POZ - April #143 : Mailbox-April 2008
Subscribe to:
POZ magazine E-newsletters
POZ Personals Sign In / Join
Username:
Password:

Back to home » Archives » POZ Magazine issues




Table of Contents


Just Add Water

Sweet Home Alabama




Halftime Show

Late Date

One... Two... C

Playing the Circuit

Who's Your Caddy?

New Med in Town

The Wire

Micro Managing

Tax and Tip




No Fly Zone

Male Call

Dummy Up, Mom

Show Girl

Enchanted

French Fried

Disco Disclosure

Eco Chamber

It's Raining Rihanna

Trump's HIV Apprentice

Caribbean Queen

On-the-Job Training

Choke Hold




Mailbox-April 2008

Editor's Letter--April 2008

The NAPWA/TAEP HIV/AIDS Policy Report-April 2008



 
Most Talked About

AIDS: Not a Heterosexual Disease? (46)

The Greatest Gay Rights Battle of Our Time (Blog) (19)

Lambda Legal Responds to HIV Spitting Conviction (19)

Ready to Quit? The Risks and Rewards of a Potent Smoking-Cessation Drug (17)

Mandatory HIV Tests Before Marriage? (15)

Most Popular Lessons

Herpes Simplex Virus

Syphilis & Neurosyphilis

Shingles

The HIV Life Cycle

Human Papilloma Virus (HPV)

Treatments for Opportunistic Infections (OIs)


NEW! Scroll down to comment on this story.


emailrssprint

April 2008


Mailbox-April 2008

Letters from readers.

Romancing Stone

I cannot agree more with Sharon Stone (“Precious Stone,” December 2007). As Stone points out, more and more Americans have no insurance, including us living with HIV/AIDS. Without insurance, access to lifesaving medications becomes very limited. Often you are placed on waiting lists to obtain free medications, and the waits can be long. In addition, more and more funds for HIV/AIDS are being cut. The lack of medical insurance is a crisis in the U.S., but nothing is being done. It appears all the major financial support is focused on Africa.

José
Miami


I enjoyed your article “Precious Stone” and the words of Ms. Stone. She cuts through, with chilling bravery, the reality that today’s HIV-positive status is ultimately a death sentence that needs to be recognized as such. Without that recognition, complacency will dominate and loss will touch us all.

Since all life ends with death, how we live is the challenge, the quality and the beauty of life. I thank POZ for bringing Ms. Stone’s quality and beauty to our attention and to Ms. Stone, I say thank you and bravo!

Pelli Wheaton
Stockton, NJ


Your article on Sharon Stone’s AIDS fund-raising efforts was a rare gem. When I see a glamorous, high-profile movie star like Ms. Stone take center stage on our behalf, it makes me less afraid and less ashamed. She has chosen raising children and giving back to the community over a self-indulgent lifestyle. It’s all about making positive choices.

Michael Murphy
Boston

Gone Fishin’

Thank you for the very inspirational story “Northern Disclosure” (December 2007). I have been positive since 1991, and I was only 26 at the time of my diagnosis. Your story [about fishing in Alaska] reminded me of the times hat I went fishing with my grandfather. I hadn’t thought about that in years.

You made me smile today.
Tommy
Montgomery, AL


I’d like to think that one could feel “strong” without subjecting another living thing [such as a fish] to pain for sport. I think I’ll stick to photography and other creative (rather than destructive) outlets for strength, personally.

David
New York City


Conspiracy Theory

Why would the government or anybody want to find a cure (“Suspicious Minds,” December 2007)? There is too much money for pharmaceutical shareholders and stockholders to lose out on. Think about it. If they had cures for most illnesses, they would lose out on billions of dollars. Heck, there is no cure for the common cold, yet people spend billions of dollars on over-the-counter drugs. These people want you to be sick or they wouldn’t have a job.

Todd
Via the Web


Corrections: In “Hot Dates,” November 2007 POZ, we stated that 89 percent of the $250,000 in funding pledged by Bristol Myers-Squibb to the National AIDS Fund to prevent HIV and help those in need would go to the community. One hundred percent of those funds were given to support people living with HIV/AIDS.

Regarding “The South Shall Rise Again,” November 2007 POZ: The National AIDS Fund (NAF) has been supported by grants of $1.55 million from the Ford Foundation and $250,000 from the Elton John AIDS Foundation—to provide a total of $1.8 million dollars that the NAF allocated in “Southern REACH” grants to nine states in the American South.


NEW! Scroll down to comment on this story.

emailrssprint


Name: (2-50 characters)
Email: (will not show)
City: (optional)

Comment (500 characters left):

(Note: The POZ team review all comments before they are posted. Please do not include either ":" or "@" in your comment.)

| Posting Rules

Previous Comments:

  comments 1 - 1 (of 1 total)    

Rick Kennedy, Toronto, 2008-03-25 18:27:32
In Canada our Federal Government is diverting dollars from HIV, prevention, education and support services in the community to support research for the vaccine initiative. Promised funding has been cut by as much as 30%. Canadians are mounting a national postcard campaign to protest the cuts, with the slogan "cutting funding=cutting lives." You can learn more about the cuts, the debates in Canada's Parliament and how to support the postcard campaign at www.increaseaidsfunding.ca.

comments 1 - 1 (of 1 total)    

[Go to top]
Get Started
Get Answers
What to do if you've just been diagnosed
How to find a support system
Things you should know before starting treatment
How to handle side effects and other concerns
How to tell someone you have HIV/AIDS

Talk to Us
Weekly Poll
Question: Do you believe that teachers and school administration need to know if any of their students are HIV positive?
Yes
No

Monthly Poll
Question: Which of the following best explains why the AIDS epidemic is disproportionately affecting the African-American community?
Early prevention campaigns were geared toward gay white men
Since HIV is considered manageable, people are less concerned about contracting it
A history of social inequality--institutionalized racism, sexism, classism and homophobia
African Americans' disproportionate access to health care and treatment
Denial/stigma around HIV/AIDS
Mainstream hip-hop's lyrics that perpetuate a culture of unprotected sex and disrespect of women.

Surveys
Do you think shopping for HIV-related products is a form of activism?

How do you see America's place in the global AIDS epidemic?

more surveys  
[ about Smart + Strong | about POZ | POZ advisory board | partner links | advertise/contact us | site map]
© 2008 Smart + Strong. All Rights Reserved. Terms of use and Your privacy