For more than 40 years, Sheryl Lee Ralph has been on the frontlines helping raise funds and awareness in the fight against ...
When the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention first reported what would later be called AIDS in 1981, public narratives narrowly centered on white gay ...
Beginning with the first wave of diagnoses among gay men in the early 1980s, the notion of HIV/AIDS as a “gay disease” — and one that primarily impacts gay men — has, unfortunately, persisted in the ...
At Elton John's Oscars party, the Emmy winner highlights a persistent HIV crisis affecting Black women, especially in the South. Here's what the data shows.
Limited healthcare access and sociostructural factors were stronger predictors of HIV than behavioral risk factors among Black women in the southern United States, based on modeling data from more ...
Women living with HIV/AIDS can now have safe and healthy pregnancies with early diagnosis, proper treatment, and consistent ...
Despite advances in HIV prevention, thousands of new cases occur annually, with Black communities in the South—especially women—often overlooked. Despite advances in treatment and prevention since the ...
With people losing access to HIV healthcare across the country, Darby's Ciarra “Ci Ci” Brown wants to help her thousands of ...
Masonia Traylor folded into a ball in the corner of the patient room. "No," the 23-year-old screamed, over and over again. She was HIV-positive. It came as a surprise to the now 38-year-old from ...
Thousands of low-income Americans with HIV are losing access to vital medications, as states grapple with a lack of federal ...
KAKUMA, Kenya, Dec 1 (UNHCR) - There's not much open talk of sex among the Dinka people of Sudan. "Even when I get married, my mother won't tell me what to expect on my wedding night," says one young ...