PHR’s senior global health policy adviser, Eric Friedman had a powerful letter in yesterday’s New York Times about President Obama’s FY10 budget announcement last week:
President Obama plans to backtrack from a campaign pledge on significantly increased global AIDS financing. Planned increases for other areas in global health, while welcome, fall far short of the investments required to achieve the United Nations Millennium Development Goals despite the president’s express commitment to them.
The greater investment in global health must scale up funding for the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) to meet the levels authorized by Congress last year in the PEPFAR reauthorization. Congress authorized $48 billion for PEPFAR over five years with the goals of treating at least 3 million people with HIV, preventing 12 million new infections, caring for 12 million people, including 5 million orphans and vulnerable children, and training and retaining at least 140,000 new health workers.
Health Action AIDS Advisor Dr. Wendy Johnson also responded, with a letter to the Seattle Times.
During the two years I spent working in Mozambique, I saw the deep gratitude of Africans across the continent toward the people of the U.S. for their commitment and solidarity. The repercussions of this broken promise could reverberate for years, potentially wiping out many of the hard-won gains of the past five years.
PHR was also disappointed at the Obama administration’s inaction on syringe exchange funding with the FY10 budget release. Paola Barahona, senior global health policy advocate of PHR, spoke to the San Francisco Chronicle.
We hoped that the president would seize the first opportunity for lifting federal restrictions on this life-saving prevention strategy.
President Obama has repeatedly expressed his support for lifting the ban; he pledged during the campaign, the transition and after the Inauguration to take action on this issue.
PHR worked to secure provisions in the PEPFAR reauthorization to address health care worker shortages, to integrate HIV/AIDS care into women’s health programs and to support evidence-based HIV prevention programs and looks forward to working with the Office of the Global AIDS Coordinator to implement these initiatives.

[...] for the Bad Obama argument see this post on the PHR Blog. Finally, for another perspective read this evaluation on the Easterly Aid Watch blog: World Bank [...]
[...] And for a different take on AIDS Funding (there isn’t enough) see the PHR blog [...]