AIDS Healthcare Foundation keeps the promise to fight against HIV/AIDS on this World AIDS Day
Launched ‘Keep the promise’ initiatives across
the globe
· Several eminent personalities were
present at the event including Arjun Rampal and Prince Manvendra Singh Gohil
· AIDS Healthcare Foundation celebrated 30 years of work in the
field of HIV/AIDS and providing treatment to over 8,30,000 PLHIV
Mumbai, December 2017: AIDS Healthcare Foundation observed the World
AIDS Day event with ‘Keep the promise’ initiative- a call to action and a
reminder to world leaders that with 1 million people still dying of AIDS every
year, the epidemic is far from over. This event was
organised on a global scale and witnessed a series of concerts
during the week leading up to World AIDS Day.
In Mumbai, the event
witnessed the participation of over 70 children who were living with HIV/AIDS.
They put up musical recitals and dance performances
and were part of Keep the promise activity to highlight the problems associated
with the disease. A documentary that paid tribute to AHF’S work over the last
thirty years was also showcased. During the event AHF provided free HIV testing
services, held interactive awareness-raising sessions and distributed condoms.
Also, the ‘Righteous Rebels Awards’ were bestowed on NGO’s and volunteers who
had whole heartedly championed for the cause.
The event witnessed the participation of
several eminent celebrities such as Mr.
Arjun Rampal (model and actor), Ms. Geeta Kapoor (ace choreographer), Ms. Tara
Sharma( actor and entrepreneur), Ms. Madhushree(singer), Ms. Shaina (designer
and politician), Ms. Hrishita Bhat (actress and model), Ms. Meenakshi Dixit
(actress and model), Shri Sadashiv Kisan Lokhande(member of Shiv Sena), Dr
Shrikant Eknath Shinde(Member of Parliament), Ms. Pratyasha Bole(model), Ms.
Bhairavi Goswami(actress), Mr. Suchhi Kumar(actor/model & fitness
enthusiast), Ms. Vandana Vadehra(singer), Ms Anjusha Chaughule(social activist)
and Prince Manvendra Singh Gohil (Gay Prince of India and Gay rights activist).
These celebrities got themselves publically tested for HIV to fight the
stigmatization and discrimination that the disease faced.
There were two noteworthy initiatives that were
launched during the event. The #REDx2
campaign, for safe and voluntary blood
donation, was launched in collaboration with Facebook. Through
this campaign AHF aims to create a pool of willing blood donors who will stay connected
through Facebook and can be easily contacted for urgent donations. AHF is
taking up this initiative as a pilot project for 3 months and will set up 10
blood banks in Delhi & Mumbai simultaneously.
The second is a
ten-day campaign called the ‘Testathon’. Under
this, AHF will conduct free HIV testing and counselling across 10 districts of five
states namely, Delhi, Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Andhra Pradesh and Tamil Nadu. The
campaign will start from December 1st and will go on till December
10th. The aim is to scale up intervention and increase access to
testing among the masses including the high risk groups in these states.
Dr. V. Sam Prasad, Country
Program Director AHF India said, “World AIDS day is essential because it brings people back to the
fundamentals of fighting AIDS thereby encouraging discussion and discourse. India
has made some remarkable progress in addressing the HIV epidemic. Not only
has the country been able to substantially reduce the incidence of HIV, but has
also been successful in providing universal treatment and care to those living
with HIV – dramatically decreasing the morbidity and mortality rates. Our ‘Keep the promise’ event in
Mumbai was full of festivities and jest. Live performances helped unite and
empower people from different walks of life against HIV/AIDS.”
Michael Weinstein, AHF President
said, “This
year’s World AIDS Day is particularly meaningful for AHF as it marks our 30th
anniversary and the fact that our organisation has cared for over 830,000
patients around the world. When AHF began as the AIDS Hospice Foundation in
1987, we were facing dire circumstances and a lot of uncertainty. Each day we
were fighting just to keep AIDS patients from having to die in the streets or
overcrowded hospitals. Our hope is that
our big concert events will help keep the spotlight on nations so that they
keep their promise to do all that they can to stop HIV/AIDS from claiming
additional lives.”
According to the WHO there
are currently 36.7 million people living with HIV worldwide, and in 2016 1
million people died from HIV-related causes. Collective
action by the National AIDS Control Organization, civil society, academia and
international bodies have made the progress against this epidemic substantial. In 2017, the World AIDS Day calls for increasing
programme and advocacy impact through strategic partnerships, transparency and
accountability in interventions to bring about radical and far-reaching changes
within the space.
About AIDS
Healthcare Foundation (AHF)
In
1987, a group of activists founded AIDS Hospice Foundation in Los Angeles to
provide a final resting place for terminally ill AIDS patients. Three
years later, as lifesaving antiretroviral medical therapy was introduced, AIDS
Hospice Foundation changed its name to AIDS Healthcare Foundation in 1990 to
signify its new focus on being a medical provider to people living with
HIV/AIDS.
AHF
funds its mission to rid the world of AIDS through a network of pharmacies,
thrift stores, healthcare contracts and other strategic partnerships. Today, as
the largest global AIDS organization, AHF currently provides medical care
and/or services to over 830,000 individuals in 39 countries, including in the
US, Africa, Latin America/Caribbean, the Asia/Pacific Region and Eastern
Europe. To learn more about AHF, please visit our website: www.aidshealth.org, find us on Facebook: www.facebook.com/aidshealth and follow us @aidshealthcare.
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