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U.S. News Hundreds of People Living With HIV/AIDS in Puerto Rico Not Receiving Medical Care, Doctors, Advocates SayJune 5, 2007 Hundreds of people living with HIV/AIDS in Puerto Rico are not receiving needed medical care, some local doctors and advocacy groups have said recently, the New York Times reports. According to the Times, the situation "reflects a stew of problems" on the island, including an overstretched health care budget and contention between the commonwealth and San Juan city governments, which run separate HIV/AIDS programs. Federal officials and some local doctors say that the "main culprit" is the island's mismanagement of funding from the Ryan White Program, the Times reports (Eckholm, New York Times, 6/5). "Antiquated equipment and poor communications" also have contributed to issues associated with the provision of antiretrovirals, the Times reports. An audit by the comptroller of Puerto Rico published in November 2006 found that health department records of drug stocks and deliveries to clinics were significantly deficient. Another report found that four of the eight main HIV/AIDS clinics on the island lacked functioning bathrooms or computers, the Times reports. Puerto Rico officials say the waiting list for the island's ADAP has decreased from 130 in the fall to 36 and soon will be eliminated. Puerto Rican and mainland groups, including the Congressional Hispanic Caucus, during the past year have called on federal authorities to take an increased role in the situation. Administration officials have said that they proposed transferring San Juan's Ryan White funds to a separate agency that would manage them, adding that Puerto Rico's Mayor Jorge Santini Padilla refused, the Times reports. "In the end," it is "up to them to do the planning, allocations and administration, and what we can do in terms of sanctions is very limited by legislation," Cheever said (New York Times, 6/5). Back to other news for June 2007
This article was provided by Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. It is a part of the publication Kaiser Daily HIV/AIDS Report. Visit the Kaiser Family Foundation's website to find out more about their activities, publications and services.
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