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Trump's funding cuts threaten HIV research and treatment in South Florida

Free HIV testing buttons are shown at a roundtable on gender-affirming care and transgender health, Wednesday, June 29, 2022, in Miami.
Wilfredo Lee
/
AP
Free HIV testing buttons are shown at a roundtable on gender-affirming care and transgender health, Wednesday, June 29, 2022, in Miami. (AP Photo/Wilfredo Lee)

The Trump administration has made several policy changes that could potentially impact HIV prevention and treatment efforts in Florida

South Florida has one of the highest HIV and AIDS infection rates in the country. Miami-Dade. Broward and Palm Beach counties all rank in the top 5% of U.S. counties for transmission of the virus, which weakens the immune system.

And yet, local HIV research and response efforts are on the chopping block as part of the Trump Administration's cuts to federal grants and funding.

Elizabeth Sherman, a pharmacy professor at Nova Southeastern University and a board member of the HIV Medicine Association, said on the South Florida Roundup that such funding cuts could hamper innovation and research.

" If you slow down the pipeline of scientific discovery, now you have delays in developing better HIV medicines. You slow down the development of new ways to prevent HIV You can't forget that. HIV evolves like the common cold. We need tomorrow's medicines tomorrow," she said.

Florida’s largest universities have already lost about $30 million for HIV efforts this year.

READ MORE: What the EPA's partial rollback of limits on 'forever chemicals' in drinking water means

This is a News In Brief report. Visit WLRN News for in-depth reporting from South Florida and Florida news.

Helen Acevedo, is WLRN's anchor for All Things Considered.
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