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Guess What Kids- Mike Pence Created an HIV Outbreak-
Oct 6, 2016 22:56:17   #
nakkh Loc: San Mateo, Ca
 
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/mike-pence-indiana-hiv_us_57f53b9be4b002a7312022ef
With the exception of a brief detour into Indiana Gov. Mike Pence’s (R) anti-a******n beliefs during the vice p**********l debate on Oct. 4, the night centered around foreign policy, not public health.

It’s a shame, since lackluster public health efforts are what led to the defining moment of Pence’s one-term Indiana governorship: a massive HIV outbreak spurred by public health funding cuts and Pence’s moralistic stance against needle exchanges.

A timeline of the HIV outbreak, the worst in state history, reads like a roadmap of what to do if you want to create a public health crisis.

Pence slashed state health spending.

Pence first laid the groundwork for Indiana’s HIV outbreak as a congressman back in 2011, when the House passed his amendment to defund Planned Parenthood. Then in 2013, Pence’s first year as governor of Indiana, Scott County’s one Planned Parenthood closed in the wake of public health spending cuts. Since that particular Planned Parenthood was also the county’s only HIV testing center, there was no longer a place for the county’s 24,000 residents to get tested.

Nearly 20 percent of Scott County residents live below the poverty line. Injection drug use there is a major problem, increasing the risk of HIV outbreak.

Fast-forward to 2015. Local health officials began to report HIV cases linked to intravenous prescription opioid use in Scott County. Scott County residents were sharing needles to inject their opioids, and nobody was getting tested.

The situation quickly spiraled out of control. At the height of the outbreak, 20 new cases of HIV were being diagnosed each week, reaching a total of nearly 200 cases by the time the outbreak was finally under control.

Pence was dangerously wrong about needle exchanges.

During that time, Pence d**gged his feet. Although the outbreak was identified in late January of 2015, it took Pence until April of that year to allow a temporary needle exchange in Scott County. It was a big shift for the governor, who was morally opposed to needle exchanges and believed they promoted drug use.

This position is dead wrong, according to health experts.

“People think that if you give someone a syringe, it means they’re going to go out and inject drugs, and if don’t give them syringes, they won’t inject drugs,” Robert Childs, executive director of the North Carolina Harm Reduction Coalition, told HuffPost in 2015.

“But the thing is that if you don’t give them syringes, they share them, and then people will start getting HIV and v***l hepatitis C.”

And beyond humanitarian or public health reasons, opposing harm reduction isn’t fiscally sound policy. “These are extremely costly diseases, and there’s no reason to get them if people can get access to clean syringes — an incredibly cheap product,” Childs said.

Pence reversed his needle exchange stance — for now.

After Pence finally reversed his stance and instituted Scott County’s temporary exchange, four other Indiana counties followed suit, according to the Indianapolis Star.

The program has largely been a success. “Over the past year, the syringe exchange program in Scott County has had a tremendously positive and dramatic impact,” Dr. R. Kevin Rogers, Scott County’s health officer, told the Star. The county will extend the program through May 2017.

But a temporary needle exchange focuses too much on solving this specific outbreak, instead of instituting a permanent public health fix for those who are going to use drugs, Hannah Cooper, an associate professor at Rollins School of Public Health at Emory University, told HuffPost in 2015. Instead, she said, the county needs a permanent program.

“This is not a closed environment,” Cooper said of Scott County. “People can move freely. New infections will come in, and people need to be able to protect themselves.”

Pence’s public health record in Indiana seems to be out of the e******n spotlight ― a frustrating oversight, considering nearly 200 people contracted HIV while Pence twiddled his thumbs over harm reduction and de-emphasized public health spending.

So the question remains: Do we really want to see Pence’s public health judgement replicated on the national stage? Our collective health may depend on that answer.

Reply
Oct 6, 2016 22:58:34   #
ken hubert Loc: Missouri
 
nakkh wrote:
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/mike-pence-indiana-hiv_us_57f53b9be4b002a7312022ef
With the exception of a brief detour into Indiana Gov. Mike Pence’s (R) anti-a******n beliefs during the vice p**********l debate on Oct. 4, the night centered around foreign policy, not public health.

It’s a shame, since lackluster public health efforts are what led to the defining moment of Pence’s one-term Indiana governorship: a massive HIV outbreak spurred by public health funding cuts and Pence’s moralistic stance against needle exchanges.

A timeline of the HIV outbreak, the worst in state history, reads like a roadmap of what to do if you want to create a public health crisis.

Pence slashed state health spending.

Pence first laid the groundwork for Indiana’s HIV outbreak as a congressman back in 2011, when the House passed his amendment to defund Planned Parenthood. Then in 2013, Pence’s first year as governor of Indiana, Scott County’s one Planned Parenthood closed in the wake of public health spending cuts. Since that particular Planned Parenthood was also the county’s only HIV testing center, there was no longer a place for the county’s 24,000 residents to get tested.

Nearly 20 percent of Scott County residents live below the poverty line. Injection drug use there is a major problem, increasing the risk of HIV outbreak.

Fast-forward to 2015. Local health officials began to report HIV cases linked to intravenous prescription opioid use in Scott County. Scott County residents were sharing needles to inject their opioids, and nobody was getting tested.

The situation quickly spiraled out of control. At the height of the outbreak, 20 new cases of HIV were being diagnosed each week, reaching a total of nearly 200 cases by the time the outbreak was finally under control.

Pence was dangerously wrong about needle exchanges.

During that time, Pence d**gged his feet. Although the outbreak was identified in late January of 2015, it took Pence until April of that year to allow a temporary needle exchange in Scott County. It was a big shift for the governor, who was morally opposed to needle exchanges and believed they promoted drug use.

This position is dead wrong, according to health experts.

“People think that if you give someone a syringe, it means they’re going to go out and inject drugs, and if don’t give them syringes, they won’t inject drugs,” Robert Childs, executive director of the North Carolina Harm Reduction Coalition, told HuffPost in 2015.

“But the thing is that if you don’t give them syringes, they share them, and then people will start getting HIV and v***l hepatitis C.”

And beyond humanitarian or public health reasons, opposing harm reduction isn’t fiscally sound policy. “These are extremely costly diseases, and there’s no reason to get them if people can get access to clean syringes — an incredibly cheap product,” Childs said.

Pence reversed his needle exchange stance — for now.

After Pence finally reversed his stance and instituted Scott County’s temporary exchange, four other Indiana counties followed suit, according to the Indianapolis Star.

The program has largely been a success. “Over the past year, the syringe exchange program in Scott County has had a tremendously positive and dramatic impact,” Dr. R. Kevin Rogers, Scott County’s health officer, told the Star. The county will extend the program through May 2017.

But a temporary needle exchange focuses too much on solving this specific outbreak, instead of instituting a permanent public health fix for those who are going to use drugs, Hannah Cooper, an associate professor at Rollins School of Public Health at Emory University, told HuffPost in 2015. Instead, she said, the county needs a permanent program.

“This is not a closed environment,” Cooper said of Scott County. “People can move freely. New infections will come in, and people need to be able to protect themselves.”

Pence’s public health record in Indiana seems to be out of the e******n spotlight ― a frustrating oversight, considering nearly 200 people contracted HIV while Pence twiddled his thumbs over harm reduction and de-emphasized public health spending.

So the question remains: Do we really want to see Pence’s public health judgement replicated on the national stage? Our collective health may depend on that answer.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/mike-pence-ind... (show quote)


Poor Dirt. Still grasping at straws. Oh, that wasn't Dirt? Oh well, hard to tell the difference between two uneducated fools.

Reply
Oct 7, 2016 08:43:12   #
jaymatt Loc: Alexandria, Indiana
 
For the record, I am not a Pence fan; I v**ed against him in the last e******n.

That said, this post accusing Pence of an HIV outbreak might well be most ignorant post I've ever read. Whose Kool Aid have you been drinking? The worst part of this post is that some fool might actually believe you.

Reply
 
 
Oct 7, 2016 11:41:01   #
Twardlow Loc: Arkansas
 
nakkh wrote:
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/mike-pence-indiana-hiv_us_57f53b9be4b002a7312022ef
With the exception of a brief detour into Indiana Gov. Mike Pence’s (R) anti-a******n beliefs during the vice p**********l debate on Oct. 4, the night centered around foreign policy, not public health.

It’s a shame, since lackluster public health efforts are what led to the defining moment of Pence’s one-term Indiana governorship: a massive HIV outbreak spurred by public health funding cuts and Pence’s moralistic stance against needle exchanges.

A timeline of the HIV outbreak, the worst in state history, reads like a roadmap of what to do if you want to create a public health crisis.

Pence slashed state health spending.

Pence first laid the groundwork for Indiana’s HIV outbreak as a congressman back in 2011, when the House passed his amendment to defund Planned Parenthood. Then in 2013, Pence’s first year as governor of Indiana, Scott County’s one Planned Parenthood closed in the wake of public health spending cuts. Since that particular Planned Parenthood was also the county’s only HIV testing center, there was no longer a place for the county’s 24,000 residents to get tested.

Nearly 20 percent of Scott County residents live below the poverty line. Injection drug use there is a major problem, increasing the risk of HIV outbreak.

Fast-forward to 2015. Local health officials began to report HIV cases linked to intravenous prescription opioid use in Scott County. Scott County residents were sharing needles to inject their opioids, and nobody was getting tested.

The situation quickly spiraled out of control. At the height of the outbreak, 20 new cases of HIV were being diagnosed each week, reaching a total of nearly 200 cases by the time the outbreak was finally under control.

Pence was dangerously wrong about needle exchanges.

During that time, Pence d**gged his feet. Although the outbreak was identified in late January of 2015, it took Pence until April of that year to allow a temporary needle exchange in Scott County. It was a big shift for the governor, who was morally opposed to needle exchanges and believed they promoted drug use.

This position is dead wrong, according to health experts.

“People think that if you give someone a syringe, it means they’re going to go out and inject drugs, and if don’t give them syringes, they won’t inject drugs,” Robert Childs, executive director of the North Carolina Harm Reduction Coalition, told HuffPost in 2015.

“But the thing is that if you don’t give them syringes, they share them, and then people will start getting HIV and v***l hepatitis C.”

And beyond humanitarian or public health reasons, opposing harm reduction isn’t fiscally sound policy. “These are extremely costly diseases, and there’s no reason to get them if people can get access to clean syringes — an incredibly cheap product,” Childs said.

Pence reversed his needle exchange stance — for now.

After Pence finally reversed his stance and instituted Scott County’s temporary exchange, four other Indiana counties followed suit, according to the Indianapolis Star.

The program has largely been a success. “Over the past year, the syringe exchange program in Scott County has had a tremendously positive and dramatic impact,” Dr. R. Kevin Rogers, Scott County’s health officer, told the Star. The county will extend the program through May 2017.

But a temporary needle exchange focuses too much on solving this specific outbreak, instead of instituting a permanent public health fix for those who are going to use drugs, Hannah Cooper, an associate professor at Rollins School of Public Health at Emory University, told HuffPost in 2015. Instead, she said, the county needs a permanent program.

“This is not a closed environment,” Cooper said of Scott County. “People can move freely. New infections will come in, and people need to be able to protect themselves.”

Pence’s public health record in Indiana seems to be out of the e******n spotlight ― a frustrating oversight, considering nearly 200 people contracted HIV while Pence twiddled his thumbs over harm reduction and de-emphasized public health spending.

So the question remains: Do we really want to see Pence’s public health judgement replicated on the national stage? Our collective health may depend on that answer.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/mike-pence-ind... (show quote)


Pretty scary stuff!

The man manipulates politics to fit his religion, without religious compassion.

Reply
Oct 7, 2016 11:42:17   #
Twardlow Loc: Arkansas
 
jaymatt wrote:
For the record, I am not a Pence fan; I v**ed against him in the last e******n.

That said, this post accusing Pence of an HIV outbreak might well be most ignorant post I've ever read. Whose Kool Aid have you been drinking? The worst part of this post is that some fool might actually believe you.


I believed it. What part of his post is in error? Perhaps I should re-think.

Reply
Oct 7, 2016 12:28:03   #
ken hubert Loc: Missouri
 
Twardlow wrote:
I believed it. What part of his post is in error? Perhaps I should re-think.


You mean you should START thinking. We wont hold our breath waiting.

Reply
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