‘We Need to Keep Fighting’: HIV Activists Organize to Save Lives as Trump Guts Funding
8 Articles
8 Articles
'These funds keep people alive': HIV prevention funding at risk
If President Trump's one big beautiful bill passes, medicaid spending could be heavily cut -- affecting people who rely on government funds for HIV treatment and prevention. Specialists said this could impact HIV patients in Oklahoma if the bill passes.Joey Scudder-Barfield is an outreach specialist at Hope. They're a health clinic near 51st and Yale. Scudder-Barfield said HIV prevention funding couldn't be more critical."These funds keep people…
As Trump Guts Funding, HIV Activists Organize to Save Lives
Greenville, Miss. — Cedric Sturdevant woke up with “a bit of depression” but made it to church, as he does every Sunday. In a few days, he would drive from Mississippi to Washington, D.C., to join HIV advocates at an April rally against the Trump administration’s actions. It had clawed back more than $11 billion in federal public health grants to states and abruptly terminated millions of… Source
Inside HIV Activists’ Plan To Save Lives as Trump Guts Federal Funding
GREENVILLE, Miss. — Cedric Sturdevant woke up with “a bit of depression” but made it to church, as he does every Sunday. In a few days, he would drive from Mississippi to Washington, D.C., to join HIV advocates at an April rally against the Trump administration’s actions. It had clawed back more than $11 billion in federal public health grants to states and abruptly terminated millions of dollars in funds for HIV work in the United States. Testi…
‘We need to keep fighting’: HIV activists organize to save lives as Trump guts funding
Cedric Sturdevant woke up with "a bit of depression" but made it to church, as he does every Sunday. In a few days, he would drive from Mississippi to Washington, D.C., to join HIV advocates at an April rally against the Trump administration's actions.
‘We Need To Keep Fighting’: HIV Activists Organize To Save Lives as Trump Guts Funding
GREENVILLE, Miss. — Cedric Sturdevant woke up with “a bit of depression” but made it to church, as he does every Sunday. In a few days, he would drive from Mississippi to Washington, D.C., to join HIV advocates at an April rally against the Trump administration’s actions. It had clawed back more than $11 billion in federal public health grants to states and abruptly terminated millions of dollars in funds for HIV work in the United States. Testi…
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