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Low-income Texans with HIV rely on a program advocates say is underfunded

Solutions Oriented Addiction Response organizer Brooke Parker displays an HIV testing kit in Charleston, W.Va., on March 9, 2021.
John Raby/AP
/
AP
Solutions Oriented Addiction Response organizer Brooke Parker displays an HIV testing kit in Charleston, W.Va., on March 9, 2021.

Advocates are gathering in Austin Monday to meet with lawmakers about funding and bills on HIV health care.

Low-income Texans living with HIV are looking to state lawmakers for more support, after a budget shortfall that threatened to leave .

The , which helps people access HIV prescriptions and health appointments, barely avoided a waitlist before .

Now the legislature will have to look at funding the program again in the 2023 session, which runs through the end of May.

鈥淚t is our number one concern,鈥 said Januari Fox with . 鈥淪ince we haven鈥檛 expanded Medicaid in Texas, this program is really a lifeline for people living with HIV.鈥

Prism Health, along with the headed to Austin Monday to sponsor HIV Advocacy Day, where they planned to meet with lawmakers and push for more funding for the program.

There were close to 100,000 people living with HIV in Texas in 2019, according to the from the Texas Department of State Health Services. The department estimates a little more than 23,000 Texans will use the .

Fox said she鈥檚 hoping the program expands treatment options to include injectable HIV medication, which was . That treatment allows people living with HIV to visit the doctor every two months for the injection instead of taking a daily pill.

She also wants the program to allow people to re-enroll every year, instead of every six months.

2023 Texas bills impacting people living with HIV

The legislature is also weighing bills Fox and others say would have a big impact on people living with HIV. would set up a pilot program for needle exchanges in Dallas and six other counties. According to the National Institute on Drug Abuse, programs like this help slow down transmission of HIV and hepatitis B, and lead to

鈥淲e鈥檙e actually getting to play offense this time as opposed to defense,鈥 Fox said. 鈥淲e have some really good bills that will make the fight against HIV easier if they pass.鈥

would remove HIV as use of a deadly weapon in assault cases. In 2008, a person with HIV spit at a police officer, and was sentenced to 35 years in prison for 鈥渄eadly weapon firing,鈥 . would also make HIV testing a routine part of medical screenings.

鈥淭exas has a powerful history of advocacy and HIV advocates,鈥 said Crystal Townsend with PWN Texas Strike Force. 鈥淭hey have been known to get things done, and really speak up.鈥

Townsend said when PWN Texas Strike Force started in 2019, there were 20 people, and now the group has over 200 people across the state of Texas advocating for HIV policy.

鈥淭here are so many people who are our people鈥攑eople who are living with HIV in Texas,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e show up for you, we stand beside you, and we will fight for you even when you are not able to be there physically.鈥

Roxie Glapion, also with PWN Texas Strike Force, has attended these HIV Advocacy Days for the past four years. She said it鈥檚 important to come together.

鈥淲e need to be sitting at these tables, as we are the experts in this field,鈥 Glapion said. 鈥淚f we鈥檙e not sitting at the table, and we鈥檙e allowing other people to make these decisions for us, how is that helpful and healthy for us?鈥

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Elena Rivera is the health reporter at 四虎影院. Before moving to Dallas, Elena covered health in Southern Colorado for KRCC and Colorado Public Radio. Her stories covered pandemic mental health support, rural community health access issues and vaccine equity across the region.