Global HIV/AIDS Timeline
By Dr. Ali Fourkan
Introduction
On June 5, 1981, the U.S. Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) issued its first warning about a
relatively rare form of pneumonia among a small group of young gay men in Los Angeles,
which was later determined to be AIDS-related. While scientists believe that
HIV was present years before the first case was brought to public attention,
1981 is generally referred to as the beginning of the HIV/AIDS epidemic. Since
that time, tens of millions of people have been infected with HIV
worldwide. The Global HIV/AIDS Timeline is designed to serve as an ongoing
reference tool for the many political, scientific, cultural, and community
developments that have occurred over the history of the epidemic.
Timeline by Year
1981 | 82 | 83 | 84 | 85 | 86 | 87 | 88 | 89 |90| 91 | 92 | 93 | 94 | 95 | 96 | 97 | 98 | 99 |2000| 01 | 02 | 03 | 04 |05 | 06 | 07 | 08 | 09 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16
1981
·
U.S. Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention (CDC) reports first cases of rare pneumonia in young gay men in the June 5 MMWR.
These cases were later determined to be AIDS. This marks the official
beginning of the HIV/AIDS epidemic. CDC also issues report on highly unusual
occurrence of rare skin cancer, Kaposi’s Sarcoma, among young gay men in the
July 4 MMWR.
·
First mainstream news coverage of
the CDC’s June 5 MMWR by the Associated Press and the LA Times on the same day
it is issued. The San Francisco Chronicle reports on it the next day.
1982
·
U.S. CDC establishes term
Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS); refers to four “identified risk
factors:” male homosexuality, intravenous drug abuse, Haitian origin, and
hemophilia A.
·
Cases of AIDS now present in many
states and its cause not yet known.
·
“GRID” or “gay-related immune
deficiency” increasingly used by media and health care professionals,
mistakenly suggesting inherent link between homosexuality and AIDS.
·
First U.S. Congressional hearings on
AIDS held.
·
Gay Men’s Health Crisis, the first
community-based AIDS service provider in the U.S., established in New York
City.
·
City and County of San Francisco,
working closely with San Francisco AIDS Foundation, Shanti Project and others,
develops the “San Francisco Model of Care,” which emphasizes home- and
community-based services for people with AIDS.
·
First AIDS case reported in Africa.
1983
·
The U.S. Public Health Service
issues recommendations for preventing transmission of
the infection through sexual contact and blood transfusions.
·
U.S. CDC clarifies its use of term
“high risk group” and urges that it not be used to justify discrimination or
unwarranted fear of casual transmission.
·
U.S. CDC adds female sexual partners
of men with AIDS as fifth risk group.
·
The Orphan Drug Act is
signed into U.S. law, providing incentives to drug companies to develop
therapies for rare diseases.
·
In the September 9 MMWR, U.S. CDC notes that AIDS has not been spread through
casual contact and declares that “AIDS is not known to be transmitted through
food, water, air, or environmental surfaces.”
·
Dr. Luc Montagnier of the Pasteur
Institute in France isolates lymphadenopathy-associated virus (LAV) — which he
believed to be related to AIDS — and publishes findings. That same year, Dr.
Robert Gallo of the National Cancer Institute in the U.S. successfully
cultivates LAV (which he identified as HTLV-III) in lab and submits paper for
publication proposing that a retrovirus causes AIDS.
·
The World Health Organization (WHO)
holds first meeting to assess the impact of AIDS globally and begins
international surveillance.
·
People living with AIDS (PWAs) take
over plenary stage at a U.S. conference and issue statement on the rights of
PWAs referred to as The Denver Principles.
·
National Association of People with
AIDS (NAPWA) and Federation of AIDS Related Organizations form.
·
AIDS Candlelight Memorial held for
the first time.
1984
·
U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services (HHS) announces Dr. Robert Gallo of the National Cancer Institute
finds that a retrovirus causes AIDS. Dr. Gallo and Dr. Luc Montagnier of the
Pasteur Institute hold joint press conference in June announcing discovery that
a retrovirus (identified as HTLV-III by Gallo and LAV by Montagnier; see 1983
entry) — later named Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) — causes AIDS.
·
U.S. CDC states that abstention from
intravenous drug use and reduction of needle-sharing “should also be effective
in preventing transmission of the virus.”
·
San Francisco officials order
bathhouses closed; major public controversy ensues and continues in Los
Angeles, New York and other cities.
·
AIDS Action Council is formed by
small group of AIDS service organizations from across the U.S.
1985
·
President Ronald Reagan mentions
AIDS publicly for the first time.
·
First International AIDS Conference
held in Atlanta, hosted by U.S. HHS and WHO.
·
At least one HIV/AIDS case reported
in each region of the world. First HIV case reported in China.
·
First HIV test licensed by the U.S.
Food and Drug Administration (FDA); detects antibodies to HIV. Blood banks
begin screening the U.S. blood supply.
·
Pentagon announces it will begin
testing all new recruits for HIV and will reject those who are positive.
·
U.S. Public Health Service issues
first recommendations for preventing transmission of HIV from mother to
child.
·
Rock Hudson announces that he has
AIDS and dies later this year.
·
Ryan White, an Indiana teenager with
AIDS, is barred from school; goes on to speak out publicly against AIDS stigma
and discrimination.
·
First major play about the early
days of the AIDS epidemic, “The Normal Heart” by playwright Larry Kramer,
opens.
·
American Foundation for AIDS Research
(amfAR) founded by Co-Chairs Mathilde Krim and Michael S. Gottlieb, and
National Chair Elizabeth Taylor.
·
Project Inform founded to advocate
for faster government approval of HIV drugs.
·
National AIDS Network (NAN) in the
U.S. forms.
1986
·
National Academy of Sciences issues report critical
of U.S. response to “national health crisis;” calls for $2 billion investment.
·
U.S. Surgeon General Koop
issues Surgeon
General’s Report on AIDS,
calling for education and condom use.
·
Institute of Medicine report calls
for a national education campaign and creation of National Commission on AIDS
in U.S.
·
AZT, the first drug used to treat
HIV/AIDS, begins clinical trials.
·
First HIV cases reported in Russia
and India.
·
2nd International AIDS Conference
held in Paris, France.
·
International Steering Committee for
People with HIV/AIDS (ISC) created; becomes Global Network of People Living
with HIV/AIDS (GNP+) in 1992.
·
Ricky Ray, a nine-year-old
hemophiliac with HIV, barred from Florida school; his family’s home
burned by arsonists the following year.
·
Robert Wood Johnson Foundation
creates “AIDS Health Services Program,” providing funding to hard hit U.S.
cities; program is precursor to Ryan White CARE Act.
·
Informal distribution of clean
syringes begins in Boston and New Haven.
·
First panel of the AIDS Memorial
Quilt created.
1987
·
First antiretroviral (ARV) drug — zidovudine
or AZT (a nucleoside analog) — approved by U.S. FDA.
·
U.S. Congress approves $30 million
in emergency funding to states for AZT.
·
AIDS Coalition to Unleash Power (ACT
UP) established in New York in response to proposed cost of AZT; the price of
AZT is subsequently lowered.
·
President Reagan makes first public
speech about AIDS; establishes Presidential Commission on HIV (Watkins
Commission).
·
U.S. CDC launches first AIDS-related
public service announcements, “America Responds to AIDS.”
·
U.S. CDC holds its first National
Conference on HIV and communities of color.
·
U.S. FDA adds HIV prevention as a
new indication for male condoms.
·
U.S. FDA creates new class of experimental drugs called Treatment Investigational New Drugs
(INDs), which accelerates drug approval by two to three years.
·
U.S. FDA sanctions first human
testing of candidate vaccine against HIV.
·
U.S. Congress adopts Helms Amendment banning use of federal funds for AIDS education materials
that “promote or encourage, directly or indirectly, homosexual activities,”
often referred to as the “no promo homo” policy.
·
U.S. adds HIV as a “dangerous
contagious disease” to its immigration exclusion list; mandates testing of all
applicants.
·
3rd International AIDS Conference is
held in Washington, D.C.
·
AIDS becomes first disease debated
on floor of United Nations (UN) General Assembly. Assembly designates WHO to
lead effort to address AIDS globally.
·
Global Programme on AIDS launched by
WHO.
·
AIDS Support Organisation (TASO)
forms in Uganda.
·
National Black Leadership Commission
on AIDS, National Minority AIDS Council, and National Task Force on AIDS
Prevention form in the U.S.
·
First issue of “AIDS Treatment News”
published to provide HIV treatment information to community members.
·
“And the Band Played On: Politics,
People and the AIDS Epidemic,” a history of the epidemic’s early years by Randy
Shilts, published.
·
AIDS Memorial Quilt displayed on
National Mall in Washington, DC, for first time.
·
Entertainer Liberace dies of AIDS.
1988
·
World AIDS Day first declared by WHO
on December 1.
·
WHO reports AIDS cases
increased 56% worldwide.
·
UNAIDS reports the number of women
living with HIV/AIDS in sub-Saharan Africa exceeds that of men.
·
4th International AIDS Conference is
held in Stockholm, Sweden; International AIDS Society (IAS) forms.
·
Watkins Commission on AIDS presents
report to President Reagan.
·
U.S. National Institutes of Health
(NIH) establishes Office of AIDS Research (OAR) and AIDS Clinical Trials Group
(ACTG).
·
U.S. FDA allows importation of
unapproved drugs for persons with life-threatening illnesses, including
HIV/AIDS.
·
ACT UP demonstrates at U.S. FDA
headquarters in protest of slow pace of drug approval process.
·
The U.S. Health Resources and
Services Administration (HRSA) awards 21 grants to plan for HIV/AIDS systems of
care, laying groundwork for statewide programs later funded through Ryan White
CARE Act.
·
U.S. Health Omnibus Programs Extension (HOPE) Act of 1988 authorizes use of federal funds for HIV/AIDS
prevention, education, and testing.
·
U.S. Surgeon General Koop and U.S.
CDC mail brochure “Understanding AIDS” to all U.S. households; first and
only national mailing of its kind.
·
U.S. Justice Department says people
with HIV/AIDS cannot be discriminated against.
·
Judge in Florida rules young girl
with AIDS can only attend school if in glass enclosure.
·
U.S. CDC launches TV commercial
campaign about AIDS awareness aimed at minorities.
·
Elizabeth Glaser, an HIV positive
mother of two HIV positive children, and two friends form the Pediatric AIDS
Foundation; later renamed the Elizabeth Glaser
Pediatric AIDS Foundation.
·
First comprehensive needle exchange
program (NEP) established in North America in Tacoma, Washington; New York City
creates first government-funded NEP; San Francisco establishes what
becomes largest NEP in the U.S.
1989
·
A foreign traveler with AIDS is
not allowed into U.S. because he has AIDS.
·
U.S. Congress creates National
Commission on AIDS.
·
U.S. CDC issues first guidelines for
prevention of Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia (PCP), an AIDS-related
opportunistic infection and major cause of morbidity and mortality for people
with HIV.
·
Head of NIH’s National Institute of
Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), Dr. Anthony Fauci, endorses parallel
track policy, giving those that do not qualify for clinical trials access to
experimental treatments.
·
AIDS activists stage several major
protests about AIDS drugs during year, including at the Golden Gate Bridge, the
New York Stock Exchange, and U.S. headquarters of Burroughs Wellcome.
·
5th International AIDS Conference
(“The Scientific and Social Challenge of AIDS”) held in Montreal, Canada.
·
First “Day Without Art” organized by
Visual AIDS to underscore impact of AIDS on the arts.
·
Dancer and choreographer Alvin Ailey
dies of AIDS.
·
Photographer Robert Mapplethorpe
dies of AIDS.
1990
·
Ryan White dies at 18.
·
Ryan White Comprehensive AIDS
Resources Emergency (CARE) Act of 1990 enacted by U.S. Congress. Provides
federal funds for community-based care and treatment services; funded at
$220.5 million in first year.
·
Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (ADA) enacted by U.S. Congress; prohibits
discrimination against individuals with disabilities, including people living
with HIV/AIDS.
·
U.S. FDA approves use of AZT for
pediatric AIDS.
·
6th International AIDS Conference
(“AIDS in the Nineties: From Science to Policy”) held in San Francisco, CA. To
protest U.S. immigration policy, domestic and international non-governmental
groups boycott conference. The 1992 conference, scheduled to take place in
Boston, moved to Amsterdam.
·
Kimberly Bergalis, of Florida,
believed to have been infected with HIV by her dentist, causing major public debate.
·
First National Conference on Women
and AIDS held in Boston.
·
“Women, AIDS and Activism,”
developed by ACT UP’s Women’s Caucus, published, becoming the first book of its
kind.
·
Pop artist Keith Haring dies of
AIDS.
1991
·
NBA legend Earvin “Magic” Johnson
announces he is HIV-positive and retires from basketball.
·
U.S. CDC recommends restrictions on practice of HIV-positive health care workers;
U.S. Congress enacts law requiring states to take similar action.
·
Housing Opportunities for Persons
with AIDS (HOPWA) Act of 1991 enacted by U.S. Congress. Provides housing
assistance to people living with AIDS through grants to U.S. states and local
communities.
·
7th International AIDS Conference
(“Science Challenging AIDS”) held in Florence, Italy.
·
ICASO (International Council of AIDS
Service Organizations) forms as global network of non-governmental and
community-based organizations.
·
Red ribbon introduced as
international symbol of AIDS awareness at Tony Awards by Broadway Cares/Equity
Fights AIDS and Visual AIDS.
·
Lead singer of band Queen Freddie
Mercury dies of AIDS.
1992
·
AIDS becomes number one cause of
death for U.S. men ages 25 to 44.
·
U.S. FDA licenses first rapid HIV
test, which provides results in as little as ten minutes.
·
8th International AIDS Conference
(“A World United Against AIDS”) held in Amsterdam, the Netherlands; would have
taken place in Boston but was moved due to U.S. immigration ban.
·
International Community of Women
Living with HIV/AIDS (ICW) founded.
·
Teenager Ricky Ray, whose home was
torched because he and his siblings were HIV-positive, dies of AIDS.
·
Mary Fisher and Bob Hattoy, each
HIV-positive, address the Republican and Democratic National Conventions,
respectively.
·
Tennis star Arthur Ashe announces he
has AIDS.
1993
·
U.S. President Clinton establishes
White House Office of National AIDS Policy (ONAP).
·
U.S. CDC initiates HIV prevention
community planning process for local distribution of federal prevention
funding.
·
U.S. CDC expands case definition of
AIDS to reflect fuller spectrum of the disease, including adding conditions
specific to women and injection drug users.
·
U.S. FDA approves female condom for
sale in U.S.
·
U.S. Congress enacts NIH Revitalization Act, giving the OAR primary oversight of all NIH AIDS research;
requires NIH and other research agencies to expand involvement of women and
minorities in all research. President Clinton signs HIV immigration
exclusion policy into law as part of the same law.
·
Women’s Interagency HIV Study (WIHS)
and HIV Epidemiology Study (HERS) begin; both major U.S. federally-funded
research studies on women and HIV/AIDS.
·
First annual “AIDSWatch” — hundreds
of community members from across U.S. converge in Washington, D.C. to lobby
Congress for increased AIDS funding.
·
9th International AIDS Conference is
held in Berlin, Germany.
·
“Angels in America,” Tony Kushner’s
play about AIDS, wins Tony Award and Pulitzer Prize for Drama.
·
“Philadelphia,” film starring Tom
Hanks as a lawyer with AIDS, opens in theaters, becoming first major Hollywood
movie on AIDS.
·
Ballet dancer Rudolf Nureyev dies of
AIDS.
·
Tennis star Arthur Ashe dies of
AIDS.
·
Leading advocate for women with AIDS
in prison Katrina Haslip dies of AIDS.
1994
·
AIDS becomes leading cause of death
for all Americans ages 25 to 44; remains so through 1995.
·
U.S. Public Health Service
recommends use of AZT by pregnant women to reduce perinatal transmission of
HIV; based on “076” study showing up to 70% reduction in transmission.
·
U.S. FDA approves oral HIV test,
first non-blood based antibody test for HIV.
·
NIH issues guidelines requiring
applicants for NIH grants to address “the appropriate inclusion of women and
minorities in clinical research.”
·
10th International AIDS Conference
(“The Global Challenge of AIDS: Together for the Future”) held in Yokohama,
Japan.
·
Author of “And the Band Played On”
Randy Shilts dies of AIDS.
·
Pedro Zamora, a young gay man living
with HIV, appears on the cast of MTV’s popular show, The Real World; dies later
in the year at age 22.
·
Co-founder of Pediatric AIDS
Foundation Elizabeth Glaser dies of AIDS.
1995
·
First protease inhibitor, saquinavir,
approved in record time by the U.S. FDA, ushering in new era of highly active
antiretroviral therapy (HAART).
·
U.S. CDC issues first guidelines for
prevention of opportunistic infections in persons infected with HIV.
·
U.S. CDC issues report on
syringe exchange programs (SEPs). The National Academy of Sciences concludes
SEPs are effective component of a comprehensive HIV prevention strategy.
·
U.S. President Clinton establishes
Presidential Advisory Council on HIV/AIDS (PACHA).
·
First White House Conference on
HIV/AIDS held.
·
First National HIV Testing Day
held on June 27; created by the National Association of People with AIDS
(NAPWA).
·
Olympic Gold Medal diver Greg
Louganis discloses he is living with HIV; announcement leads to public debate
regarding disclosure of HIV status.
·
Rap artist Eric Wright (Eazy-E of
NWA) dies of AIDS.
1996
·
11th International AIDS Conference (“One
World, One Hope”) held in Vancouver, Canada; highlights effectiveness of HAART,
creating a period of optimism.
·
UNAIDS (Joint United Nations
Programme on HIV/AIDS) begins operations; established to advocate for global
action on epidemic and coordinate HIV/AIDS efforts across UN system.
·
IAVI (International AIDS Vaccine
Initiative) forms to speed the search for effective HIV vaccine.
·
Brazil begins national ARV
distribution; first developing country to do so.
·
Number of new AIDS cases diagnosed
in U.S. declines for first time in history of epidemic.
·
HIV no longer leading cause of death
for all Americans ages 25-44; remains leading cause of death for
African-Americans in this age group.
·
Time Magazine names AIDS researcher
Dr. David Ho as its “Man of the Year.”
·
The Levine Committee, a blue ribbon
advisory panel, calls for overhaul of NIH AIDS research, including stronger
role for OAR and increased support for vaccine-related and
investigator-initiated research.
·
U.S. FDA approves viral load test, a
new test that measures the level of HIV in the body.
·
U.S. FDA approves first HIV home
testing and collection kit.
·
U.S. FDA approves first HIV urine
test.
·
U.S. FDA approves first
non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor (NNRTI), nevirapine.
·
AIDS awareness ad campaigns
target larger public, not only those at high risk.
·
Former heavyweight boxing champion
Tommy Morrison announces he is HIV-positive.
1997
·
AIDS-related deaths in U.S. decline
by more than 40 percent compared to prior year, largely due to HAART.
·
U.S. President Clinton announces
goal of finding an effective vaccine in 10 years and creation of Dale and Betty
Bumpers Vaccine Research Center.
·
U.S. FDA approves Combivir, a tablet
combining two ARV drugs, making it easier for people living with HIV
to take medication.
·
U.S. Congress enacts FDA
Modernization Act of 1997, codifying accelerated approval process and allowing
dissemination of information about off-label uses of drugs.
1998
·
First large-scale human trials
(Phase III) for an HIV vaccine begin.
·
Despite earlier optimism, several
reports indicate growing signs of treatment failure and side effects from
HAART.
·
U.S. HHS issues first national
guidelines for use of antiretroviral therapy in adults.
·
U.S. HHS Secretary Shalala
determines needle exchange programs to be effective and do not
encourage use of illegal drugs, but Clinton Administration does not lift ban on
use of federal funds for such purposes.
·
U.S. Supreme Court, in Bragdon v. Abbott, rules
that Americans with Disabilities Act covers those in earlier stages of HIV
disease, not just AIDS.
·
Ricky Ray Hemophilia Relief Fund Act of 1998 enacted by U.S. Congress, authorizing payments to
hemophiliacs infected through un-screened blood-clotting agents between 1982
and 1987.
·
Minority AIDS Initiative created in
U.S., after African-American leaders declare “state of emergency” and
Congressional Black Caucus (CBC) calls on U.S. HHS to do the same.
·
12th International AIDS Conference
(“Bridging the Gap”) held in Geneva, Switzerland.
·
Treatment Action Campaign (TAC)
forms in South Africa; grassroots movement pushes for access to treatment.
·
Global AIDS and human rights
activists Jonathan Mann and Mary Lou Clements-Mann killed in plane crash.
1999
·
First human vaccine trial in a
developing country begins in Thailand.
·
U.S. President Clinton
announces Leadership
and Investment in Fighting an Epidemic (LIFE) Initiative to address the global epidemic; leads to increased
funding.
·
U.S. Congressional Hispanic Caucus,
with the Congressional Hispanic Caucus Institute, convenes Congressional
hearing on impact of HIV/AIDS on Latino community.
·
Founder of National Task Force on
AIDS Prevention Reggie Williams dies of AIDS.
2000
·
13th International AIDS Conference
(“Breaking the Silence”) held in Durban, South Africa; first time held in
developing nation; heightens awareness of the global pandemic.
·
Millennium Development Goals, announced
as part of Millennium Declaration, include reversing the spread of HIV, TB, and
malaria as one of 8 key goals.
·
UNAIDS, WHO, and other global health
groups announce joint initiative with five major pharmaceutical manufacturers
to negotiate reduced prices for AIDS drugs in developing countries.
·
U.S. Congress enacts Global AIDS and Tuberculosis Relief Act of 2000, authorizing up to $600 million for U.S. global
efforts.
·
U.S. President Clinton
announces Millennium Vaccine Initiative, creating incentives for development
and distribution of vaccines against HIV, TB and malaria.
·
U.S. President Clinton issues Executive Order 13155 to assist developing countries in importing and
producing generic forms of HIV treatments.
·
U.S. President Clinton creates first
ever Presidential Envoy for AIDS Cooperation.
·
U.S. CDC forms Global AIDS Program
(GAP).
·
U.S. CDC reports that among men who
have sex with men in the U.S., African-American and Latino cases exceed those
among whites.
·
U.S. HHS approves first state
1115 Medicaid expansion waivers for low-income people with HIV in Maine,
Massachusetts and District of Columbia; in 2001, Massachusetts becomes first
state to enroll new clients.
2001
·
June 5 marks 20 years since first
AIDS case reported.
·
UN General Assembly convenes
first ever special session (UNGASS) on HIV/AIDS.
·
UN Secretary-General Kofi
Annan calls for a global fund, a “war chest”, to address AIDS, during African Summit
on HIV/AIDS in Abuja, Nigeria.
·
Newly appointed U.S. Secretary of
State, Colin Powell, reaffirms U.S. statement that HIV/AIDS is a national
security threat.
·
World Trade Organization announces
“DOHA Agreement” to allow developing countries to buy or manufacture generic
medications to meet public health crises, such as HIV/AIDS.
·
Generic drug manufacturers offer to
produce discounted, generic forms of HIV/AIDS drugs; several major
pharmaceutical manufacturers agree to offer further reduced drugs prices in
developing countries.
·
First National Black HIV/AIDS
Awareness Day in U.S.
·
First National HIV Vaccine
Awareness Day in U.S.
2002
·
HIV is leading cause of death
worldwide among those aged 15-59.
·
Global Fund to Fight AIDS,
Tuberculosis and Malaria begins operations; approves first round of grants
later this year.
·
14th International AIDS Conference
(“Knowledge and Commitment”) held in Barcelona, Spain.
·
UNAIDS reports that women comprise
about half of all adults living with HIV/AIDS worldwide.
·
U.S. National Intelligence Council
releases report on “next wave” of epidemic, focused on India, China, Russia,
Nigeria, and Ethiopia.
·
U.S. FDA approves OraQuick Rapid
HIV-1 Antibody Test; first rapid test to use finger prick. OraQuick granted
Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendments (CLIA) waiver in 2003, enabling test
to be performed outside of laboratory, allowing more widespread use.
2003
·
President Bush announces President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR), a five-year, $15 billion initiative to address
HIV/AIDS, TB, and malaria in hard hit countries.
·
G8 Evian Summit includes special
focus on HIV/AIDS; new commitments to the Global Fund announced.
·
Government of South Africa announces
new antiretroviral treatment program.
·
William J. Clinton Presidential
Foundation secures price reductions for HIV/AIDS drugs from generic
manufacturers to benefit developing nations.
·
First National Latino AIDS Awareness
Day in U.S.
2004
·
PEPFAR begins first round of
funding.
·
UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan
compares war on terror to war on AIDS.
·
UNAIDS launches Global Coalition on
Women and AIDS to raise the visibility of epidemic’s impact on women and girls.
·
Group of Eight (G8) nations call for
creation of “Global HIV Vaccine Enterprise,” a consortium of government and private sector groups
designed to coordinate and accelerate research efforts to find an effective HIV
vaccine.
·
15th International AIDS Conference
(“Access for All”) held in Bangkok, Thailand; first time held in Southeast
Asia.
·
Global Fund to Fight AIDS,
Tuberculosis and Malaria holds first ever “Partnership Forum” in Bangkok,
Thailand; 400 delegates participate.
·
U.S. HHS announces expedited
review process by U.S. FDA for fixed dose combination and co-packaged
products; to be used by the U.S. in purchasing medications under PEPFAR.
·
U.S. FDA approves OraQuick Rapid
HIV-1 Antibody Test for use with oral fluid; oral fluid rapid test granted CLIA
waiver.
2005
·
United Kingdom hosts G8 Summit at
Gleneagles; focus on development in Africa, including HIV/AIDS.
·
World Economic Forum’s Annual
Meeting in Davos, Switzerland includes focus on addressing HIV/AIDS
in Africa and other hard hit regions.
·
UN General Assembly convenes
high-level meeting to review progress on targets set at 2001 UNGASS on
HIV/AIDS.
·
WHO, UNAIDS, U.S. Government, and
Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria announce results
of joint efforts to increase availability of antiretroviral drugs in developing
countries. An estimated 700,000 people had been reached by the end of 2004.
·
U.S. FDA grants “Tentative
Approval to Generic AIDS Drug Regimen for Potential Purchase Under the
President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief”, marking first ever approval of
an HIV drug regimen manufactured by a non-U.S.-based generic pharmaceutical
company, under U.S. FDA’s new expedited review process.
·
First Indian drug manufacturer
(Ranbaxy) gains U.S. FDA approval to produce generic antiretroviral for
PEPFAR.
·
First National Asian and
Pacific Islander HIV/AIDS Awareness Day in U.S.
2006
·
June 5 marks quarter century since
first AIDS case reported.
·
United Nations convenes follow-up
meeting and issues progress report on the implementation of the Declaration of Commitment on HIV/AIDS.
·
Russia hosts G8 Summit for first
time (in St. Petersburg); HIV/AIDS is addressed.
·
16th International AIDS Conference
(“Time to Deliver”) held in Toronto, Canada.
·
U.S. CDC releases revised HIV testing recommendations for health-care settings, recommending routine HIV
screening for all adults, aged 13-64, and yearly screening for those at high
risk.
·
First National Women and Girls
HIV/AIDS Awareness Day in U.S.
·
First National Native HIV/AIDS
Awareness Day in U.S.
2007
·
WHO and UNAIDS issue new
guidance recommending “provider-initiated” HIV testing in health-care settings.
·
WHO and UNAIDS recommend “male
circumcision should always be considered as part of a comprehensive HIV
prevention package.”
2008
·
U.S. Congress reauthorizes PEPFAR
for an additional 5 years at up to $48 billion; the legislation ends
the statutory HIV travel and immigration ban.
·
UN General Assembly convenes UNGASS
follow-up meeting and issues progress report on implementation of Declaration
of Commitment on HIV/AIDS.
·
17th International AIDS Conference
(“Universal Action Now”) held in Mexico City; first time held in Latin America.
·
U.S. CDC releases new HIV incidence estimates for U.S., showing that the U.S.
epidemic is worse than previously thought.
·
First National Gay Men’s
HIV/AIDS Awareness Day in U.S.
2009
·
U.S. President Obama launches
the Global Health Initiative (GHI), an effort to develop a comprehensive
U.S. Government approach to addressing global health in low- and middle-income
countries, with PEPFAR as a core component.
·
Obama Administration officially
lifts HIV travel and immigration ban by removing final regulatory barriers to
entry; to take effect in January 2010. Leads to announcement that
International AIDS Conference will return to U.S. for first time in more
than 20 years, and be held in Washington, D.C., in 2012.
·
U.S. Congress eliminates
long-standing statutory ban on use of federal funding for needle exchange in
U.S., with caveats.
·
First National Caribbean
American HIV/AIDS Awareness Day in U.S.
2010
·
Removal of U.S. HIV travel and
immigration ban officially begins.
·
Large international clinical study (iPrEx)
shows daily dose of combination antiretroviral pill reduced risk of acquiring
HIV among men who have sex with men and transgendered women who have sex with
men.
·
South African researchers announce
results of clinical trial CAPRISA 004 showing
that use of microbicide gel reduced risk of HIV infection among sexually active
women.
·
18th International AIDS Conference
(“Rights Here, Right Now”) held in Vienna, Austria; focus is on human rights as
a critical part of HIV response.
·
U.S. President Obama signs
comprehensive health reform, the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act
(ACA), into law, which provides new health insurance coverage
opportunities for millions of individuals in U.S., including people with HIV.
Provisions of law to be implemented in coming years.
2011
·
June 5 marks 30 years since first
AIDS case reported.
·
Large multinational study of
serodiscordant, mostly heterosexual, couples (HPTN 052)
shows early treatment of HIV-infected person greatly reduces transmission to
negative partner.
·
UN General Assembly convenes
meeting to review progress on HIV/AIDS; adopts new Political Declaration on
HIV/AIDS.
·
Obama Administration announces
goal of AIDS-free generation, highlighted in speeches by Secretary of State Clinton and President Obama.
·
U.S. Congress reinstates decades-long
ban on federal funding for needle exchanges only two years after eliminating
the same ban.
·
U.S. CDC releases new HIV incidence
estimates for U.S.
·
U.S. HHS launches 12 Cities Project,
focusing resources on areas with the highest HIV/AIDS burden in the country.
·
AIDS activist and actress Elizabeth
Taylor dies.
2012
·
XIX International AIDS
Conference held in Washington, D.C., marking first time conference held in
U.S. since 1990.
·
U.S. FDA approves OraQuick
In-Home Test, first rapid test using oral fluid that can be bought
over-the-counter; results of which are obtained at home.
·
U.S. FDA approves the
use of Truvada (emtricitabine/tenofovir disoproxil fumarate) for reducing risk
of HIV infection in uninfected individuals at high risk, marking the first HIV
treatment to be approved for pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP).
2013
·
UNAIDS reports that since 2005,
deaths related to AIDS have declined by almost 30%.
·
WHO releases new guidelines recommending
earlier use of antiretrovirals, calling for treatment to begin when CD4 cell
count falls below 500 cells/mm3, a change from the previous standard of 350
cells/mm3; also includes recommendations related to antiretroviral
therapy for children under 5 with HIV, pregnant and breastfeeding women
with HIV, and HIV-positive persons with uninfected sexual partners.
·
Article published
in the New England Journal of Medicine details case of an infant thought
to be cured of HIV by starting HAART 30 hours after birth.
·
U.S. Preventative Services Task
Force gives routine
HIV screening an A grade, indicating “there is high certainty that the net
benefit is substantial.”
·
U.S. President Obama issues HIV Care
Continuum Initiative executive order “to further strengthen the capacity of the Federal
Government to effectively respond to the ongoing domestic HIV epidemic.”
·
U.S. Congress passes, and U.S.
President Obama signs, HIV Organ Policy Equity (HOPE) Act, allowing HIV-infected organs to be donated to persons who
are already living with HIV.
2014
·
Child thought to have cleared HIV
with treatment tests positive for HIV, a disappointing setback in the quest for a cure.
·
Major coverage reforms under the
U.S. Affordable Care Act go into affect, impacting health coverage for many
people with and at risk for HIV in U.S.
·
U.S. FDA issues statement announcing the agency “will take the necessary steps
to recommend a change to the blood donor deferral period for men who have sex
with men from indefinite deferral to one year since the last sexual contact.”
2015
·
Findings from Ipergay and PROUD studies show PrEP to be effective in reducing HIV
acquisition among gay men.
·
Findings from “Strategic Timing of AntiRetroviral
Treatment” (START)
study released; show starting antiretroviral treatment early improves health
outcomes for people with HIV.
·
White House announces updated National HIV/AIDS Strategy for U.S.; releases federal agency implementation plan
·
Millennium Development Goals’
HIV/AIDS-related targets of “halting and reversing” HIV/AIDS epidemic met ahead of schedule.
·
International community agrees on
new Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), which include a target to end AIDS epidemic by 2030; U.S. announces new PEPFAR targets for
treatment and prevention.
·
WHO announces “treat all” recommendation calling for people to begin HIV treatment as soon as
possible following diagnosis.
·
U.S. FDA issues final guidance changing its blood donation deferral policy for men
who have sex with men from “indefinite deferral” to 12 months since last sexual
contact with another man.
·
U.S. Congress lifts restrictions, under certain circumstances, for states and localities on
the use of federal funds for syringe services in response to outbreaks of HIV
related to injection drugs.
2016
·
United Nations General Assembly
High-level Meeting on Ending AIDS held in New York; Member States adopt new political declaration on ending epidemic.
·
HHS releases guidance that permits certain jurisdictions (those experiencing
or at risk for an increase in viral hepatitis or HIV infections due to
injection drug use) to use federal funds to support syringe-services programs
(SSPs); funds may be used for support services but not for the purchase of
sterile needles or syringes.
·
Fifth Global Fund Replenishment Conference takes place in Montréal, Canada, mobilizing US$12.9
billion for the next three years.
Key Sources
Arno, P., and Frieden, K., Against
the Odds: The Story of AIDS Drug Development, Politics, and Profits, Harper
Collins: New York, 1992.
Gay Men’s Health Crisis, HIV/AIDS
Timeline.
Mann, J., and Tarantola, D.
(eds.), AIDS in the World II, Oxford University Press, 1996.
Netter, T. , Mann, J., and
Tarantola, D., AIDS in the World, Harvard University Press, 1992.
NYTimes.com Library, AIDS
Index, topics.nytimes.com/topics/news/health/diseasesconditionsandhealthtopics/aids/index.html.
Personal communication with: David
Barr, Pat Christen, Chris Collins, Fred Dillon, Anne Donnelly, Robert
Greenwald, Steven Johnson, Miguelina IleanaLeon, Jeff Levi, Mary Lucey, David
Munar, Scott Sanders, Jane Silver, Gustavo Suarez, Richard Sorian, Tom
Sheridan, Todd Summers, Tim Westmoreland, Susan Wolfson.
Smith, R. (ed.), Encyclopedia
of AIDS: A Social, Political, Cultural, and Scientific Record of the Epidemic,
Fitzroy Dearborn Publishers: Chicago and London, 1998.
University of California, San
Francisco, Thirty Years of AIDS: A Timeline of the Epidemic, http://www.ucsf.edu/news/2011/06/9971/thirty-years-aids-timeline-epidemic.
U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services – Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (www.cdc.gov/hiv).
Also based on KFF, The AIDS
Epidemic at 20 Years: Selected Milestones, prepared by Regina Aragón
and Jennifer Kates, 2001, www.kff.org/docs/AIDSat20/loader.cfm?url=/commonspot/security/getfile.cfm&PageID=29922.
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