Taking the National HIV/AIDS Strategy to ViennaJuly 20, 2010 This article was cross-posted from the AIDS.gov blog. Gregorio Millett is a Senior Policy Advisor, Office of National AIDS Policy. (Cross-posted from the ONAP Blog, originally posted on July 20, 2010.) Last week, we released the National HIV/AIDS Strategy -- a comprehensive plan to fight HIV in the United States. On Sunday, June 18, 2010, The Office of National AIDS Policy in conjunction with the Department of Health and Human Services sponsored a session at the International AIDS Conference entitled "A Discussion on the U.S. National HIV/AIDS Strategy." The purpose of the session was to describe the development of the recently released National HIV/AIDS Strategy to an international audience, as well as to introduce the audience to a few of the individuals responsible for the development and the implementation of the Strategy. The session began with remarks by Jeffrey Crowley, Director of the Office of National AIDS Policy (ONAP) and Dr. Howard Koh, Assistant Secretary for the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). Mr. Crowley addressed ONAP's year-long effort of community engagement and outreach to Federal agencies to solicit recommendations for the Strategy. Dr. Koh discussed the interagency process in developing the Strategy and the duties of his office to oversee the Strategy's implementation. This was followed by two panel discussions. The first panel, chaired by Dr. Ronald Valdiserri of HHS, included a range of Federal officials who discussed the implications of the Strategy to their respective agencies and coordination of effort across the Federal level. The second panel, chaired by Dr Helene Gayle of CARE USA, included community members who shared their perspectives in the development of the Strategy and the role of community-based organizations and advocates in its implementation. Notably, the community panel included recently appointed members of the Presidential Advisory Council on HIV/AIDS, as well as members of the Coalition for a National AIDS Strategy. The Coalition, which began in 1997, coalesced around a single idea: that the United States should have a concise, outcomes-based plan of action to address the domestic HIV epidemic. The main impetus for the Coalition was the publication of a document by Christopher Collins in 2007 entitled "Improving Outcomes: Blueprint for a National AIDS Plan for the United States." You can watch the full video below or skip to the sections you're most interested in. Presentation: Developing a National HIV/AIDS Strategy for the United States (00:00 - 11:32) Presentation: Implementation of the National HIV/AIDS Strategy (11:32 - 26:06) Panel Discussion: Federal agency involvement in the National HIV/AIDS Strategy (27:45 - 1:05:55) Panelists:
Panel Discussion: Community involvement in the development and implementation of the National HIV/AIDS Strategy (1:07:15 - 1:58:26) Panelists:
Read more of Positive Policy, TheBody.com's multi-author blog on law, policy and activism. This article was provided by TheBody.com. It is a part of the publication The XVIII International AIDS Conference.
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