Sunday, December 1, marks the 31st annual World AIDS Day (WAD).
It commemorates those lost to the epidemic and encourages people across the
globe to join in the fight against HIV/AIDS.
This year’s theme is “Communities Make the Difference,” according to the
Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS), which spearheads WAD.
On its website, UNAIDS highlights the importance of communities in the
fight against AIDS:
“Communities contribute to the AIDS response in many different
ways. Their leadership and advocacy ensure that the response remains relevant
and grounded, keeping people at the centre and leaving no one behind.
Communities include peer educators, networks of people living with or affected
by HIV, such as gay men and other men who have sex with men, people who inject
drugs and sex workers, women and young people, counsellors, community health
workers, door-to-door service providers, civil society organizations and
grass-roots activists.
“World AIDS Day offers
an important platform to highlight the role of communities at a time when
reduced funding and a shrinking space for civil society are putting the
sustainability of services and advocacy efforts in jeopardy. Greater
mobilization of communities is urgently required to address the barriers that
stop communities delivering services, including restrictions on registration
and an absence of social contracting modalities. The strong advocacy role
played by communities is needed more than ever to ensure that AIDS remains
on the political agenda, that human rights are respected and that
decision-makers and implementers are held accountable.”
You can visit the UNAIDS site to download sharable graphics, posters and
reports. According to a UNAIDS fact sheet:
·
In 2018, there were about 37.9 million
people living with HIV; 1.7 million of them were younger than 15.
·
79% of all people living with HIV knew
their HIV status.
·
About 8.1 million people did not know that
they were living with HIV.
·
New HIV infections have been reduced by 40%
since the peak of the epidemic in 1997.
Visit
the POZ page devoted
to World AIDS Day for a collection of stories and the
#WAD2019 calendar. To learn more about HIV, including information about
transmission, prevention and treatment, visit the POZ Basics.
SOURCE: POZDOT COM
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