The 9th International AIDS Society (IAS) Conference on HIV Science is highlighting innovative efforts to increase access to quality HIV information and services for communities heavily impacted by HIV but often overlooked by government and community-based responses.
This is taking place through awards, plenary addresses, research presentations and an official press conference. The press conference, “Combating Stigma for Key Populations”, will be live streamed here on Tuesday, 25 July, from 14:00 to 15:00 CEST.
Dozens of sessions and research presentations at IAS 2017 focus on the experiences of members of key populations and on the care providers and programs that serve them. These address topics such as supporting men who have sex with men (MSM) to initiate HIV therapy in West Africa, providing stigma-free services to help people who inject drugs remain in HIV care in Ukraine and South Africa, supporting psychological and economic wellbeing and reducing HIV risk for female sex workers in Cambodia and ensuring access to pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) for MSM and transgender women in Brazil.
Healthcare professionals are being honored at IAS 2017 for their efforts to overcome HIV stigma and discrimination and to increase access to high-quality HIV prevention, treatment, and care for key populations. They include the IAS Me and My Healthcare Provider champions and the recipients of the IAS and ViiV Healthcare Combating Stigma & Discrimination in Healthcare Settings Award.
“These dedicated care providers prove that HIV can be defeated when key populations have access to high-quality, stigma-free information and services,” IAS President Linda-Gail Bekker said.
“Their examples encourage us to challenge the discriminatory laws, traditions, and beliefs that allow HIV to flourish, and to do more to ensure effective, inclusive and comprehensive HIV services for key populations everywhere.”
Since its launch at the 21st International AIDS Conference (AIDS 2016) in Durban, South Africa, the IAS Me and My Healthcare Provider campaign has worked to build awareness of the extraordinary impact of HIV on key populations and to promote practical steps to overcome barriers to health services.
The campaign puts a human face on the HIV response by recognizing outstanding healthcare professionals, nominated by members of key populations, who are #DoingTheRightThing to increase access to high-quality HIV prevention, treatment, and care for their communities.
iasocietyMe and My Healthcare Provider celebrates the frontline #healthcare providers who are #DoingTheRightThing by delivering quality #HIV prevention, treatment and care services to key populations, often in the face of discriminatory laws, traditions and belief systems
An IAS 2017 symposium, “#DoingTheRightThing: Addressing Stigma and Discrimination among Key Populations in Healthcare Settings” (Wednesday, 26 July, 11:00-12:30), highlights the collaborative efforts of these IAS 2017 honorees and of the communities they serve to reduce HIV stigma and discrimination.
The Me and My Healthcare Provider champions honored at IAS 2017 are:
Also at IAS 2017, IAS and its partner, ViiV Healthcare, presented the £100,000 IAS and ViiV Healthcare Combating Stigma & Discrimination in Healthcare Settings Award. The award recognizes scalable best practices in healthcare delivery that treat every person with dignity and respect and encourages new “proof of concept” innovations in the equitable treatment of members of key populations.
The recipients of the 2017 IAS/ViiV Healthcare award are Doan Thanh Tung, Director of Lighthouse Social Enterprise, and Le Minh Thanh, Director of G-Link Vietnam, for their innovative efforts to reduce stigma and discrimination in Vietnam: zero discrimination and violence to zero HIV.
“Excellence in health care means providing sensitive, appropriate, high-quality service to all,” ViiV Healthcare CEO Deborah Waterhouse said. “When frontline healthcare workers and facilities welcome key populations, safeguard their rights and provide them with quality HIV care, our entire society benefits. By recognizing the best-practice of providers who implement these important principles in their delivery of care, we want to encourage approaches that overcome stigma and discrimination towards key populations to improve access to health, opportunity, and rights.”