Category Archives: AIDS Healthcare Foundation

Price of new once-daily AIDS drug draws criticism

Truvada, Gilead, gay news, Washington Blade

(Photo courtesy of Gilead)

SAN FRANCISCO — Gilead’s new once-daily AIDS drug Stribild provides an attractive option for those with HIV who have never started a meds regiment before, but activists say the $33,000 a year price-tag will make it unattainable for most who need it.

“In the long run, the cost to Gilead to actually produce [Stribild] will be a small fraction of its selling price, which means Gilead can show restraint on…pricing and still make an enormous profit,” AIDS Healthcare Foundation president Michael Weinstein told the Huffington Post, after a massive ACT UP San Francisco demonstration at the drug maker’s headquarters over the price.

Activists are putting pressure not just on Gilead, but on lawmakers to intervene and making HIV drugs more affordable for more people.

Year in review: D.C. hosts International AIDS Conference

Gay News, Washington Blade, Gay Uganda

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton honored Ugandan human rights advocates at the International AIDS Conference in Washington, D.C. (Washington Blade file photo by Michael Key)

More than 30,000 people from around the world gathered at the Walter E. Washington Convention Center in D.C. in July for the International AIDS Conference.

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, former President Bill Clinton, former First Lady Laura Bush, House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.,) Bill Gates of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, UNAIDS Executive Director Michel Sidibé, Burmese opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi, “The View” co-host Whoopi Goldberg and gay singer Elton John were among the politicians, public health officials and others who spoke during the gathering that took place in the United States for the first time since San Francisco hosted it in 1990. (President Obama in 2009 completed the process that lifted the ban on people with HIV/AIDS from entering the country.)

Mayor Vincent Gray and other D.C. officials used the conference to highlight the city’s ongoing efforts to curb the HIV/AIDS epidemic in the nation’s capital. The NAMES Project showcased tens of thousands of panels of the AIDS Memorial Quilt throughout the metropolitan area in July, while the AIDS Healthcare Foundation and other HIV/AIDS service providers protested what they contend is a lack of commitment from the White House and other American politicians to combat the epidemic. U.S. Park Service police arrested Housing Works President Charles King and 12 others who tried to tie red ribbons, condoms and other items to the White House fence following a protest in Lafayette Park.

The 20th International AIDS Conference is scheduled to take place in Melbourne, Australia, in July 2014.