of people care to not only learn
more about the HIV epidemic but also (as gleaned from many of the more
than 400 comments) learn what can be done to help. However, as both
Villarosa and Farrow make clear, when it comes to HIV, it is imperative
that we not fall prey to myths, shaming and lazy reporting but hold news
outlets accountable in our search for the truth—praising the media when
merited and calling it out when needed—and brace ourselves to accept
the burden of responsibility that falls on us all when we do hear or
read that truth.
Read more articles from POZ, here.
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