Community organizations laud new supports to help combat rising HIV rates in Manitoba - Action News
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Manitoba

Community organizations laud new supports to help combat rising HIV rates in Manitoba

The Manitoba government announced new supports for HIV care on Friday, coinciding with World AIDS Day including the creation of an Indigenous-led mobile service for homeless Manitobans and a research grant in memory of a doctor who treatedHIV/AIDS patients at the height of the crisis.

Infection rates doubled between 2018-22, with record number last year, says Manitoba HIV Program

A politician in a maroon suite and white shirt speaks into a microphone.
Manitoba Health Minister Uzoma Asagwara announces a range of funding and program commitments at the legislature on Friday, meant to help stem the spread of HIV in the province. (Trevor Brine/CBC)

The Manitoba government announced new supports for HIV care on Friday, coinciding with World AIDS Day including the creation of an Indigenous-led mobile service for homeless Manitobans and a research grant in memory of a doctor who treatedHIV/AIDS patients at the height of the crisis.

The provincecommitted $527,000 toward the Manitoba HIV Program this year and $271,000 for a mobile care service run by the Aboriginal Health and Wellness Centre.

The funding comes on the heels of a record number of ManitobaHIV diagnoses last year.

Some Manitobans withHIV "face multiple barriers, whether it's stigma, mental health, health-care access challenges, lack of adequate housing,"Health Minister Uzoma Asagwarasaid during a news conference at the legislature.

"We must work together to eliminate thebarriers and support Manitobans living with HIV/AIDS."

They said the suite of new supports are meant to help curb the spread of HIV and sexually transmitted diseases inManitoba, which has some of the highest ratesin the country.

One way public health hopes to do that is throughResearch Manitoba, which willlaunch a postdoctoral fellowship focused on HIV/AIDS research next February, named in honour of Dr. Richard (Dick) Smith.

Dr. Smith, a recent Order of Manitoba recipient for his decades of work treating patients in the LGBTQ community, died last monthat age80.

"In a time of extreme stigma, Dr. Smith provided care and compassion when no one else would," Asagwara said. "His legacy and advocacy lives on."

Manitoba's rate 5 times national average

The rate of new diagnoses "has been dramatically increasingly" and more than doubled over five years, according to the latest data from Manitoba Health for 2022.

Last year had the highest number of cases detected in Manitoba's history. The provincial rate of HIV is nearly five times the Canadian average, said Manitoba HIV Program lead Kimberly Templeton.

There were 196 newly diagnosed cases last yeara 36 per cent increase from the 144 new cases in 2021. There were also 60 people living with HIV who moved to Manitoba, bringing the total to256, according to the program.

Nine Circles Community Health Centre and the Manitoba HIV Program say theyidentified 135 newly diagnosed cases in the first six months of this year.

A man with short hair, a beard and glasses speaks to a reporter.
Mike Payne is executive director of Nine Circles Community Health Centre. (Trevor Brine/CBC)

At this rate, there could be more than 300cases by year's end, said Nine Circles executive director Mike Payne.

"If we don't do anything meaningful now we will see those rates of HIV continue to climb up to potentially 500 next year, 800 in years beyond that," said Payne, who said the province'scommitment to work with community groups is "essential" to stemming the spread.

Payne hopes the new provincial plans include "lowering the cost barrier"topre-exposure prophylaxis, commonly known as PrEP, which prevents HIV infections. It was added to the provincial formulary two years ago.

Templetonsaid the demographics in Manitoba's HIV/AIDS cases differfrom other provinces, with higher rates of infection in heterosexual people, women and people who use injection drugs like methamphetamine.

Elsewhere in Canada, HIV is more likely to impact gay, bisexual and other men who have sex with men, she said.

A woman with long hair, glasses and a black blazer speaks into a microphone
Kim Templeton, program lead of the Manitoba HIV Program, applauded the range of HIV/AIDS commitments by the province as part of World AIDS Day on Friday. (Trevor Brine/CBC)

Indigenous people in Manitoba are disproportionately impacted by HIV, she said, "due to the ongoing impacts of colonization, structural racism and inter-generational trauma."

There's also a growing rate of people testing positive who aren't getting care, she said.

A "significant" investmentacross multiple sectorsis needed for "evidence-based strategies in HIV prevention, testing and treatment, with Indigenous leadership and collaboration at the forefront," Templeton said.

She said she is encouraged by the "openness" of the new government to do those things.

Asagwara said the province will partner with provincewide local and Indigenous-led organizations committed to preventing, treating and stemming the spread of HIV/AIDS and other sexually transmitted and blood-borne infections.

That includes moresupport for culturally informed care throughthe non-profit Ka Ni Kanichihk.

The new mobile service run through Aboriginal Health and Wellness Centrewill target homeless and precariously housed people living with HIV, sexually transmitted or blood-borne infections, and other chronic health issues. It will also connect those people with housing, community and cultural programming, as well as mental health and harm reduction supports.

A woman with a bob and dark-framed glasses speaks into a microphone.
Colleen Ottertail is director of primary care for Aboriginal Health and Wellness. (Trevor Brine/CBC)

"Some of these people haven't had a chance to be in the health-care system, and when they are they aren't treated very well, so we will bring our services to them," saidColleen Ottertail, director of primary care for Aboriginal Health and Wellness.

The province is also partnering withthe Program to Access Treatment for HIV and Support, or PATHS, which provides outreach care to people living with HIV/AIDS who face barriers to treatment.

Asagwara said that will begin with the creation of interdisciplinary teams in Winnipeg, which could expand to Brandon and Thompson, to help people who aren't plugged in to the care system better manage their symptoms.

The province also plans to hire staff focused on keeping in touch with people who test positive for asexually transmitted or blood-borne infection, the health minister said.

With files from Zubina Ahmed