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How the American Run for the End of AIDS Reshaped the Fight Against HIV
Health & Longevity

How the American Run for the End of AIDS Reshaped the Fight Against HIV

Photography & Words by Elena Rostova June 2, 2026 2 MIN READ
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American Run for the End of AIDS began as a daring idea in 1986 when Brent Nicholson Earle, a theater‑savvy New Yorker, pledged to circle the United States on foot to spotlight a virus that was killing his friends.

American Run for the End of AIDS: A 9,000‑Mile Crusade

At 35, Earle was neither a professional athlete nor a policy maker; he was a man with a Walkman, a prayer book, and a Winnebago crew led by his mother, Marion, who set the pace and shielded him from traffic.

Running roughly 20 miles a day, he faced blistered feet, snowstorms, and hostile drivers who hurled slurs and even a shotgun. Yet each town stop turned into a conversation about a disease many preferred to ignore.

“You may think AIDS isn’t your problem, but it’s coming,” Earle told a church hall in Ohio.

His route raised modest funds for Gay Men’s Health Crisis, but the real impact was cultural. Media pickups, from local stations to a feature in Reuters, turned a lone runner into a national symbol.

By October 1987, after two years and roughly 9,000 miles, crowds gathered in Times Square to greet the exhausted pilgrim. The following day he entered the New York City Marathon, declaring the battle far from over.

Later, Earle joined ACT UP, faced dozens of arrests, and in 1989 learned he was HIV‑positive—a diagnosis that mirrored the loss of his partner and his mother within a few short years.

Today, treatment advances mean HIV is manageable, yet the epidemic persists. In 2024 alone, ↓ 630,000 people died of AIDS‑related illnesses while ↑ 1.3 million new infections were recorded worldwide, and U.S. funding cuts threaten to reverse hard‑won gains.

Earle, now 75, still runs occasional charity miles, reminding us that change begins with a single step.


Reported by: Elena Rostova

Socio-Economic Trends Analyst

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