AHF: L.A. Needs New Leadership on Monkeypox, HIV and STDs

 
 
 

In a press release today AHF  announced it will run another full-page, full-color advocacy ad in the Los Angeles Times on monkeypox targeting Los Angeles County Public Health officials over their response to the ongoing outbreak, which has overwhelmingly affected gay men, men who have sex with men and transgender individuals.

The ad, headlined “L.A. Needs New Leadership on Monkeypox, HIV and STDs”, criticizes L.A. County officials over their “top-down approach, which dictates to the community rather than enlisting their support, and sets community groups against one another.” The ad reminds readers that public health is the most basic responsibility of government yet points out that the “LA County Department of Public Health treats the trusted representatives of the community with contempt.”

This ad follows two previous monkeypox ads that AHF ran in prior editions of the Los Angeles Times. The first ad, headlined “LA County Fails Gay Men AGAIN” (Sunday, July 31, 2022), reminded readers how L.A. County officials, who failed gay men on its AIDS response at the start of that epidemic over 40 years ago, are sadly once again not taking enough appropriate steps on monkeypox to ensure the public’s safety.

The second ad, headlined “Monkeypox: LA County Alert” (Sunday, August 7, 2022), criticized L.A. County officials over their disjointed and disorganized response to the outbreak, cases of which first started appearing outside of Africa in Western Europe and the United States beginning in mid-May. It also decried the county’s lack of effective cooperation with community partners, who have the ground level networks, outreach and programs already in place to aid the county in mounting a more effective response providing education, prevention, testing and vaccinations, particularly given the extremely limited supply of vaccine doses.

According to LA County Public Health, as of August 19, 2022, there are 1,105 confirmed monkeypox cases in the county (including case counts from Pasadena and Long Beach, which each have their own public health departments) with 98% found among males and 98% of those cases within the LGBTQ+ community.

AHF’s latest LA Times ad closes with a powerful admonishment to the County: “Put the public back in public health.”

AIDS Healthcare Foundation (AHF), the largest global AIDS organization, currently provides medical care and/or services to over 1.6 million individuals in 45 countries worldwide in the US, Africa, Latin America/Caribbean, the Asia/Pacific Region and Eastern Europe. To learn more about AHF, please visit their website: www.aidshealth.org, find them on Facebook: www.facebook.com/aidshealth, follow them @aidshealthcare or subscribe to their AHF podcast “AHFter Hours.”

 

 

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