Washington,
DC, November 30, 2005 – On the eve of
World AIDS Day, December 1, 2005, The National AIDS
Housing Coalition has released a groundbreaking study
concluding that housing helps reduce the risk of HIV/AIDS
and increases access to needed medical care.
A result of the National Housing and HIV/AIDS Research
Summit held last June, the report, entitled Housing
is the Foundation of HIV Prevention and Treatment,
supports the development and implementation of a new
HIV prevention and care strategy in the US based upon
the proven effectiveness of and primary importance
of housing as a structural HIV prevention and treatment
intervention.
"These powerful findings provide the basis for
a public health response to the housing needs of persons
living with HIV/AIDS, and of persons whose homelessness
places them at heightened risk of HIV infection,"
said Nancy Bernstine, Executive Director of the National
AIDS Housing Coalition (NAHC). "The report should
be the basis for new comprehensive HIV/AIDS prevention
strategies on all levels of government."
"This growing evidence refutes the predominant
‘risky person' model for understanding the co-occurrence
of homelessness, HIV infection, and poor health outcomes
among persons living with HIV/AIDS who lack stable
housing," said summit researcher, Angela Aidala,
PHD and a professor at Columbia University's School
of Public Health. "It is not the homeless or
unstably housed person who is risky, but the person's
situation."
Key public policy imperatives outlined in Housing
is the Foundation of HIV Prevention and Treatment
include:
"Housing can be an effective
and cost-effective prevention intervention, and a
key gateway to HIV care," states another summit
researcher, David Holtgrave, PHD, department head
at Johns Hopkins University and a prominent healthcare
economist. "The cost to the public of providing
supportive housing may be offset by reduced use of
more expensive public services such as emergency health
care, inpatient services, emergency shelters and prisons."
"These findings validate the
notion that the future starts with a place to live
for people with HIV/AIDS," said former NAHC president
Regina Quattrochi, CEO of Bailey House, New York's
oldest AIDS housing provider." As people with
HIV/AIDS continue to live longer, the need for housing
will grow. It's crucial that public-policy makers
on all levels address this issue."