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Anthony J. Santella, DrPH, MCHES, an infectious disease expert and the University’s COVID-19 coordinator, reflects on the importance of World AIDS Day, which is commemorated globally every December 1 to raise awareness of the HIV/AIDS epidemic, honor lives lost, and pay tribute to people living with HIV, particularly long-term survivors.
December 1, 2021
World AIDS Day, which is observed on December 1, is a day where those of us who work in the field share stories and experiences. This year’s theme is Ending the HIV Epidemic: Equitable Access, Everyone's Voice. I’d like to start this blog by sharing my voice.
I’ve known about HIV/AIDS since I was in high school in the 1990s in Norwalk, Connecticut. While there wasn’t much, if any, school-based sex education, I knew it was an illness that disproportionately impacted gay and bisexual men. My community. A community I loved as a young adult living in New York City after graduating from UConn in 2001. My friends and I certainly engaged in our own questionable behaviors that put us at risk for HIV and other sexually transmitted diseases (STDs). I have many close friends and colleagues who are living with HIV/AIDS who I deeply care about.
Fast forward to 2003, I began working in the field while earning a master’s degree in public health at Emory University. I was hired by a dynamic health education faculty member who trusted me with recruiting gay and bisexual men to take part in HIV vaccine clinical trials. I loved this work. It was an opportunity to roll up my sleeves and practice what I was learning in the classroom the very next day on the streets of Atlanta.
I continued that work even as a public health doctoral student at Tulane University in New Orleans. My dissertation ultimately focused on hospital outcomes of people with HIV. After earning my doctoral degree in 2007, I was hired by the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene as the inaugural director of HIV care and treatment policy, planning, and implementation. While I loved my work, I found that governmental public health wasn’t for me. I entered academia full-time in 2009 and have been conducting HIV/AIDS and STD-related research ever since.
My work focuses on developing and evaluating strategies to improve HIV prevention, care and treatment services, to inform program and policy development, with the goal of ending the epidemic in my lifetime. I focus on expanding HIV testing to non-traditional settings, such as dentistry, increasing access to the HIV prevention pill to the suburbs, and ensuring historically forgotten communities such as persons experiencing homelessness and persons who are justice-involved have the tools and resources they need to achieve their full health potential.
HIV/AIDS has and continues to be an issue of public health significance in CT. Here are some quick facts that you should be aware of:
Now that you know a bit more about how HIV/AIDS impact CT residents, let me tell you three things everyone should know about this illness.
Now that you are more familiar with HIV/AIDS, please consider what you can do to help end the epidemic. For example, words matter. Use words and phrases that are not stigmatizing when referring to HIV/AIDS or people with HIV/AIDS.
Additionally, everyone, regardless of their level of risk, should know their HIV status. There are many options for free testing. Click here to find a place near you.
Lastly, do your part to advocate for school-based, age-appropriate, medically-accurate sex education. We know young people are waiting longer to have sex and are more likely to use contraceptives. However, a few hours a year of classroom instruction is not enough to effectively teach them about responsible sexual behavior and how to protect their health.
On this World AIDS Day, I thank you in advance for supporting those affected by and living with HIV/AIDS and for doing your part to end this epidemic and achieve health equity for all.
Dr. Santella is a professor, director of the Doctor of Health Sciences program, and COVID-19 coordinator for the University of New Haven. He is also on the Board of Directors at The HIV League and a member of the American Public Health Association HIV/AIDS Section, New Haven/Fairfield Counties HIV Planning Council and the Connecticut HIV Planning Consortium.
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