July 7, 2003
The Department of Public Health is prioritizing counseling and testing services over some of the client support services that cover child care for people with HIV/AIDS, as well as respite care for family members who care for people with HIV/AIDS.
The Boston-area AIDS Action Committee is taking a $100,000 cut in state funding for services for people who are infected, said Magnolia Contreras, the agency's director of public policy. "This will obviously affect the number of people who find out their status and get into health care," she said. AIDS Project Worchester, which has lost about $400,000 in state funding in the past two years, will cut two of its programs to absorb the latest $68,000 cut, Executive Director Edla L. Bloom said.
Contreras said Massachusetts has had one of the lowest AIDS mortality rates in the country, a distinction that is in danger. The loss of anonymous testing sites that counsel and refer people to medical care will deter many people from seeking testing, she said. "It won't be immediate," she said. "It will take time to catch up to tracking the folks that would be getting infected now."
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Excerpted from:
Associated Press
07.04.03