Touting better HIV treatment, Toronto service organization closing after 42 years
TORONTO — An organization that bills itself as Canada’s oldest HIV service agency will close next year, in part due to groundbreaking medical advances that have reduced the need for its services, even as the rate of new diagnoses rises across the country.
AIDS Committee of Toronto says plummeting demand coincided with financial challenges and broader changes in the health-care system, leading to the decision to close after 42 years. The organization was founded in 1983 when AIDS was marked by stigma, long-term illness and often death.
“It felt like it’s the right time for us to take a step back,” ACT executive director Ryan Lisk said in an interview.
The organization said it has faced “a combination of government funding challenges and steadily declining philanthropic support, especially since COVID.” At the same time, the number of ACT users has dropped by half from pre-pandemic levels, and people over the age of 55 make up nearly a third of its clients.


