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HIV Care System Is Getting Swamped
2011-03-21
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HIV Care System Is Getting Swamped
March 17, 2011 -- The U.S. HIV care system is being swamped by a rising tide of new patients, an Institute of Medicine (IOM) report warns.
As HIV treatment continues to improve, people with HIV are living much longer. Meanwhile, the CDC's universal HIV screening program is bearing fruit, identifying more people who are infected with the AIDS virus.
The result is a widening gap between the number of Americans with HIV and the resources available to treat them.
"Our system is getting stretched," IOM panel chair Paul D. Cleary, PhD, dean of the Yale School of Public Health, tells WebMD. "There is going to be a dramatic change in the number of people with HIV detected and cared for. When we start treating this many more people ... we find there are barriers to getting them into available treatment facilities."
Over 20% of the 1.1 million Americans with HIV don't know they are infected. Learning they have HIV is good for the individual, as earlier treatment means better health. It's also good for society, as people who know they carry HIV are less likely to infect others -- and treatment actually makes a person less infectious.
"There is a moral imperative that if we do testing, we have to get people who test positive into care," Michael Saag, MD, tells WebMD.
But there's a raft of problems with actually providing this care, notes Saag, director of AIDS research at the University of Alabama, Birmingham and immediate past president of the HIV Medicine Association.
Saag's state-of-the-art AIDS clinic is a prime example. In 2000, the clinic was caring for 750 patients. Now the same clinic, with pretty much the same funding and same staff level, is caring for 1,800 patients.
"We are at capacity now," Saag says.
But more patients soon will be knocking at the door. Saag points to a graph in the IOM report showing that while U.S. funding for HIV care under the Ryan White Act has remained stable at about $200 million per year, the number of patients who qualify for benefits has increased from about 150,000 to 250,000.
That difference reflects the U.S. HIV treatment gap.
"We call it the triangle of misery," Saag says. "But in this day and age of budget crisis in every state across the country, asking Congress for more money is not going to cut it."
The IOM notes that states are slashing, not increasing, their HIV/AIDS programs. In 2009, states cut $170 million from these programs:
- 22 states cut HIV care and treatment programs
- 17 states cut their contributions to AIDS Drug Assistance Programs
- 25 states cut HIV prevention programs
The cuts mean more red tape and more waiting lists for people who need HIV care. It sometimes means that people must interrupt their HIV treatment -- an extremely dangerous situation, as such interruptions mean an increase in drug-resistant HIV.