Our timeline: past and future
The following is a summary of events provided by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. For further information, visit CDC.gov.
June 5, 1981
Dec. 10, 1981
Bobbi Campbell becomes the first Kaposi Sarcoma patient to go public, writing a newspaper column on living with “gay cancer”.
Dec. 31, 1981
There is a cumulative total of 270 reported cases, including 121 deaths, of severe immune deficiency among gay men.
June 4, 1982
Sept. 24, 1982
Jan. 7, 1983
Feb. 1983
March, 1983
The CDC announces that injection drug use is a leading cause of AIDS transmission in the United States.
May 18, 1983
May 1984
Community-based AIDS service organizations join together to form AIDS Action, a national organization in Washington, D.C., to advocate on behalf of people and communities affected by the epidemic, to educate the federal government, and to help shape AIDS-related policy and legislation.
July 13, 1984
Aug. 27, 1985
Oct. 24, 1986
March 19, 1987
1988
Senator Jesse Helms equates syringe services programs with a federal endorsement of drug use and leads Congress to enact a prohibition on the use of federal funds for such programs.
The National AIDS Fund was founded in 1988. We’ve spent the decades since supporting community-driven efforts to combat the HIV epidemic across the country. From the beginning, we recognized and focused on the most disproportionately affected populations, including gay and bisexual men, communities of color, women and people living in the South.
Aug. 18, 1990
1995
A panel convened by the United States Institute of Medicine recommends that the U.S. government lift the ban on funding syringe services programs, finding that syringe services programs are effective at reducing rates of HIV while not contributing to an increase in drug use. A review by the CDC reaches a similar conclusion.
June 27, 1995
Oct. 31, 1995
Jan. 1, 1996
April 1997
April 24, 1998
Feb. 7, 2001
Jan. 2004
Jan. 2004
2006
Dr. Julio Montaner pioneers the concept of treatment as prevention, or TasP.
July 25, 2008
2009
2010
Jan. 4, 2010
2011
July 3, 2012
July 16, 2012
March 4, 2014
PARTNER 1 study reports no one with an undetectable viral load can transmit HIV. The study included 44,000 times a couple where one person was living with HIV and the other was not had sex without a condom.
2015
Feb. 25, 2015
Oct. 19, 2016
Dr. Carl Dieffenbach and the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases at the National Institutes of Health confirm undetectable=untransmittable or U=U.