94-13324. Pediatric and Adolescent AIDS Awareness Week, 1994  

  • [Federal Register Volume 59, Number 103 (Tuesday, May 31, 1994)]
    [Presidential Documents]
    [Pages 27963-27964]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 94-13324]
    
    
    [[Page Unknown]]
    
    [Federal Register: May 31, 1994]
    
    
    
    
                            Presidential Documents 
    
    
    Federal Register
    Vol. 59, No. 103
    Tuesday, May 31, 1994
    
    ____________________________________________________________________
    
    Title 3--
    The President
                    Proclamation 6694 of May 25, 1994
    
     
    
    Pediatric and Adolescent AIDS Awareness Week, 
                    1994
    
                    By the President of the United States of America
    
                    A Proclamation
    
                    Ten thousand children in the United States today are 
                    living with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Ten 
                    million children worldwide will become infected with 
                    HIV before the millennium. Over 5,000 cases of 
                    pediatric AIDS and 1,500 cases of AIDS in adolescents 
                    ages 13 through 19 have been reported in this country 
                    alone. The tragedy is magnified for our youth, as the 
                    epidemic reaches far beyond those actually infected--it 
                    will leave up to 125,000 children and teenagers 
                    orphaned in this country by the end of this decade. By 
                    the year 2000, AIDS will be one of the five leading 
                    causes of death among American children ages one to 
                    four.
    
                    It is agonizing to watch our young suffer and die. It 
                    is all the more painful because we have been frustrated 
                    thus far in our efforts to find a cure. But we must not 
                    give up hope nor stand by idly. With hard work, we will 
                    find that cure. Moreover, HIV and AIDS are preventable. 
                    Americans can stop AIDS with targeted, linguistically 
                    specific, and culturally based prevention education for 
                    people in all age groups. If we are to overcome the HIV 
                    epidemic, communities must address difficult and 
                    controversial issues surrounding sexuality, drug abuse, 
                    and health care delivery.
    
                    The effects of infection by HIV are different in 
                    children than in adults. Infected infants get sicker 
                    faster, their immune systems may deteriorate more 
                    rapidly, and treatments that are helpful to adults may 
                    not be helpful for children.
    
                    It is imperative to continue the research now being 
                    done to study ways to prevent transmission of HIV from 
                    mother to infant. We must also develop and refine 
                    treatments that increase the survival time and quality 
                    of life of HIV-infected infants, children, and 
                    adolescents.
    
                    As a people, we must see to it that those among us 
                    living with HIV and AIDS are allowed to enjoy 
                    productive lives for as long as possible. We must put 
                    aside our differences and recognize the necessity of 
                    working together to defeat our common enemy--HIV. I 
                    challenge all Americans to join the fight. And we must 
                    educate people about the true nature of HIV so that the 
                    discrimination and fear born of ignorance and 
                    translated into ostracism and discrimination can be 
                    stopped.
    
                    Many communities across the country have already 
                    realized the grave dangers posed to our society by HIV 
                    and have responded by reaching out to battle the 
                    disease. More people must become involved now, or many 
                    more lives will be needlessly lost. This 
                    Administration, through the Office of National AIDS 
                    Policy and its Cabinet agencies, has joined with 
                    community-based AIDS organizations, families, 
                    businesses, professional associations, churches, 
                    schools, and universities to fight HIV and AIDS. Early 
                    intervention and educational resources must be made 
                    available, especially to youth and other high-risk 
                    groups. One in five of all reported AIDS cases is 
                    diagnosed in the 20-29 year old age group, meaning that 
                    these people were adolescents when they became 
                    infected.
    
                    The single most important step taken by my 
                    Administration in the fight against HIV and AIDS is the 
                    introduction to the Congress of the Health Security Act 
                    of 1993. All people living with HIV and AIDS, 
                    especially our children, must often fight not only the 
                    disease, but also a health care system likely to deny 
                    them coverage in their moment of greatest need. This 
                    Administration is absolutely committed to ensuring 
                    every American adequate health care coverage that will 
                    never be taken away. To do any less in a nation as 
                    resourceful as ours would be unacceptable.
    
                    Remembering that every person living with HIV and AIDS 
                    is someone's child, we must work together tirelessly to 
                    find a cure. We must distribute our human and financial 
                    resources across the Nation to strengthen and expand 
                    programs for HIV and AIDS education, treatment, 
                    research, and prevention.
    
                    We can stop the terrible harvest of children and 
                    adolescents wrought by HIV and AIDS. Working together 
                    we have the power to stop this plague.
    
                    NOW, THEREFORE, I, WILLIAM J. CLINTON, President of the 
                    United States of America, by virtue of the authority 
                    vested in me by the Constitution and laws of the United 
                    States, do hereby proclaim the week of May 29 through 
                    June 4, 1994, as Pediatric and Adolescent AIDS 
                    Awareness Week. I call on the people of America, the 
                    Governors of the 50 States and the Commonwealth of 
                    Puerto Rico, the Mayor of the District of Columbia, and 
                    officials of other areas under the flag of the United 
                    States of America, to join with me in the continuing 
                    fight against HIV and AIDS and to remember especially 
                    during this week children and young people living with 
                    HIV and AIDS and their families.
    
                    IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand this 
                    twenty-fifth day of May, in the year of our Lord 
                    nineteen hundred and ninety-four, and of the 
                    Independence of the United States of America the two 
                    hundred and eighteenth.
    
                        (Presidential Sig.)>
    
    [FR Doc. 94-13324
    Filed 5-26-94; 2:40 pm]
    Billing code 3195-01-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
05/31/1994
Department:
Executive Office of the President
Entry Type:
Presidential Document
Document Type:
Proclamation
Document Number:
94-13324
Pages:
27963-27964 (2 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Federal Register: May 31, 1994
EOCitation:
of 1994-05-25