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Julie Davids's blog

New AIDS Czar Widely Praised by Advocates

By Julie Davids, CHAMP

February 26, 2009 - 12:15pm

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Today, the Obama Administration announced the appointment of longtime HIV/AIDS health care advocate Jeff Crowley to head the long-vacant Office of National AIDS Policy.

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World AIDS Delay or Why We Really Need, and May Even Get, A National U.S. AIDS Strategy

By Julie Davids, CHAMP

December 1, 2008 - 8:00am

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The change we need for the country as a whole is the change we need to fight HIV/AIDS. Let's insist that economic stimulation and health care reform become components of a comprehensive strategy to fight HIV/AIDS, rather than being complicit with this stable epidemic that will infect another person every nine minutes on this World AIDS Day.

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McCain, Obama Respond to New Numbers on HIV Infection Rate

By Julie Davids, CHAMP

August 5, 2008 - 7:00am

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In response to new numbers suggesting that the HIV infection rate in the U.S. is 40% higher than previously reported, Barack Obama called for a national HIV plan while John McCain failed to call for a national, coordinated strategy.

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Keeping What Promise? HIV in an Election Year

By Julie Davids, CHAMP

November 30, 2007 - 11:54am

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On this World AIDS Day, the focus is on prevention justice, a paradigm shift in understanding the epidemic: HIV transmission is a social condition that requires systemic change.


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From Breakthroughs to Reality: The Health Care Link in High-Tech HIV Prevention

By Julie Davids, CHAMP

March 2, 2007 - 8:00am

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Julie Davids is the Executive Director of CHAMP (Community HIV/AIDS Mobilization Project).

Twenty years ago, AIDS was burning through the country and decimating whole communities while Reagan fiddled away. ACT UP New York burst onto the scene with a rallying cry of "drugs into bodies," shutting down Wall Street over the price of AZT, the only treatment and the most expensive drug ever marketed.

The group grew into a powerful and innovative social force—with hundreds of independent chapters worldwide—and racked up hard-won victories from the accelerated approval of the drugs that turned around the epidemic in the U.S., to changing the very definition of AIDS, to include the conditions seen in women and injection drug users so they could access research and benefits, to the establishment of underground and legalized needle exchanges, to the vigilant defense of the civil and human rights of people living with HIV.


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Structures of Injustice: Notes from the HIV Epidemic

By Julie Davids, CHAMP

February 28, 2007 - 8:00am

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Julie Davids is the Executive Director of CHAMP (Community HIV/AIDS Mobilization Project).

Imagine that you live in a country where HIV infection rates are on the rise. In your nation's capital, one out of every 20 people is HIV positive. In some socially marginalized communities, nearly half of people are HIV positive.

In this place, about half of all people who need to be taking HIV medication to stay healthy are unable to access medication on an ongoing basis, and some have died while on waiting lists for drugs. Hundreds of thousands of HIV positive people pass through prisons and jails each year, and no effort is made to coordinate education, prevention or social services for them.

If you are reading this post from the United States, you live in that country. The epidemic in Washington, DC rivals that of some African nations; people in South Carolina and West Virginia have died on waiting list for AIDS drugs; and Black gay and bisexual men, at the intersection of the gay and Black epidemics that comprise the majority of cases in our nation, have rates of HIV that average 46% across urban centers.


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