Miscellaneous
GW administrator reflects on HIV/AIDS epidemic
Dr. Jeffrey Akman to become honorary chair of administrative medicine


Dr. Jeffrey Akman, dean of George Washington University School of Medicine and Health Sciences. (Photo courtesy of George Washington University School of Medicine and Health Sciences.)
A prominent figure in the fight against HIV/AIDS in D.C. will formally become the honorary chair of administrative medicine at George Washington University next week.
Dr. Jeffrey Akman on Oct. 23 will be formally confirmed as the Bloedorn Chair of Administrative Medicine named in honor of former George Washington University School of Medicine Dean Walter Bloedorn who held the position from 1939-1957. Bloedorn also served as the George Washington University Hospital Medical Director from 1932-1957.
This appointment comes less than a year after the GW Board of Trustees appointed Akman as the vice president for health affairs and the dean of the George Washington University School of Medicine and Health Sciences.
“To me it’s the best job I could ever have,” Akman told the Washington Blade during a recent interview.
A native of Baltimore, Akman enrolled in the GW doctoral program in 1977 after he graduated from Duke University.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in 1981 reported the first cases of what became known as AIDS — Akman graduated from GW’s M.D. program the same year. D.C. health officials observed the first known AIDS case in the city in 1983.
“We were really not prepared in terms of medical knowledge at that time,” Akman, who was a psychiatry resident at GW in 1983, recalled. “[We] really became aware of these young gay men coming into our hospital with this unknown awful illness that people were dying from very rapidly. I was just compelled to go into their rooms and sit and talk to them and find out what was going on.”
Researchers did not discover an AIDS anti-body test until 1985, but doctors in the Dupont Circle area soon began to refer their patients with the virus to GW Hospital once they diagnosed them with the virus after they came down with pneumocystis pneumonia, Kaposi’s sarcoma or what Akman described as “some awful opportunistic infection.”
Akman said a significant portion of his work at the time was talking with his patients about death and dying, AIDS-related dementia and the stigma and fear and anxiety associated with the virus. He also began to receive referrals from infectious disease experts and other D.C. doctors as the number of people with AIDS continued to grow.
Some of Akman’s friends were also living with AIDS.
“We as a medical center we were incredibly responsive,” he told the Blade, discussing stories of doctors refusing to treat people with the virus and nurses and other hospital staff leaving trays of food outside the rooms of their patients with AIDS that emerged at the time. “That really was not the case here. There was a lot of work done internally… we really felt very good and had very strong connections in the community.”
Akman: I lost ‘a lot of friends’ to AIDS
Akman began to volunteer at Whitman-Walker Clinic in the mid-1980s as the epidemic in D.C. and elsewhere continued to expand. He served on the organization’s board of directors for 10 years – and he was president of it when Whitman-Walker opened the Elizabeth Taylor Medical Center on 14th Street, N.W., in 1993.
Akman’s late partner, Steven Dixon, who was a physician and a fellow GW alum, chaired some of the organization’s first AIDS Walks. He and Akman also supported Food and Friends.
“I lost a lot of friends during the time,” Akman told the Blade. “All of us in our way kept lists of who died. We were caregivers. We were building a community response. We were fundraising.”
Fight against AIDS in D.C. is ‘moving in the right direction’
Akman, who is a member of the D.C. Mayor’s Commission on HIV/AIDS, spoke to the Blade a day after city officials released an annual report that documents the epidemic in the nation’s capital.
The report noted 15,056 D.C. residents – or 2.4 percent of Washingtonians – were living with HIV at the end of 2011. Men who have sex with men and heterosexual sexual contact were the two leading modes of transmission among newly diagnosed HIV cases, but the report found they decreased 46 percent from 2007.
The report also found the number of HIV/AIDS-related deaths in D.C. dropped from 425 in 2007 to 251 in 2011. And 80 percent of those who learned they were living with the virus in 2011 were linked to care within three months of their diagnosis.
“My sense is that we’re moving in the right direction,” Akman said. “The numbers of are definitely improving.”
Akman applauded the way he says D.C. Mayor Vincent Gray has focused on getting people with HIV into treatment, expanding testing, training health care providers and ensuring there is not a waiting list in the nation’s capital for people who seek access to anti-retroviral drugs. He also praised the way former D.C. mayors responded to the epidemic within the context of the information, research and other resources that were available to them at the time.
“It feels like we’re turning the corner in the District of Columbia,” Akman said. “We’ve still got work to do, but the trends are all looking good.”
HIV/AIDS service providers with whom Akman worked applauded his recent appointment and his advocacy on behalf of people with the virus in D.C.
“Through his leadership of Whitman-Walker’s board of directors in the early 1990s, we witnessed firsthand his strong clinical leadership, his unwavering commitment to fighting HIV/AIDS in D.C. and his tremendous compassion for those most in need of high-quality health care,” Whitman-Walker CEO Don Blanchon told the Blade. “He is a servant leader in every sense of the word.”
“Jeff is a strong consensus builder on this campus, dedicated to the GW community and is committed to defining the future of medicine here at GW,” GW Hospital CEO Barry Wolfman said in a January press release that announced Akman’s appointment as the vice president for health affairs and dean of the university’s School of Medicine and Health Services
D.C. Councilmember Jim Graham (D-Ward 1), who was executive director of Whitman-Walker at the time Akman was president of the organization’s board, also applauded his appointment.
“This is somebody who is so substantive and so talented when he was a volunteer at Whitman-Walker,” Graham told the Blade. “He was a major player for us and was really so experienced and smart.”
Akman was the assistant dean for student educational policies at the GW School of Medicine and Health Sciences from 1991-2000. He chaired the university’s Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences from 2000-2010.
Akman told the Blade his new position allows him to continue the fight against HIV/AIDS he joined more than three decades ago.
“It gives me a brand new platform to deal with HIV/AIDS,” he said. “It’s a new platform for me to bring the school’s resources to bare.”
Miscellaneous
Stephen Miller’s legal group sues Fairfax County schools
Lawsuit challenges policies for transgender, nonbinary students

Former Trump administration official Stephen Miller’s legal group on Tuesday filed a lawsuit against the Fairfax County School District over its policies for transgender and nonbinary students.
America First Legal in a press release notes it filed the lawsuit against the school district on behalf of a female, “practicing Roman Catholic” student “for allowing teenage boys to use the female restrooms and for forcing a radical, government-sponsored gender indoctrination and approved-speech scheme that discriminates against students on the basis of sex and religion and violates their free speech rights under the Virginia Constitution.”
The lawsuit was filed in Fairfax County Circuit Court.
The Virginia Department of Education last July announced new guidelines for trans and nonbinary students for which Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin asked. Equality Virginia and other advocacy groups claim they, among other things, would forcibly out trans and nonbinary students.
Fairfax County schools are among the school districts that have refused to implement the guidelines.
“Fairfax County Public Schools appears to believe that its policies and regulations can override the Virginia Constitution’s protections for religious beliefs, speech and from government discrimination on the basis of sex and religious beliefs,” said America First legal Senior Advisor Ian Prior in a press release. “It is well past time for FCPS to stop sacrificing the constitutional rights of its students so that it can implement a state-sanctioned ideology that demands compliance in speech, beliefs and conduct.”
FCPS Pride, a group that represents the Fairfax County School District’s LGBTQ employees, described the lawsuit as “abhorrent.”
“We are confident that the school board and the superintendent will strongly and firmly oppose this specious suit and continue to support all students, including transgender and gender expansive students,” said the group in a press list.
Miscellaneous
More than a dozen LGBTQ candidates on the ballot in Va.
Control of the state Senate hangs in the balance

More than a dozen openly LGBTQ candidates are on the ballot in Virginia on Nov. 7.
State Del. Danica Roem (D-Manassas) is running against Republican Bill Woolf in the newly redistricted Senate District 30 that includes western Prince William County and the cities of Manassas and Manassas Park.
Roem in 2018 became the first openly transgender person seated in a state legislature in the U.S. after she defeated then-state Del. Bob Marshall, a prominent LGBTQ rights opponent who co-wrote Virginia’s constitutional amendment defining marriage as between a man and a woman. Roem would become Virginia’s first out trans state senator if she defeats Woolf.
Woolf supports a bill that would require school personnel to out trans students to their parents. The Republican Party of Virginia has highlighted this position in ads in support of Woolf.
“Thank you for reminding me why I won three elections in this district in Prince William County, which is the most diverse county in all of Virginia and the 10th most nationally where we welcome everyone because of who they are, not despite it, no matter what you look like, where you come from, how you worship, if you do, or who you love because you should be able to thrive here because of who you are, never despite it,” said Roem on Sept. 28 in response to a woman who heckled her during a debate with Woolf that took place at Metz Middle School in Manassas.
Gay state Sen. Adam Ebbin (D-Alexandria) is running for re-election in Senate District 39. State Del. Mark Sickles (D-Fairfax County), who is also gay, is running for re-election in House District 43.
Former state Del. Joshua Cole, who identifies as bisexual, is running against Republican Lee Peters in House District 65. State Del. Kelly Convirs-Fowler (D-Virginia Beach), who came out as bisexual last year at Hampton Roads Pride, will face Republican Mike Karslake and independent Nicholas Olenik.
State Del. Marcia “Cia” Price (D-Newport News), a Black woman who identifies as pansexual, is running for re-election in House District 85.
Adele McClure, a queer Democrat, is running to represent House District 2 that includes portions of Arlington County. Laura Jane Cohen, a bisexual woman who is a member of the Fairfax County School Board, is a House of Delegates candidate in House District 15.
Rozia Henson, a gay federal contractor who works for the Department of Homeland Security, is running in House District 19. Zach Coltrain, a gay Gen Zer, is running against state Del. Barry Knight (R-Virginia Beach) in House District 98.
LPAC has endorsed Jade Harris, a Rockbridge County Democrat who is running to represent Senate District 3. Harris’ website notes trans rights are part of their platform.
“Protecting trans rights, repealing right to work, strengthening unions and supporting our farmers are just a few of my legislative priorities,” reads the website. “I am dedicated to addressing the revitalization of our state’s infrastructure, fostering a favorable environment for job creation, and supporting our public education system.”
Republicans currently control the House by a 51-46 margin, while Democrats have a 21-19 majority in the state Senate.
Senate Democrats have successfully blocked anti-LGBTQ bills that Republicans have introduced since Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin took office in January 2022.
The Virginia Department of Education in July released new guidelines for trans and nonbinary students that activists and their supporters have sharply criticized. They fear that Republicans will curtail LGBTQ rights in the state if they regain control of both houses of the General Assembly on Nov. 7.
“Time and time again, anti-equality lawmakers and the Youngkin administration have made it clear that they will continue to disrespect and disregard the lives and lived experience of LGBTQ+ people within Virginia,” said Equality Virginia PAC Executive Director Narissa Rahaman in August when her organization and the Human Rights Campaign endorsed Roem, Ebbin and other “pro-equality champions.”
“We must elect pro-equality champions who will secure and strengthen our freedoms,” added Rahaman. “We have that chance as the eyes of the nation are on us this November.”
The LGBTQ+ Victory Fund has endorsed Fairfax County School Board Vice Chair Karl Frisch and Fairfax County School Board candidates Robyn Lady and Kyle McDaniel, who identify as lesbian and bisexual respectively.
Michael Pruitt would become the first openly bisexual man elected to the Albemarle County Board of Supervisors if he were to win on Nov. 7. Blacksburg Town Councilman Michael Sutphin and Big Stone Gay Town Councilman Tyler Hughes, who are both gay, are running for re-election.
“Tyler will be a critical voice for equality as the only out LGBTQ+ person on the Big Stone Gap Town Council,” says the Victory Fund on its website.
Cal Benn contributed to this article.
Miscellaneous
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Five easy tips to help you avoid common risks

Your home is more than just a place to eat and sleep; it’s your safe haven. As much as you might cherish your home, you should probably also recognize the potential hazards within its familiar walls. Accidents can happen in an instant, yet with a little foresight and some simple adjustments, you can transform your house into a safer haven.
Accidents can happen anywhere, and with a few simple tweaks, you can lower risks in your space. Below you’ll find five tips for each room in your home to help prevent injuries, falls, and other mishaps. In short, home safety.
This article was inspired by a shower in a rental we managed that began leaking through the kitchen ceiling below. If only the landlord had installed grab bars, right!? Below, we’ll guide you through the steps to fortify your bathroom, making it a place of relaxation without the fear of slips and falls. Then, we’ll venture into the room where the magic happens, where proper planning can ensure great nights and peaceful mornings. We’ll show you how to prevent accidents while you experiment becoming the next Gordon Ramsey. And we’ll include a few surprising solutions for those other rooms that hold their own unique hazards, offering solutions to safeguard against unexpected mishaps.
Bathroom Safety
Install Grab Bars: Adding grab bars near the shower and toilet can provide essential support for family members of all ages. Not only can they help with getting in and out, but they can help provide stability when washing. Make sure they are securely anchored to the wall.
Non-Slip Mats: Place non-slip mats inside the shower and bathtub to prevent slips. They’re a small investment that can save you from falls and head injuries.
Adjust Water Temperature: Ensure your hot water is set to a safe temperature to avoid scalding. The hot water heater should be set to around 120°F (49°C)l, the middle setting on many water heater settings.
Medicine Cabinet Locks: If you have young children, use childproof locks on your medicine cabinet to keep harmful substances out of reach.
Proper Lighting: Ensure there’s adequate lighting in the bathroom to avoid trips and falls during nighttime visits. Nightlights can be a simple and effective solution.
Bedroom Safety
Clear Pathways: Keep pathways in the bedroom clutter free to prevent tripping. Ensure there’s enough space to move around comfortably, particularly getting around the bed. Be aware where all furniture is when walking around to avoid stubbed toes, particularly at night.
Secure Rugs: If you have throw rugs, use rug grippers or double-sided tape to keep them from slipping. Loose rugs are a common trip hazard.
Bed Rails: For anyone at risk of falling out of bed, consider installing bed rails to provide extra support and prevent falls.
Nightstands with Drawers: Opt for nightstands with drawers to keep essential items. This reduces the need to get out of bed at night, minimizing the risk of falls, as you race to grab what you need and not lose a moment’s rest.
Fire Safety: Install battery-operated smoke detectors in the bedrooms if there are none. Make sure to install them 36 inches away from an air vent or the edge of a ceiling fan. Also six inches away from the joint between the wall and ceiling. And test smoke detectors regularly.
Kitchen Safety
Non-Slip Flooring: Choose slip-resistant rugs in the kitchen, especially in areas where spills are common. Mats near the sink and stove can also help and you can often buy them fairly cheaply at Costco.
Childproof Cabinets: If you have little ones, use childproof latches on cabinets and drawers to prevent them from accessing potentially hazardous items.
Anti-tip brackets: Install an anti-tip bracket behind the range. These are often used when children are in the home. Although they are less likely to open the oven door and use it as a step stool to get to the stove-top, adults can also benefit from installing these.
Adequate Lighting: Proper lighting is crucial in the kitchen to avoid accidents. Under-cabinet lighting can illuminate work areas effectively.
Secure Heavy Items: Ensure heavy pots and pans are stored at waist level to prevent straining or dropping them from high shelves.
Sharp Object Storage: Keep knives and other sharp objects in a secure drawer or block. And handle all sharp items with extreme care, even when washing and drying. These steps reduce the risk of accidental cuts.
Other Safety Tips
Furniture Anchors: Secure heavy furniture, like bookshelves and dressers, to the wall to prevent tip-overs, especially if you have young children.
Adequate Outlets: Check for damaged outlets and replace them promptly. Avoid overloading circuits with too many devices. Install placeholder plugs in outlets to prevent young curious fingers (or tongues?) from going inside an electrical outlet.
Stair Gates: If your home has stairs, install safety gates at the top and bottom to prevent falls, especially if you have toddlers or pets to keep them off of the stairs when you cannot monitor them.
Emergency Escape Plan: Develop and practice an emergency escape plan with your family, including a designated meeting place outside.
Carbon Monoxide Detector: If your home burns any fossil fuels for heating or appliances, install carbon monoxide detectors in common areas of your home to detect this odorless gas. The D.C. building codes require this if you use a fireplace or if you have an attached garage. In essence, if there is any potential source of carbon monoxide in the home, be sure to install these detectors.
Remember, a safer home not only prevents accidents but also provides peace of mind for you and your family. Implement these simple tips to create a secure environment in every room of your house.
With these practical tips and a few adjustments, you can significantly reduce the risk of injuries and falls in your home. Enjoy peace of mind in your now much safer haven.
Scott Bloom is owner and senior property manager of Columbia Property Management.
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