Los Angeles LGBT Center and LGBTQ+ Health Organizations Across U.S. Condemn Trump Administration’s Move to Close CDC HIV Prevention Division
LOS ANGELES, March 19, 2025–Eleven of the nation’s leading LGBTQ+, HIV, and health organizations are uniting to raise the alarm about the Trump administration’s planned actions to defund critical HIV prevention efforts at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). The anticipated actions will severely impede the nation’s ability to prevent new HIV infections, undoing decades of hard-won progress toward ending the HIV epidemic.
HIV advocates across the country learned on March 18 about plans to end more than $1 billion in funding for the CDC’s HIV prevention initiatives, close the Division of HIV Prevention, and make deep cuts to CDC personnel. Funding changes will reduce nationwide access to powerful HIV prevention tools, including pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP), surveillance initiatives to track outbreaks and infection rates, and prevention for not only HIV but also sexually transmitted infections (STIs), viral hepatitis, and tuberculosis (TB). The new plan runs counter to the Ending the HIV Epidemic (EHE) initiative enacted in 2019 during Trump’s first administration. It aimed to reduce new HIV infections by 90% by 2030 and led to nearly 7,000 fewer HIV cases in 2022 compared to 2016. There are currently more than 30,000 new HIV infections that happen nationwide every year.
Closing the CDC’s Division of HIV Prevention would not only have a devastating effect on the nation’s progress in preventing new cases of HIV and ending the epidemic, it would also result in rising costs for the country. Currently, HIV, STI, viral hepatitis, and TB prevention programs provide cost savings for the U.S. With an average lifetime cost of $500,000 for a person living with HIV, it would only take an average of 40 more new HIV infections per state every year to exceed the $1 billion saved by making cuts to the CDC Division of HIV Prevention. Without critical federal public health infrastructure devoted to HIV prevention, new cases of HIV would likely far exceed that estimate.
“We are outraged and deeply alarmed by the Trump administration’s reckless decision to defund and deprioritize HIV prevention. This abrupt and incomprehensible cut threatens to reverse decades of progress, exposing our nation to a resurgence of a preventable disease with devastating and avoidable human and financial costs. Without the critical support of the CDC HIV Prevention Division, countless lives will be at risk—more people will fall ill, more lives will be lost, and we will be thrust back into an HIV epidemic reminiscent of the darkest chapters in public health history,” said the CEOs of the aligned organizations listed below.
The following LGBTQ, HIV and health organizations condemn the Trump administration’s planned actions to defund critical HIV prevention efforts at the Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC):
- APLA Health, Los Angeles, CEO Craig E. Thompson
- CrescentCare, New Orleans, CEO Alice Riener
- DAP Health, Palm Springs, CEO David Brinkman, MBA
- Equitas Health, Columbus, CEO David Ernesto Munar Fenway Health, Boston
- Los Angeles LGBT Center, Los Angeles, CEO Joe Hollendoner, MSW
- Philadelphia’s Mazzoni Center, Philadelphia, CMO Dr. Stacey Trooskin
- Prism Health North Texas, Dallas, CEO John Carlo
- San Francisco AIDS Foundation, San Francisco, CEO Dr. Tyler TerMeer
- San Francisco Community Health Center, San Francisco, CEO Lance Toma
- Whitman-Walker Health, Washington, DC, CEO Naseema Shafi
AIDS United is also mobilizing support to defend HIV prevention funding to CDC. Find out more: https://aidsunited.org/action/policy-action-center/protect-cdc/
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About the Los Angeles LGBT Center
Since 1969 the Los Angeles LGBT Center has cared for, championed, and celebrated LGBT individuals and families in Los Angeles and beyond. Today the Center’s nearly 800 employees provide services for more LGBT people than any other organization in the world, offering programs, services, and global advocacy that span four broad categories: Health, Social Services and Housing, Culture and Education, Leadership and Advocacy. We are an unstoppable force in the fight against bigotry and the struggle to build a better world; a world in which LGBT people thrive as healthy, equal, and complete members of society. Learn more at lalgbtcenter.org