Tag Archives: HIV

Communities Make the Difference This World AIDS Day – At Home and Around the World

Communities Make the Difference This World AIDS Day – At Home and Around the World

Post submitted by HRC Global Senior Manager Taylor N. T. Brown

Each Dec. 1, advocates around the world come together to recognize World AIDS Day. The annual commemoration is a vital opportunity to remember those who have come before us, show solidarity with communities and elevate the stories of advocates working around the world to end HIV & AIDS.

This year, the Joint United Nations (U.N.) Programme on HIV & AIDS is organizing around the theme, “Communities make the difference.” HRC understands the value of empowered community advocates around the world and through our work amplifies the innovative approaches many use to fight HIV & AIDS.

This spring, HRC Global hosted advocates from Africa, the Caribbean, Europe, Asia and the Middle East, many of whom are working to end HIV & AIDS and the dangerous stigma around it, at our 2019 Global Innovative Advocacy Summit. Through their words and actions, these activists inspire us to continue working to end HIV & AIDS once and for all.

“These global advocates are leading the way in their communities to support people living with HIV & AIDS. Their efforts show that LGBTQ communities have and continue to make a difference in this fight,” said HRC Global Director Jay Gilliam.

Our HRC Global Innovators are making a tangible difference — not just in their home communities, but also around the world. They have gone to the U.N. to advocate for the protection of human rights for people living with HIV & AIDS. And in their own communities, they are bringing together peers and community members to push for the inclusion of transgender people in developing national guidance on combatting HIV.

Collectively, they have lifted up LGBTQ people and others living with HIV through Pride celebrations, innovative tools to accessing services, messages of hope and determination and providing support for women vulnerable to HIV.

Working together, we can end HIV.

Visit hrc.org/HIV for more information on HRC Foundation’s work to end HIV and share this video.

For more information about HRC’s work around the world, subscribe to our quarterly newsletter and visit hrc.org/Global. 

www.hrc.org/blog/communities-make-the-difference-this-world-aids-day-at-home?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss-feed

HRC President Calls on Trump Jr. To Apologize for Vile HIV and AIDS Tweet

HRC President Calls on Trump Jr. To Apologize for Vile HIV and AIDS Tweet

Today, HRC called on Donald Trump Jr., son of President Trump, to apologize for his vile weekend tweet stigmatizing people living with HIV.

“Trump Jr. just proved again what we already knew — that he, his father and the Trump-Pence administration don’t care about people living with HIV, are undermining competent care and have no understanding of people living with HIV,” said HRC President Alphonso David. “Trump Jr.’s absolutely disgusting and ignorant tweet only serves to perpetuate the stigma faced by people living with HIV, which HRC and LGBTQ advocates have fought so long to end. Trump Jr. must apologize. And Trump and Pence must put their money where their mouth is and actually sufficiently fund the domestic initiatives aimed at ending the epidemic they claim to be combatting.”

Donald Trump and Mike Pence share a disturbing record on HIV and AIDS. In 2017, the Trump-Pence White House proposed a federal budget that would have slashed $1.1 billion in funding for international HIV-prevention programs. This was slammed by experts, who claimed it would lead to political instability and entirely reverse the gains made against the disease in the past decade. The same budget proposal called for a repeal of Obamacare that included deep cuts to Medicaid and defunding Planned Parenthood for a year, despite the sobering reality that 40 percent of Americans with HIV depend on Medicaid to pay their medical bills.

Early last year, the Trump-Pence Administration’s Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) proposed a regulation that would blatantly allow healthcare providers a license to discriminate based on their own personal beliefs, even in cases of life-saving medical care, which would drastically impact patients living with HIV and AIDS.

During Pence’s time as governor of Indiana, he oversaw the worst outbreak of HIV and AIDS in the state’s history due to his refusal to lift a ban on needle exchange programs, only backing down after his approach drew universal outrage from public health experts, including the Centers for Disease Control (CDC). His actions have since been described as “the case study for how misguided health policies can endanger lives.”

Pence has spent his career aggressively demanding Planned Parenthood be defunded, even to the detriment of HIV and AIDS prevention, calling condoms “very, very poor protection against sexually-transmitted diseases” and stated that if Planned Parenthood wanted to provide HIV testing services, they should stop providing abortions.

Donald Trump has demonstrated his own ignorance on HIV on numerous occasions. Microsoft founder Bill Gates says he has had to explain to the President — twice — that there is a difference between HIV and HPV. In 1997, Trump bizarrely characterized his early sex life as his “own personal Vietnam” — a war he avoided through five deferments —  and said his avoidance of contracting STDs made him feel like “a great and very brave soldier.” In the same interview, he joked that he could have forced Princess Diana to have an HIV test.

William Barr, the Trump-Pence Administration’s nominee for Attorney General, created an “HIV prison camp” in Guantanamo Bay in 1991, which reportedly held 310 asylum-seekers in dire conditions without adequate healthcare. Barr has also made personal statements promoting a draconian approach to the federal government’s role in responding to the HIV/AIDS epidemic, including the adoption of proven methods of prevention and access to treatment. Barr blamed AIDS and other sexually transmitted infections on “sexual licentiousness,” calling them “the costs associated with personal misconduct.” He disputed public health efforts to inform the American people about the transmission and prevention of HIV and AIDS, opposing public health interventions, such as the distribution of condoms, because “by removing the costs of [sexual] misconduct, the government serves to perpetuate it.”

www.hrc.org/blog/hrc-calls-on-trump-jr.-to-apologize-for-vile-hiv-and-aids-tweet?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss-feed

Donald Trump Jr. slams Queerty for fighting HIV stigma

Donald Trump Jr. slams Queerty for fighting HIV stigma

Via Flickr

Donald Trump, Jr. wandered into it over the weekend when he derided a Queerty story about not sexually discriminating against HIV+ people.

“Well I can think of one thing,” Trump tweeted on Saturday in response to an article titled “What you stand to lose by not having sex with people with HIV.”

The onslaught against his stigma-reenforcing comment followed swift and hard.

Well I can think of one thing. t.co/A34xY74OYc

— Donald Trump Jr. (@DonaldJTrumpJr) November 23, 2019

“We’re days away from the 31st WORLD AIDS DAY,” wrote ACT UP NY, “and the President’s son is typing anti-science stigma inducing bull sh*t.”

We’re days away from the 31st WORLD AIDS DAY and the President’s son is typing anti-science stigma inducing bull shit. There’s a special place in hell waiting for you junior. t.co/nbknNdApRB

— ACT UP NY (@actupny) November 23, 2019

Related: What you stand to lose by not having sex with people with HIV

“How’s trolling Gay websites going?” asked Broadway performer Nick Adams.

Actor Javier Munoz pointed out that one of Trump’s father’s campaign promises included ending HIV transmission by 2030. “Your own father made this pledge yet you perpetuate Stigma which prevents progress?” he tweeted.

Your own father made this pledge yet you perpetuate Stigma which prevents progress? pic.twitter.com/lNOJvBpdLr

— Javier Muñoz (@JMunozActor) November 23, 2019

Olivia Alabaster noted: “When the world has come so far in combatting stigma around HIV – and it now impossible to pass on HIV when one is on treatment – this comment is stunningly retrograde and dangerous.”

When the world has come so far in combatting stigma around HIV – and it now impossible to pass on HIV when one is on treatment – this comment is stunningly retrograde and dangerous t.co/FzdQ4b5Q4S

— Olivia Alabaster (@OliviaAlabaster) November 24, 2019

The original story which triggered Trump Jr.’s comment concerned the effectiveness of PrEP in preventing the spread of HIV, as well as how HIV+ folks with an undetectable viral load cannot spread the disease.

While we’re flattered (if perplexed) that Trump Jr. reads Queerty, we’d like to take this opportunity to point out that he, evidently, knows little about HIV risk or transmission. No big surprise there.

www.queerty.com/donald-trump-jr-slams-queerty-fighting-hiv-stigma-20191125?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+queerty2+%28Queerty%29

Empowering the Transgender Community, One Relationship at a Time

Empowering the Transgender Community, One Relationship at a Time

For health and equity consultant Tori Cooper, what underlies her work every day are relationships and empowerment, and how those two things intertwine.

“I approach it from an empowerment standpoint,” Cooper said.

Along the way, it’s been the relationships she’s made with fellow advocates as well as the examples set by those who have come before her that have paved her way.

Cooper has been working in HIV & AIDS advocacy in various capacities for the last 30 years, and started out as a volunteer in the HIV & AIDS advocacy field while she was working a corporate job. Eventually, it was a conversation with advocate Freda Jones that spurred her to turn her advocacy work into a career.

After moving to Atlanta and seeing the discrimination faced by Black transgender women and people living with HIV, Cooper realized that she had the responsibility to use her voice to speak out.

“I felt I was on a mission to use the privilege that I have in life really to help out my own community,” Cooper said. Since then, “opportunities began to open up for me to use my voice and it’s just been no stopping from there.”

Currently, Cooper is focusing on building meaningful relationships with those around her. That’s part of what’s driving her work with HRC’s ELEVATE program, where she serves as a facilitator. She says we will end the HIV epidemic when people who are living with HIV reach an undetectable, untransmittable status and are able to access the necessary care to retain that status.

But to do so, advocates need to engage in different kinds of work.

When reaching out to Black and Latinx communities, which often have higher rates of HIV, it’s key to ensure that those providing services are representative of the people they’re serving and empowering them to get the care they need.

Cooper is working on a nationwide advocacy training program that’s focused on that kind of outreach and leveraging privilege. She’s also working on a project based around providng three levels of housing — emergency housing, intermediate housing and long-term or semi-permanent housing — with the specific focus of reaching transgender people.

Housing, says Cooper, is the key element to ending the HIV epidemic. Once transgender and people living with HIV have stable housing, other needs such as employment opportunities, education, transportation, food insecurity and health care can be addressed — with the goal of moving toward equity.

When passing along information to the next generation of advocates, she remembers why she’s able to do this work today. If she hadn’t started off as a volunteer in the beginning, she says, she’d have burned out years ago.

“There’s a lot of work to be done, and we all have different roles and different assignments. Pace yourself.”

But even with all the work ahead, Cooper is optimistic.

“Resilience means getting back up. Starting over. Doing it again even when folks say that you shouldn’t or you couldn’t … Thriving in spite of it all.”

www.hrc.org/blog/empowering-the-transgender-community-one-relationship-at-a-time?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss-feed

What you stand to lose by not having sex with people with HIV

What you stand to lose by not having sex with people with HIV

Imagine a couple. Let’s call them Todd and Carl. They love one another like crazy and continue to be amazed at how much they have in common.

They work out together at the same gym, enjoy watching the same nerdy, sci-fi and fantasy series on Netflix, and share a love for Japanese and Korean food.

They seemed to effortlessly merge their groups of friends when they got together and share the same values when it comes to working hard and building their careers.

Although neither has popped the question yet, they’re likely heading toward marriage somewhere down the line. They love, trust and support each other.

Oh, and the sex? The sex is mind-blowing. It helps that Todd’s around 20% top and 80% bottom and Carl’s the opposite. They just click. They make that ridiculously cute couple that others envy.

Sounds good, right?

Except it never happened. Despite both catching each other’s attention on an app, Todd and Carl never went for that first date. They never made it to the bedroom stage, let alone realize that they both shared a dream of adopting a kid and trekking across South America one day.

See, Todd stated on his profile that he’s HIV positive. And when he messaged Carl, he wasn’t rude, but he simply responded, “Sorry, not quite what I’m looking for.”

And with that, a relationship that would have changed both their lives disappeared into the ether. Mr Right was pushed right back out of the door.

A few weeks ago, I wrote a story on Queerty about an HIV positive man who finds himself often – sometimes rudely – rejected on apps.

Related: HIV positive gay guys blocked on Grindr by guys on PrEP

Some of those who commented on the article appeared to feel attacked by the piece.

“It is insane to shame people for attempting to protect their own health,” said one.

“Everybody has the absolute right to make whatever decisions they want about their own sex life, period, full stop, no qualifiers,” said another.

Others agreed that everyone has the right to take responsibility for their sexual health and, for some, this includes not having sex with people who they know to be HIV positive.

I don’t disagree that everyone should take responsibility for their own sexual health. My purpose in writing this is merely to ask you to give a thought to the potential consequences of your particular decisions.

Related: If you meet Mr. Right and he turns out to be HIV-positive, he’s still Mr. Right

If someone is HIV positive, knows their status, is on effective medication and has consistently had an undetectable viral load, they cannot pass on the virus. PrEP is also widely available in the US and several other countries to prevent people from acquiring HIV. And condoms are also, of course, widely available.

I know a couple of long-term serodiscordant couples. A serodiscordant relationship is one in which one partner is HIV positive and one is HIV negative. Single myself, I look upon these relationships with awe. Not because of the HIV side of things, but just because I’m always impressed and inspired by any longterm couples.

I can’t imagine one without the other, or what would have happened if a fear of acquiring HIV, or a decision to reject someone for being HIV positive, had prevailed.

When friends go through bad break-ups, we console them by telling them there are plenty more fish in the sea. There is a presumption – perhaps even an arrogance – that we can just move on to the next guy and that he might be “the one.”

Well, you don’t meet many of “the ones” during life, actually. A survey by AARP last year found that “57% of gay men over the age of 45 are single compared to 39% of lesbians.”

There are many reasons for this, and yes, plenty of us are content being “self-partnered”, as actress Emma Watson recently put it. But many others are less happy at not being in a relationship.

So yes, take responsibility for your health and do what you feel is best for you. But do so with an awareness of the potential consequences of those decisions. Refusing to entertain the idea of dating an HIV-positive person might just mean you miss out on the love of your life.

If you find yourself single and contemplating why, bear in mind it might be because you blocked ‘Mr Right’ when you read he was HIV positive on Grindr.

Of course, some will say, “My perfect man doesn’t HIV!”. Well, I hope you’re not too old before you realize: Nobody’s perfect.

David Hudson is a freelance contributor to Queerty. @davidhudson_uk

www.queerty.com/stand-lose-not-sex-people-hiv-20191117?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+queerty2+%28Queerty%29

Wanna check out guys in sexy Santa Skivvies while raising money to fight HIV? Here’s how…

Wanna check out guys in sexy Santa Skivvies while raising money to fight HIV? Here’s how…

Did you know that just by dressing up or stripping down to your underwear and running or walking around the Castro half naked you can raise awareness and funds for HIV services in the Bay Area?

That’s right, all you have to do is sign up for the annual Santa Skivvies Run coming up on Sunday, December 8.

Celebrating its 11th year, Santa Skivvies Run is a San Francisco holiday tradition. Every year, hundreds of participants don their finest gay (under) apparel for a one-mile fun run through the Castro to support the life-saving services offered by the fabulous San Francisco AIDS Foundation.

Since it began, the event has raised a whopping $500,000 for the foundation.

“For a lot of people, it’s become an annual tradition,” explains Chris Hastings, founder of the event and owner of the event partner, the popular Castro bar Lookout. “It allows people to bust out and do something that’s really positive in a way that is a little out of the ordinary.”

And bust out they do. In addition to having the chance to show off their finest skivvies, registered participants also have the opportunity to earn some hella jolly fundraising awards: A camping mug, robe, and skivvies are all up for grabs for high-performing fundraisers.

Alex Locust, a past participant who currently is the second-highest fundraiser this year, says he participates because he loves seeing “an amazing cross-section of different communities within the Bay Area who want to come out, break down stigma, and help support the foundation.”

Don’t forget to use promo QUEERTY for $5 off registration.

Now take a look at all the sexy fun to be had at this year’s Santa Skivvies Run, all in the name of a great cause: 

A man in a red and green scarf at the Santa Skivvies Run in San Francisco.

Don’t forget to use promo QUEERTY for $5 off registration

Check out more great pics from Santa Skivvies!

www.queerty.com/wanna-check-guys-sexy-santa-skivvies-raising-money-fight-hiv-heres-20191116?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+queerty2+%28Queerty%29

Ensuring Competent Care for Transgender and Non-Binary People

Ensuring Competent Care for Transgender and Non-Binary People

While communities around the country observe Trans Awareness Week, in one Texas city, advocates have shifted the narrative. 

The Mahogany Project and Save Our Sisters, two Houston-based organizations, have founded Black Trans Empowerment Week to “not only to memorialize those who have been tragically taken, but to charge forward into the empowered future they envision for all transgender people.”

For Houston community health advocate Donte Oxun, it’s exciting to see. 

“Even in the light of so much transphobia and racism from our government and from some parts of society, to see my community be like, ‘You know what? We’re not just remembering our dead.’ We actually have so much more work to do, and we’re going to do all of it,’” they told HRC.

Oxun has worked in HIV and public health spaces since 2009, shortly after they were diagnosed with HIV — something that propelled them into speaking out.

“Like many people who are gender diverse and of color, my life was definitely touched by HIV even before I was living with HIV,” Oxun said. “I have family members who I lost to HIV when I was pretty young.”

“I’ve always been a bit of a loudmouth and a person who understands and relates with people who struggle,” they continued. “So, the way I dealt with my HIV diagnosis was to be really public about it at first. It’s important to humanize our perspective and really show that people can live regular lives and that we deserve to have our stories told.”

In their work with Legacy Community Health in Houston, Oxun is a lead patient advocate, primarily helping patients — particularly trans and non-binary patients — living with HIV or Hepatitis C to navigate the health care system and receive the care they need. Legacy has been offering gender-affirming, LGBTQ-competent care for young people and adults for more than 30 years, Oxun said.

“Competent care is a challenge,” they said. “We shouldn’t have to negotiate between parts of our identities when seeking care is already a challenge.”

Texas has one of the highest populations of uninsured people, reminds Oxun. Obstacles to accessing care range from poverty and socioeconomic status to fear of stigma or violence — something on the minds of many as we draw closer to commemorating Transgender Day of Remembrance

Of the 22 known transgender or gender non-conforming people killed this year, four of those victims were killed in Texas. All four of the trans people killed in Texas this year were Black transgender women — something that matters when talking about how to support and provide services for the local transgender community.

“Violence affects people’s health care,” Oxun said. “When a person doesn’t feel safe to catch the bus to walk down the street, they’re going to be less likely to see a doctor. They’re going to be less likely to pick up their prescriptions. They’re going to be less likely to get access to care.”

Until those barriers are dismantled and addressed, transgender and gender non-conforming people will continue to face higher rates of discrimination, poverty, homelessness and violence not just in Texas but around the country.

“No matter who you are, if you’re working in any form of health care, you’re going to interact with somebody who’s gender diverse,” Oxun said. “You may not know it, they may not be comfortable reporting it to you, but you are. It’s about seeing them as a whole person.”

For information for LGBTQ people seeking to learn more about access to care, particularly under the Affordable Care Act, click here.

www.hrc.org/blog/ensuring-competent-care-for-transgender-and-non-binary-people?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss-feed

Gay guys describe their worst experiences with homophobia

Gay guys describe their worst experiences with homophobia

Let’s certainly hope “It Gets Better,” because a lot of men have endured horrific treatment at the hands of peers and strangers just for being who they are. Some of those guys shared their scariest brushes with homophobia in a recent Reddit thread, and their anecdotes are appalling. Here’s a sampling, edited only for readability:

  • My so-called friend asked me [if] I am gay because I act very cartoony. I said no. Then he told me I am his best friend. Then he said he will kill me if I’m gay. He said his family shot gays. We lived far apart and went to different colleges, so after three years, I told him I’m gay, and he blocked me. He called me after two months with another number to say sorry, but I was over him at that point. I blocked him again and told him not to call me ever again.

Related: ER nurse who ranted against LGBTQ people is officially unemployed

  • I was 13 in a Geography class, and the guys on the same table as me were discussing how much they’d love to torture a gay guy.
  • My best friend in high school was really Republican and homophobic, actually, but I guess the worst experience was when I was bullied on the school bus and these guys gathered around my seat and just talked sh*t about how obviously gay I was, despite the fact [that] at that time I was trying my best to hide it, so it hurt even more that being in the closet didn’t spare me the harassment. I also was called f*ggot at a bus stop just by some random passerby. I went the f*ck off on him. You could tell he was not expecting that lol.

When I was on a first date with this guy and a group of people from my background started making fun of us in my mother tongue throughout the entire date. They assumed I was a different background. I had to pretend nothing was off and that I was enjoying myself. When you’re slightly closeted, it was like hearing all of your deep doubts out loud, but I couldn’t even react.

Related: University stands behind professor’s vehemently antigay social media posts

  • In elementary school, a group of guys tried to take all my clothes off to find out if I was really a boy because I was so feminine. Those same guys would follow me around town on their bikes and kick and spit on me. I was also forced to play sports by my parents and was on teams with them. They would throw rocks at me constantly. Or the many times in elementary school where we would play various types of tag in gym or recess and I couldn’t play because nobody wanted to touch me.
  • In the late ‘80s and through the ‘90s, I was deeply involved in HIV testing, counseling, and prevention. I was also involved in helping isolated and abandoned gay men who were dying of AIDS. This was in a conservative part of the country. On three separate occasions, a gang of gay-bashers came to my house and threatened violence. The first time, a neighbor came out with a shotgun and told them to get and not come back. I ran off the two following groups with my own shotgun. Those were exciting times, in the worst possible way.

www.queerty.com/gay-guys-describe-worst-experiences-homophobia-20191112?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+queerty2+%28Queerty%29

Maryland Company Claims to Have Cure for HIV/AIDS Through Gene Therapy, Expects Clinical Trial in January: WATCH

Maryland Company Claims to Have Cure for HIV/AIDS Through Gene Therapy, Expects Clinical Trial in January: WATCH

American Gene Technologies in Rockville, Maryland says it has submitted an application to the FDA for a gene therapy it claims eliminates HIV.

CBS Baltimore reports: “The company said the therapy, AGT103-T, is a genetically-modified product made from a person’s own cells that focuses on repairing damage to the immune system caused by HIV. The company expects to start a phase one clinical trial in humans in January.”

Said Chief Science Officer C. David Pauza, PhD: “Our aim is to treat HIV disease with an innovative cell and gene therapy that reconstitutes immunity to HIV and will control virus growth in the absence of antiretroviral drugs. Development of this complex product (AGT103-T) required our deep knowledge of both HIV disease and lentivirus vector technology; it is the first cell and gene immunotherapy addressing the most critical feature of HIV infection, which is the chronic absence of virus-specific CD4 T cells.”

Said Jeff Galvin, Founder and Chief Executive Officer of AGT: “We are excited to have reached this milestone of submitting our first IND application to the FDA for an HIV gene/cell therapy. This event brings us closer to reaching our mission to transform lives with genetic medicines. Based on our successful commercial-scale product manufacturing runs and features of the product observed in our laboratories, this therapy has a high potential to be effective. I feel confident that AGT103-T will make an important difference in the lives of HIV infected persons. HIV is the first drug candidate to result from AGT’s proprietary platform and model for creating gene and cell therapeutics more efficiently, predictably and reliably for clinical development.”

The post Maryland Company Claims to Have Cure for HIV/AIDS Through Gene Therapy, Expects Clinical Trial in January: WATCH appeared first on Towleroad Gay News.



www.towleroad.com/2019/11/hiv-gene-therapy/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+towleroad%2Ffeed+%28Towleroad+Gay+News+%29