Jirair Ratevosian | |
---|---|
Born | 1980 (age 43–44) Los Angeles, California, U.S. |
Alma mater | University of California, Los Angeles Boston University School of Public Health Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health |
Political party | Democratic |
Website | jirairforca |
Jirair Ratevosian (born 1980) is an American policy advisor specializing in global health and human rights who served as the acting chief of staff to the United States Global AIDS Coordinator from 2022 to 2023. Ratevosian was previously a legislative director to U.S. representative Barbara Lee.
Ratevosian was born in 1980 in Hollywood, Los Angeles, to a Lebanese mother and Armenian father. [1] His mother was born and raised in Lebanon until immigrating to the United States in 1976 due to the Lebanese Civil War. [2] Ratevosian's father was born in Siberia as a result of his paternal grandfather being sent there due to his anti-communist activism in the Armenian Soviet Socialist Republic. [2] He was named after his paternal grandfather, Jirair, who was a shoe cobbler, community organizer, and small business owner. [1] [3] His parents met in Hollywood. [2] His mother worked at McDonald's and his father was a banker. [2]
Ratevosian was raised in Sun Valley, Los Angeles. [1] [4] At 15 years old, he started his first job scooping ice cream at Baskin-Robbins. [3] He earned a bachelor's degree in physiology and political science at the University of California, Los Angeles in 2003. [1] [2] [5] Ratevosian completed a two-year medical postbaccalaureate program through University of California, San Francisco. [2] Influenced by a 2004 trip to South Africa where he witnessed the HIV/AIDS epidemic, he decided to pursue public health. In 2007, he completed a M.P.H. at the Boston University School of Public Health. [1] [6]
Following his graduation from Boston University, Ratevosian worked with the Boston Public Health Commission on HIV funding. [6] He worked as a national field organizer for the health action AIDS campaign of the Physicians for Human Rights. [6] He later became the deputy director of public policy of amfAR and worked on its syringe access programs. [6]
In May 2011, Ratevosian joined the office of U.S. representative Barbara Lee as a legislative director. [2] [6] He led budget, appropriations, and the reauthorization of President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) in 2013. [7] In August 2014, Ratevosian joined Gilead Sciences as its government affairs director. [2] [6] He led corporate social responsibility and partnership relations. [7]
During the presidential transition of Joe Biden, Ratevosian served as a policy advisor on national security, COVID-19, and global health. [7] [3] In August 2021, he joined the Office of the United States Global AIDS Coordinator (S/GAC) as a senior advisor for health equity policy. [7] [8] In 2022, he became the acting chief of staff to the Global AIDS Coordinator John Nkengasong. [7] In that role, Ratevosian assisted Nkengasong with strategic planning, hiring, policy development, and other front office management issues. [7] He departed PEPFAR in early 2023. [8] In 2023, Ratevosian earned a DrPH with a concentration in public healthy policy at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. [3]
Ratevosian was a Democratic candidate in the 2024 California's 30th congressional district election. [9] He has noted that some in Los Angeles' Armenian community were unhappy about his being an openly gay Armenian. Ultimately, he finished 9th out of 15 candidates in the primary election. [10]
Ratevosian has proposed an American Dream Act which contains aspects of Medicare for All, a Green New Deal, and canceling student debt. He has also promised that 25% of all his earmark requests as a Member of Congress will go towards affordable housing. [11]
He supports the Ceasefire Now movement and has drawn parallels to his own lived experience as an Armenian American. [12]
Ratevosian considers himself a progressive. He is pro-LGBTQ+ and has proposed a Gay Agenda for Congress to protect the rights of LGBTQ+ individuals. [13]
In a 2024 op-ed cowritten with Laura Friedman, Ratevosian noted that "LGBTQI individuals who also belong to ethnic minority communities, such as Black, Latino, Asian, or Armenian, face disproportionate systemic injustices. They often find themselves at the crossroads of multiple forms of discrimination." [14]
Ratevosian came out as gay in 2014. [2] In January 2020, he met Micheal Ighodaro, the director of global Policy advocacy at the Prevention Access Campaign. [2] Ighodaro is a gay Nigerian from Benin City who was granted asylum. [2] [5] They married on October 9, 2023 in a ceremony at St. Michael's Episcopal Church in Manhattan. [5] As of 2023 [update] , Ratevosian resides in Burbank, California. [2]
The AIDS epidemic, caused by HIV, found its way to the United States between the 1970s and 1980s, but was first noticed after doctors discovered clusters of Kaposi's sarcoma and pneumocystis pneumonia in homosexual men in Los Angeles, New York City, and San Francisco in 1981. Treatment of HIV/AIDS is primarily via the use of multiple antiretroviral drugs, and education programs to help people avoid infection.
The United States President's Emergency Plan For AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) is the global health funding by the United States to address the global HIV/AIDS epidemic and help save the lives of those suffering from the disease. The U.S. allocation of over $110 billion marks the largest investment by any country has ever made towards combating a single disease. Launched by U.S. President George W. Bush in 2003, as of May 2020, PEPFAR has provided cumulative funding for HIV/AIDS treatment, prevention, and research since its inception, making it the largest global health program focused on a single disease in history until the COVID-19 pandemic. PEPFAR is implemented by a combination of U.S. government agencies in over 50 countries and overseen by the Global AIDS Coordinator at the United States Department of State. As of 2023, PEPFAR has saved over 25 million lives, primarily in sub-Saharan Africa.
AIDS Healthcare Foundation (AHF) is a Los Angeles-based 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization that provides HIV/AIDS prevention, treatment, and advocacy services. As of 2024, AHF operates about 400 clinics, 69 outpatient healthcare centers, 62 pharmacies, and 22 Out of the Closet thrift stores across 15 U.S. states, Washington, D.C., Puerto Rico, and 46 countries, with over 5,000 employees, and provides care to more than two million patients. The organization's aim is to end the AIDS epidemic by ensuring access to quality healthcare, including HIV and STD testing, prescription of medications like Pre-exposure Prophylaxis (PrEP), and referrals to specialty pharmacies. AHF is the largest provider of PrEP in the United States, though its founder Michael Weinstein has received criticism for his past opposition to the drug.
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Eric Goosby is an American public health official, currently serving as Professor of Medicine and Director of the Center for Global Health Delivery, Diplomacy and Economics, Institute for Global Health Sciences at University of California, San Francisco. Dr. Goosby previously served as the UN Special Envoy on Tuberculosis as well as previously served as the United States Global AIDS Coordinator from 2009 until mid-November 2013. In the role, Goosby directed the U.S. strategy for addressing HIV around the world and led President Obama's implementation of the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR). Goosby was sworn in during June 2009 and resigned in November 2013, taking a position as a professor at UCSF, where he directs the Center for Global Health Delivery and Diplomacy, a collaboration between UCSF and the University of California, Berkeley.
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