Let's Stop HIV Together Campaign Materials
Use Together campaign resources to share information on HIV testing, treatment, prevention, and stigma reduction for young people.
Use Together campaign resources to share information on HIV testing, treatment, prevention, and stigma reduction for young people.
NASTAD delivered a four-part webinar series, “Employing Status-Neutral Approaches to End the HIV Epidemic.” The series provided an overview of status-neutral approaches for CDC and HRSA funded health departments working to end the HIV epidemic. Each webinar focused on person-first strategies to address activities embedded within the four EHE Pillars (Diagnose, Treat, Prevent, and Respond).
April 10 is National Youth HIV/AIDS Awareness Day (NYHAAD). Share the social media posts below to help spark conversations about HIV and highlight prevention methods to reduce HIV among youth. You can also find and share Let’s Stop HIV Together campaign resources for young adults in English and Spanish.
April 18 is National Transgender HIV Testing Day (NTHTD). Share the social media posts below to help spark conversations about HIV testing and status awareness, as well as HIV prevention and treatment for transgender and nonbinary people. You can also share Let’s Stop HIV Together campaign resources for transgender people (in English and Spanish) as well as HIV testing resources (in English and Spanish).
A journal article summarizes the recently-concluded work of a HRSA-funded quality improvement learning collaborative, which documented and focused on improving viral suppression rate improvements among four groups hit hardest by HIV: men who have sex with men of color, Black/African American and Latina women, youth aged 13 to 24 years, and transgender people.
The following document examines various states' minor consent and confidentiality laws. A minor is a person who does not have the legal rights and responsibilities of an adult. Minors’ ability to access PrEP independently, i.e., without parental or guardian consent, varies throughout the United States. States allowing minors to autonomously consent to PrEP does not mean that access to the health care service will remain confidential.
National surveys collected over 20 years in 35 African countries provides strong evidence that men who pay for sex should be classified as an ‘at-risk’ population for HIV.
People with HIV living in the 12 states that have not adopted the Medicaid expansion face limited access to health coverage. In 2018, across sampled states, 20% of people with HIV living in non-expansion states were uninsured compared to 6% in expansion states, and those in expansion states were more likely to have Medicaid coverage (46% v 30%).
This guidance document was designed to assist a variety of harm reduction programs — ranging from small-scale grassroots organizations to larger harm reduction programs — with navigating the funding landscape and fulfilling the requirements laid out in grant proposals and their application process.
This resource provides sample materials, considerations, and resources to assist health departments with developing and implementing a table-top activity in their respective communities.