This is the slogan for a new HIV prevention marketing campaign in San Francisco, and the name of that campaign's Web site: www.hivstopswithme.org The campaign will feature prime-time TV spot ads and some associated radio and print advertising.
The companion piece on San Francisco's recent new infections controversy highlights the lack of prevention services for HIV+ people as a major part of what's wrong with HIV prevention. The San Francisco "11 Point Action Plan" calls for developing and expanding prevention programs for positives as well as reaching more positive folks with appropriate care and support to revitalize prevention and our community's control of its longevity.
The gay press in California and around the country have spent a lot of ink debating some numbers released just before the Durban International AIDS Conference and an accompanying speculation by San Francisco's chief HIV epidemiologist that "rates of new HIV infections in some parts of San Francisco's gay population have increased to sub-Saharan levels."
This is the slogan for a new HIV prevention marketing campaign in San Francisco, and the name of that campaign's Web site: www.hivstopswithme.org The campaign will feature prime-time TV spot ads and some associated radio and print advertising.
Enormous press coverage and community anxiety has greeted the findings presented in one poster presentation at the 7th Retrovirus Conference in San Francisco. Physicians and researchers from the University of California at San Francisco, San Francisco General Hospital and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) presented their analysis of the likely routes of infection for 102 gay and bisexual men enrolled in The Options Project between June 1996 and June 1999.
The Revenge of the Non-Nukes: Protease Sparing Soars: Maybe it was the at first startling-and to many, unanticipated-findings of trial dmp-006 (showing superiority of an efavirenz-containing triple regimen in suppressing viral load when compared to a protease inhibitor (PI) counterpart). Maybe people wanted fewer pills. Or just more options.