Tenth National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day
February 7, 2010 by Gay Agenda News Team · Leave a Comment
The National Minority AIDS Council (NMAC) will honor the tenth annual National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day on February 7th. Held during Black History Month, the special HIV/AIDS observance day serves as a “national HIV testing and treatment community mobilization initiative designed to increase the awareness of HIV/AIDS prevention, care and treatment among Blacks in the United States and Diaspora.”
“This year’s theme, ‘HIV/AIDS Prevention: A Choice and a Lifestyle,’ evokes a message of self-empowerment,” says Paul A. Kawata, NMAC’s Executive Director. “One has the right and responsibility to protect themselves and others from HIV. It also is time to lift the stigmas around HIV/AIDS and sexuality that have created barriers to testing, treatment and care for many people of color.”
The need for routinized HIV/AIDS care has never been greater in the U.S., particularly in Black communities, which have been disproportionately impacted by the epidemic since it began nearly thirty years ago. Though African Americans account for less than 15% of the U.S. population, they bear 70% of the country’s HIV/AIDS burden and represent nearly half of all new HIV cases reported to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) each year. Of the 1.1 million people living with HIV in the U.S. at the end of 2006, almost half (46%) were Black (506,000).
The potential impact of HIV on future generations of African Americans cannot be overstated. AIDS is one of the leading causes of death among African-American women nationwide, and is the number one killer of Black women aged 25-34 in this country. It is the third leading cause of death among African-American men in the same age group. Black gay/men who have sex with men also are testing positive for HIV in high numbers.
“Part of the ‘choice’ in ending HIV/AIDS in this country also means working in our communities and with our legislators to address the socio-economic determinants that historically have undermined the health and welfare of Black communities,” says Ravinia Hayes-Cozier, NMAC’s Spokesperson and Director of Government Relations and Public Policy. “Homelessness, lack of access to education and health care, as well as high rates of malnutrition, substance use, incarceration and poverty, have laid the foundation for AIDS in our community. It is up to us to create a new future free from HIV.”
NMAC encourages everyone to get educated about HIV/AIDS this National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day and spread the word to others. We also encourage everyone to learn about HIV vaccine research, the success of which depends on diverse community participation.
For more information, visit NMAC online: www.nmac.org or contact the agency directly at (202) 483-6622 or communications@nmac.org. Other helpful resources include:
- Watch NMAC’s PSA: African American Women GET REAL about HIV/AIDS.
NMAC’s first public service announcement in over ten years, “African American Women GET REAL about AIDS” features NMAC Board Member and singing legend, Nancy Wilson; CEO and Founder of Aspirations Wholistic Tutorial Services, Archbishop Joyce Turner-Keller; and HIV/AIDS Activist, Ebony Gilreath speaking directly to African American women about the importance of knowing their HIV status. - Visit the official 2010 National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day website.
Here you can download materials, learn what observances are taking place in your neighborhood or register your own events. You can also make a donation to support the relief effort in Haiti. (Read NMAC’s official statement about the devastation in Haiti and other ways to help here.) - Watch videos of interviews with Ravinia Hayes-Cozier, NMAC’s Director of Government Relations and Public Policy, about the importance of National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day
- Learn more about two Black Leadership Commission on AIDS (BLCA) of Washington, DC and Vicinity events honoring Black History Month and National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day.
- Read the article, “A Review of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Response to the HIV/AIDS Crisis Among Blacks in the United States, 1981–2009” in the October 2009 edition of the American Journal of Public Health.
- Visit the Greater Than AIDS website.
- Read about future HIV/AIDS leaders.
This page features profiles of young African Americans heading the fight against HIV/AIDS on college campuses and in their communities.
About NMAC
The National Minority AIDS Council (NMAC) has advanced its mission, “to develop leadership within communities of color to address the challenges of HIV/AIDS” since 1987 through individualized capacity building assistance; technical assistance trainings; public policy education programs; national and regional conferences; treatment and research education programs; online and printed resource materials; and a website: http://www.nmac.org/. The agency also serves as a membership association for its constituent AIDS service organizations and minority faith- and community-based organizations delivering HIV/AIDS services in communities of color and advocates on their behalf in Washington, D.C.
NMAC’s advocacy efforts are funded through private funders and donors only. For more information, please contact NMAC directly at (202) 483-NMAC (6622) or communications@nmac.org. You may find us online at http://www.nmac.org/ as well as on Facebook.com, Wikipedia.com, Twitter.com, MyPhotoAlbum.com and YouTube.com.
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