2/23/2018
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During their 13 months in power, the Trump administration
has made it abundantly clear that they have no desire to protect the rights of the
LGBT community and, if anything, are actively looking to undermine them. Last
weekend, POLITICO
published a report on the various ways that the Trump administration has
been chipping away at Obama-era protections for LGBT Americans, especially in
matters of health. The piece highlights a
series of steps taken by the Trump administration over the last year that will
have a significant impact on the ability of LGBT individuals to access care. As
evidence, it cites Trump administration decisions to:
- Freeze a series of LGBT-friendly rules from taking effect, including an expansion of anti-discrimination protections for transgender individuals enrolled in Medicare and Medicaid
- Reinterpret and opt not to defend the ACA’s anti-discrimination mandate (Section 1557)
- Pull questions on sexual orientation and gender identity from Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) surveys; and
- Form the new Conscience and Religious Freedom Division at HHS’ Office of Civil Rights to offer greater protections for health care workers who decide not to treat LGBT patients.
While reports that President Trump complained that all
immigrants from Haiti “had AIDS” were beyond troubling, even more alarming are
the steps he and his administration have taken to undermine our national
progress to end AIDS. In his 2018 budget request,
Trump proposed, among other things:
- Cutting HIV prevention funding at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) by 19 percent
- Completely eliminating the Ryan White Program’s AIDS Education and Training Centers (AETC) and Special Projects of National Significance (SPNS) programs
- Eliminating the HHS Secretary’s Minority AIDS Initiative Fund and reducing SAMHSA’s Minority AIDS Initiative programs; and
- Cutting funding for Housing Opportunities for People with AIDS (HOPWA) by $26 million
His recent FY2019 request did much of the same.
What’s more, his administration’s strategic plan for Health and
Human Services hardly referenced HIV or STDs, while completely ignoring
LGBT needs, failing to include a single reference to them. He similarly failed
to mention the LGBT community’s unique needs in his World AIDS Day remarks as
well. This culture of silence appeared like it was expanding into official
policy when reports surfaced that staff at CDC had been
instructed not to use specific words when drafting their budget
justification documents for Congress, including “transgender” and
“evidence-based,” among others.
President Trump also dismissed,
without any warning or explanation, all remaining members of the
Presidential Advisory Council on HIV/AIDS (PACHA) in December while everyone
was away celebrating the holidays, and still has not announced any
replacements. Perhaps equally as troubling, Trump has yet to appoint a head of
the White House Office of National AIDS Policy as well.
We continue to hope that this administration will recognize
that providing care and prevention services for people living with and
vulnerable to HIV is both a moral and public health imperative. However, absent
a 180 degree turn in White House health care policy, we will have to rely on
Congress to do the right thing – a prospect that’s also far from assured.
That’s why we are counting on you to register
and join us for this year’s AIDSWatch in DC on March 26th and 27th. Learn more about this year’s event here
and join us in urging Congress to stand up to this administration’s deliberate
efforts to divide us and demand fair and immediate action to protect all
Americans’ health.
Posted By: AIDS United, Policy Department - Friday, February 23, 2018