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Date Created:
Find Your Frequency is a social marketing campaign funded by the Public Health departments in King, Pierce, and Snohomish Counties. These counties banded together because their jurisdictions contain approximately 80 percent of all HIV cases in Washington state. The campaign encourages men who...
Date Created:
The "Know Now. Get Tested. Get Treated for HIV and STDs" campaign from the Arkansas Department of Health HIV/STD Section engages at-risk communities via print, radio, and a significant amount of grassroots work, including rallies, testing events, poster and brochure distribution, and working...
Date Created:
Status Sexy is a grassroots movement to increase testing and decrease the stigma around HIV for young men. This site is a place for young men to get the facts on HIV and express themselves as the generation that has only known the world with HIV/AIDS as a part of it. No matter the outcome of the...
The campaign encourages people of all ages to get tested for HIV and reminds people that "regardless of age, people can be at risk for HIV if they have unprotected sex or share needles." The images used in the campaign reflect the diversity of women and men in terms of age, race and culture.
The I Love My Boo campaign seeks to address homophobia and reduce the spread of HIV with its precise focus on populations most susceptible to the disease. Featured throughout New York City, ILMB directly challenges homophobia and encourages all who come across it to critically re-think notions...
African Americans are more likely to become infected with HIV, less likely to know they have the disease, and more likely to die from HIV/AIDS than any other race. Given the Black Church's historic involvement in advocacy, the NAACP created the campaign, "The Black Church & HIV: The Social...


