Showing posts with label Mexico City. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mexico City. Show all posts

Friday, November 14, 2008

Oh, the Humanity

We must envision a day
when we are reflexively
empathetic to gay men.


Homophobia—multiplied nineteen times


by Jim Pickett
in the November/December 2008 issue of Positively Aware

So, as it turns out, efforts (and the lack thereof) to eradicate HIV across the globe are systematically ignoring, denying, under-serving, and failing gay men and other men who have sex with men (MSM).

While this was not exactly a surprise on a planet where 86 countries continue to criminalize LGBTs in any number of human rights-crushing ways, to fully comprehend the broad, wide-reaching neglect of gay/MSM in the global AIDS pandemic is nevertheless a shock and awe to the soul. I was delighted that this issue emerged as a key, defining theme of the XVII International AIDS Conference (AIDS 2008), held in Mexico City August 3–8.

The AIDS 2006 conference in Toronto had frustrated me with the paucity of discussion and energy around gay/MSM topics. While AIDS 2008 featured gay/MSM issues prominently, my emotions were yet again set to frustration, and rage, as the extent of the neglect was revealed in countless plenaries, sessions, symposia, and press conferences.

Read the rest of the article.


Tuesday, September 2, 2008

Chatting with TheBody.com about Lubricants and the Development of Anal Microbicides

Jim Pickett chats up lubes with Bonnie Goldman

At the International AIDS Conference in Mexico City last month, TheBody's Bonnie Goldman asked Jim Pickett of IRMA to discuss IRMA's poster - "International Lubricant Use Behaviors for Anal Intercourse: Focus on Women."

Here is how the chat began:

[Jim] In 2007, IRMA did a huge survey on lubricants used for anal sex, in which we had about 9,000 people respond from 107 countries, in six languages (including 1,000 in Turkish -- who would have ever known?). Out of all of those who responded, we had 911 women respond. From those, 428 reported that they had engaged in anal intercourse or anal sex with toys in the last six months.

The poster looks at those [428 women]. It shows how they use lubricant [lube] -- or if they don't use lubricant -- as well as some interesting behavioral things. For instance, we found that most women don't really want lube with flavor, color or smell. They equally like lube consistency to be either thick or thin, and they also would like a silicone-based formulation.

Interestingly -- in terms of getting a sense of how people use lubricants -- is the substances we found that people add to their lube. This is interesting in terms of potential rectal microbicides in the future, which is really what this is about. A large number of people indicated that they added vaginal fluid to their lube, or saliva, or water. What does that mean in terms of testing for efficacy and safety? We're going to have to figure out how to do that in the lab, because vaginal fluid could very much change some of the properties [of a rectal microbicide]. Maybe it enhances it. Maybe it makes it something toxic. That was an interesting "Aha!" moment: We can't just test the actual product; we have to test it in the ways that people are really using it, before we get to people really using it.

[Bonnie] It's curious to me that you're studying lubricant use. Is that a critical part of figuring out aspects of future rectal microbicides? What's the connection?

[Jim] A rectal microbicide could very well be formulated as a lubricant. There would be some kind of chemical or agent put into a lube that would provide protection against HIV. It could also be delivered rectally through an enema, a douche, a suppository. We were sussing out, in the overall, huge survey [of both men and women], how people use lubes and what lubes they use, to figure out how acceptable it would be, among both populations, to use a lube for [anal sex].

We really wanted to get a sense of what lubes people were using because, in fact -- and this could be another project, for more researchers -- lubes that we use for sex aren't tested for safety. These are FDA [U.S. Food and Drug Administration]-regulated products, but they are not testing them for safety. They're considered cosmetic, even though they're going "in" places [in people's bodies] and staying there.

So we wanted to get a sense of what people are actually using, and then push researchers -- such as at Population Council, or wherever -- to test them. We need safety data on lubes that we're already using.

Microbicides are the next step, or a couple steps away. We need information on lubes right now.

Read the rest on TheBody.com.

Check out the abstract and additional info on the poster.


Thursday, August 28, 2008

Photos from AIDS 2008 - FRESH!


So, IRMA finally got its act together and uploaded all of our photos from AIDS 2008 in Mexico City into a set on Flickr. Click here to see all of them.

The picture above was taken at Partners in New Prevention Technologies booth in the Global Village IRMA shared with the Global Campaign for Microbicides, the AIDS Vaccine Advocacy Coalition, the African Microbicides Advocacy Group and PATH. IRMA member Lanre Onigbogi of Nigeria is pictured center.

Check out all of our photos and see IRMA - and our friends - in action --- from the "Invisibile Men" pre-conference to IRMA's event with Elizabeth Pisani to protests, posters, plenaries, workshops and the Global Village.

Have photos you would like to add to our AIDS 2008 collection? Send us an email! Many thanks to Arwa Meijer (pictured top right) of the Global Campaign for Microbicides for sharing some of her best pics with us.


Wednesday, August 27, 2008

Forgotten Truths, Hidden Realities: Addressing the Dynamics of HIV and MSM in Unfavorable Environments


Forgotten Truths, Hidden Realities:
Addressing the Dynamics of HIV and MSM in Unfavorable Environments


[session at AIDS 2008]

Speakers for this session:


Chairperson

Joel Nana
Africa Research and Policy Associate
International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission



Overcoming Homophobia, Violence, Stigma and Discrimination as a Way to Promote HIV Prevention Among Gay Men in Ghana

Mac-Darling Cobbinah
Executive Director
Centre for Population Education and Human Rights
Accra, Ghana



HIV Prevention, Care and Support for MSM in a Post-Soviet Country: Fighting with Old Stereotypes and New Realities

Zoryan Kis
Project Director
All-Ukrainian Coalition of the HIV-service Organizations

Ukraine



The Yogyakarta Principles at the International HIV/AIDS Conference in Mexico, August 2008

Boris Dittrich
Advocacy Director of the LBGT Rights Program
Human Rights Watch



From Invisibility to Being a Core High Risk Group - The Journey of India's Colorful Communities of Marginalized Sexualities Waking up to the Genocide of HIV and AIDS

Ashok Row Kavi
Founder-Chairperson
Humsafar Trust

India



Thursday, August 21, 2008

Hope for PrEP to prevent HIV infection

by Boeb Roehr, via the Bay Area Reporter

PrEP, shorthand for pre-exposure prophylaxis, is the next great hope for HIV prevention. Given recent failures of vaccine and microbicide trials, participants at the XVII International AIDS Conference in Mexico City were eager to give PrEP a whirl.

Excerpt:

"I really believe it will work. If it is as effective as we think it is going to be, it should revolutionize the way that HIV prevention dollars are spent." - Dr. Tom Coates

Read the whole article here.

Read more PrEP items on the IRMA blog here.

Read more about PrEP on PrEP Watch.

Tuesday, August 19, 2008

At Meeting on AIDS, Focus Shifts to Long Haul


"...microbicides — chemicals that are inserted into the vagina or rectum to prevent H.I.V. infection..."

In the New York Times today, Lawrence Altman summarizes the mood of AIDS 2008 in Mexico City. IRMA was especially thrilled that he used a clear and correct definition for microbicides, as seen above.

Excerpt:

"Though the meeting this month had its circuslike elements, the mood was much more sober. No major breakthroughs were announced, and cutting-edge research findings were rare. The great strides that many researchers thought they were on the verge of making in 2006 — in vaccines, microbicides and herpes-suppressive drugs to reduce H.I.V. transmission — have failed to materialize."

Read the whole article here.


And in case there were any doubts...
ADVOCACY WORKS


IRMA member Gary Hammond of the UK sent the following note to Altman recently, after an article he penned on PrEP. We are SURE this had an effect! Nice work Gary!!!

"Dear Lawrence,

I am curious as to why there was no mention in your PrEP article about the study in Thailand with IDU drug users, funded by the CDC.

Also do you not think that you were factually incorrect in your description of Microbicides in that you omitted to mention that research is also ongoing into people being able to use them rectally... is it really that unacceptable in the USA to mention ANAL SEX and INJECTION DRUG USE in a newspaper?

Shame as you missed out on reporting on the results of the rectal microbicide study in Macaques... probably the best news we have had in relation to microbicides in a long time...

I look forward to your timely reply!

Best wishes..."

Monday, August 11, 2008

Global AIDS prevention gives short shrift to gays

MEXICO CITY (AP) -- Jorge Saavedra's moment of truth came in the middle of an impassioned speech to 5,000 people about the paltry amount of money being spent to stop the spread of AIDS among gay men.

The Mexican federal official paused, then said publicly for the first time that he was gay. As he held up a photo of himself with his partner, the crowd applauded wildly. Afterward, men from Africa and India congratulated him with tears in their eyes.

"They told me that I was a hero, and that they wished they could do the same in their countries," said Saavedra, who is infected with HIV and also heads the AIDS prevention program in a country where many gay men live in denial.

Saavedra's coming out on Tuesday at the International AIDS Conference sent a powerful message to the world: Homophobia must be stamped out if AIDS is to be controlled. Fewer people are dying from AIDS, but new HIV infections among gay and bisexual men in many countries are rising at alarming rates.Yet less than 1 percent of the $669 million reported in global prevention spending targets men who have sex with men, according to UNAIDS figures from 2006, the latest available data.


Friday, August 8, 2008

Caught by the paparazzi at AIDS 2008












These are only a few of the many pics we have snapped of IRMA members and friends (and protests and speakers and other exciting stuff) at AIDS 2008 in Mexico City. In the next week or so we will have ALL the photos uploaded into a complete set for your viewing pleasure...

Until then, we hope you enjoy these.

And please, if you have photos you would like to add to the IRMA AIDS 2008 photo set, please send them to Jim Pickett here.

Thursday, August 7, 2008

Commercial lubricant use for anal sex among men who have sex with men in Lima, Peru


IRMA steering committee member Jerry Galea (above, IRMA-ALC dynamo, and the driving force behind the Spanish translation of "Less Silence, More Science") presented the above poster on behalf of himself and his colleagues. Check out the abstract here.

As luck would have it, his poster was right next to the IRMA poster.

Here are a few more pics from the poster exhbition yesterday.





Wednesday, August 6, 2008

Tuesday, August 5, 2008

...To The Land of Rectal!

¨Rectal microbicides are incredibly important,
and need to be developed.¨




Yesterday, at AIDS 2008, there was a huge session entitled -
Vaccines and Microbicides: Where Do We Go from Here?

Click the link to take you to Kaiser´s video and podcast of the entire program.

But let us quickly highlight this interesting session... While overall, there was not much said about rectal microbicides, there were some key moments to make rectal microbicide advocates giddy.

Panelist Zeda Rosenberg (pictured middle), Chief Executive Officer of
International Partnership for Microbicides who spoke on ¨Antiretroviral-Based Microbicides and IPM,¨ was asked by moderator Mitchell Warren (pictured bottom), Executive Director of the AIDS Vaccine Advocacy Coalition about rectal microbicides.

And this is what she had to say
-

¨Rectal microbicides are incredibly important, and need to be developed.¨

Zeda went on to say that while the ¨proof of concept¨was simpler to determine for vaginal microbicides, and that creating safe and effective rectal microbicides mean dealing with some distinct formulation challenges, the research and development of rectal microbicides ¨need to be encouraged.¨

THANK YOU ZEDA!

Also on the panel was IRMA Steering Committee member Manju Chatani, Coordinator of the African Microbicide Advocacy Group, (pictured top) who spoke on Microbicide Community Mobilization and Trial Participation.¨ She mentioned the good advocacy and community work of IRMA several times and underlined the need both men and women have for safe, effective, acceptable rectal microbicides.

THANK YOU MANJU!

These simple ¨shout outs¨ in high·profile venues are important to IRMA and more significantly, to the field at large. We hope these type of endorsements from respected leaders in the microbicide field will help encourage new funders to come to the table with resources, resources, resources for both research and development activities as well as advocacy work. Rectal microbicide research needs, conservatively, to have at least a 5x increase in yearly expenditures, from approximately $7 million USD to $35 million if we are to have a healthy drug development pipeline.

And our advocacy efforts also need support!

Advocacy, community education, awareness, engagement and mobilization activities are all critical factors in moving the field forward.
Don´t forget about IRMA!

Sex between men: the highest prevalence of HIV and the least amount of resources to prevent it




IRMA made the Global Voice (La Voz Global) yesterday - the official newspaper of the AIDS 2008 conference...


See below. Here is the link to the full issue.

Segregation has played an important role in the fact that, in certain countries, MSM, or ‘men who have sex with men’, have been affected in greater numbers than in any other communities. However, generally speaking, studies regarding the characteristics of the epidemic among MSM communities are not given enough support or attention, which causes a problem that becomes two-fold. On the one hand, men having sex with men are being widely stigmatized as one of the communities most affected by HIV/AIDS. On the other hand, in many countries, this population is being frequently left out from support and research programs and projects.

The organizers of the pre-conference entitled Invisible Men: Gay Men and Other MSM in the Global HIV/AIDS Epidemic call attention to this situation. It has been stated that the risk for men who have sex with men to contract HIV is 19 times higher than for the rest of the population. In Malawi for example, the number of HIV infections among MSM is almost double than that of men who do not have sex with other men, as it has been shown in a study supported by both the US and Canada. Another investigation presented in this event, carried out in Ukraine, showed that the incidence of HIV in MSM communities is not geographically homogeneous: while in the capital of the country, Kiev, the prevalence rate is 4.4 percent, in Odesa, that figure has reached 23.2 percent.

This is how Peter Piot, UNAIDS Executive Director, drew attention to the imbalance that exists between the high prevalence rates of HIV infections and the scant amount of resources allocated to HIV control among MSM and homosexual communities. Dr. Piot insisted on the need for economic funds to fight homophobia, since homophobia is what facilitates the spreading of the virus.

David Wilson, representing the World Bank, was also present at the event. He illustrated thecurrent situation of the pandemic, and stated the need to form strategic alliances in order to be able to contain the epidemic, especially among men who have sex with men.


Jim Pickett, from the International Rectal Microbicide Advocates (IRMA), in turn, expounded on the urgent need to promote the development of microbicides specifically designed for use in anal sex practises, which might be one of the most effective methods for preventing HIV transmission through anal sex. Given the histological characteristics of the anus and the rectum, risks of HIV transmission are much higher than those existing in vaginal sexual contact. According to the presenters, anal sex practices are widespread among the general population, making it strange that it is exclusively associated with male homosexual practices.

At the end of the conference, George Ayala, who is one of the main organizers and a member of the AIDS Project Los Angeles (APLA), considered that the most important facet of this pre-conference resides in strengthening relations between various groups from all over the world. Its main goal is the creation of collaborative networks which will make everyone's work more efficient and will improve the optimization of resources. However, it is not just a matter of research or social activism. It is more a matter of making this part of the population, which remains invisible in the eyes of many institutions, more evident to governments, organizations,and societies around the world. Dr. Ayala concluded that this event is an example of such an effort.


Check out the current issue, and all back issues of the Global Voice, here.


Monday, August 4, 2008

Brit Chicks I Fancy - live from Mexico City

IRMA's Jim Pickett, coming to you live from Mexico City, at AIDS 2008.

Read his post on the aforementioned chicks aqui... - on the Positively Aware blog. One, btw, is a rather famous female singer, right out of a sweet dream.

[pictured above, Pickett and one of the chicks (at left) with two other very cool lasses, at the TGI Fridays of Mexico -Sanborn's - having a cerveza and some chilequiles - and scheming.)

Check out the conference community blog - some great stuff there.

Saturday, August 2, 2008

IRMA in Action - Update and pix from the "Invisible Men" pre-conference in Mexico City








It was a bit of a travel nightmare for IRMA´s Jim Pickett.

Just because he was scheduled to arrive in Mexico City in the late evening of Thursday, July 31 - to be ready to participate and present at the "Invisible Men" pre-conference the following morning - did not make it so. Numerous nail-biting delays and narrowly missed connections meant he was not to arrive in Mexico City until 2pm on Friday, well after the IRMA presentation was supposed to have occurred. Thankfully, the wonderful organizers of the pre-conference (The Global Forum on MSM and HIV) changed the timing of the IRMA workshop for 3:30pm to allow for Pickett´s participation. When he finally arrived at the Sheraton Maria Isabel at 3:45, breathless, unkempt, under-rested and over-caffeinated - anything for attention! - IRMA co-presenters and all around Rectal Superstars Jeremy Kwan, Lanre Onigbogi and Jerry Galea had already gotten the presentation started.

Despite the drama - it ended up being a great workshop - if we must say so ourselves - with some really thoughtful questions from the 30 or so diverse participants - including concerns around ARV-based microbicides, the tension between the vaginal and rectal portions of the field, and how we best determine safety. We hope everyone who joined us for this workshop will go to the IRMA website and sign up to be a part of our expaning rectal empire!

Olivia from TheBody.com was there audio taping the whole thing - so when the link goes live, we will let you know. Thanks Olivia!

A highlight of the workshop (see an earlier post for all the slides), was the official, thrilling unveiling of the translated IRMA report - "Menos Silencio, Más Ciencia"- spearheaded by IRMA-ALC. Hard copies are being distributed at the International AIDS Conference which officially kicks off tomorrow.

It was a real delight to see so many friends from all over the world, IRMA members new and old, to put faces to names we have known for some time, and to meet new, aspiring rectal microbicide advocates!

¡VIVA IRMA!


Friday, August 1, 2008

Click 'n Learn - "Making Anal Sex Safer for MSM in the Developing World"

Today IRMA presented our workshop - Making Anal Sex Safer for MSM in the Developing World.

It was featured at "The Invisible Men: Gay Men and Other MSM in the Global HIV/AIDS Epidemic" - the pre-conference for MSM prior to the 2008 International AIDS Conference in Mexico City, organized by the Global Forum for MSM and HIV.


For your ease and convenience, the slides are available in PDF format on the IRMA website here, under Community Presentations.


IRMA presenters also unveiled the brand new Spanish-language version of our "Less Silence, More Science" report. Titled "Menos Silencio, Más Ciencia" the new translated document may be found on the IRMA website here.


Read the news release here.


You can view other "Click 'n Learn" presentations on the blog here.

Thursday, July 31, 2008

JOIN US - A Conversation with Author Elizabeth Pisani in Mexico City

Caucus for Evidence-Based Prevention

and

International Rectal Microbicide Advocates



cordially invite you to join us
on the occasion of the
XVII International AIDS Conference for

A Conversation with Author
Elizabeth Pisani

Monday, August 4, 2008,
6:30-8:00 pm

at the Hotel Camino Real Mexico in the Guanajuato Room. The Hotel Camino Real is located in the Polanco area of Mexico City on Mariano Escobado Avenue.

This is a closed session and only members and partners of the Caucus for Evidence-Based Prevention, the International Rectal Microbicide Advocates, and San Francisco AIDS Foundation will be allowed to attend. This invitation is non-transferrable. Contact Jim Pickett if you have questions.

About the book

Writer-scientist Elizabeth Pisani’s, "The Wisdom of Whores – Bureaucrats, Brothels and the Business of AIDS” is a kumbaya-free must read for anyone in the HIV/AIDS field. The book openly challenges you to re-examine your turf in “AIDS.inc," wherever your spot on the trough may be, and seriously question the billions of dollars being spent in the service of… what, exactly? Pisani’s take is that prevention, specifically prevention among gay men, injection drug users, and sex workers, is horribly neglected due to the questionable global strategy of making AIDS “everyone’s problem.” This generalization doesn’t hold true in most of the world, she says, and governments and funders have used it to spend their largesse among those least at risk, conveniently ignoring the politically unpopular messiness of sex, gay sex and drugs. Pisani's blunt account spares no one and offers all of us a chance to reflect on the current state of funding priorities for HIV prevention. For more information about Elizabeth Pisani and her book, please visit, her website.

Monday, July 28, 2008

AIDS2008.com - Your Community Connection to the 2008 International AIDS Conference


AIDS2008.com is an independent community resource sponsored by Community HIV/AIDS Mobilization Project (CHAMP) for the 2008 International AIDS Conference.

From July 21 through the end of the conference, AIDS2008.com will be a home for community bloggers and other journalists reporting from and about the plenaries, workshops, sessions, exhibits, and satellite/affiliated events at the XVII International AIDS Conference.

IRMA's Jim Pickett will be providing content among dozens of others.

Pickett will also be blogging for Positively Aware as well as right here, the only blog in the WWW devoted to rectal microbicides.


So many blogs, so little time!

Friday, July 25, 2008

Making Anal Sex Safer for MSM in the Developing World



The Invisible Men: Gay Men and Other MSM in the Global HIV/AIDS Epidemic is the exciting pre-conference for MSM prior to the 2008 International AIDS Conference in Mexico City. It is being put on by the Global Forum for MSM and HIV.

Click here for the pre-conference program.

Dates: August 1-2, 2008
Location: Sheraton Maria Isabel Hotel & Towers
Paseo de la Reforma, 325 Col. Cuauhtemoc
Mexico City, Mexico

IRMA is delighted to be presenting our workshop - Making Anal Sex Safer for MSM in the Developing World - on Friday, August 1, 12:00 – 1:30 PM.

Speakers:

Jim Pickett, AIDS Foundation Chicago/International Rectal Microbicide Advocates (IRMA), United States

Jeremy Wing Kien Kwan, PT Foundation Pink Triangle/MSM Programme (Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia)

Olanrewaju Onigbogi, University College Hospital (Ibadan, Nigeria)

Dr. Javier Lama, IRMA – America Latina y el Caribe (Lima, Peru)


Abstract:

The notion that gay men and MSM are strictly a Western phenomenon is patently false. Gay men and other men who have sex with men exist throughout the developing world, despite official denial and cultural stigma and shame that results in catastrophically low levels of HIV prevention funding for these communities. Unprotected anal intercourse is an extraordinarily efficient means of HIV transmission, and more user-controlled methods of protection are needed for gay and MSM that go beyond latex, fidelity and abstinence. International Rectal Microbicide Advocates (IRMA) works to advance the research and development of safe, effective and acceptable rectal microbicides for all the men, and women, around the world who engage in anal intercourse. IRMA members from the developing world (IRMA’s 600+ membership hails from 50 countries) will share the latest rectal microbicide research, highlight key finding in the new IRMA report, ‘Less Silence, More Science”, and discuss global advocacy efforts to engage gay and MSM.

[Slides for this presentation will be available right here, on the only blog in the WWW devoted to rectal microbicides. Check back after August 1.]

Tuesday, July 8, 2008

A Conversation with Author Elizabeth Pisani in Mexico City

[**NEW! Read this interview with Pisani on BlogCritics Magazine]

Caucus for Evidence-Based Prevention

International Rectal Microbicide Advocates

and
San Francisco AIDS Foundation

cordially invite you to join us
on the occasion of the
XVII International AIDS Conference for

A Conversation with Author
Elizabeth Pisani

Monday, August 4, 2008,
6:30-8:00 pm

at the Hotel Camino Real Mexico in the Guanajuato Room. The Hotel Camino Real is located in the Polanco area of Mexico City on Mariano Escobado Avenue.

This is a closed session and only members and partners of the Caucus for Evidence-Based Prevention, the International Rectal Microbicide Advocates, and San Francisco AIDS Foundation will be allowed to attend. This invitation is non-transferrable.

About the book

Writer-scientist Elizabeth Pisani’s, "The Wisdom of Whores – Bureaucrats, Brothels and the Business of AIDS” is a kumbaya-free must read for anyone in the HIV/AIDS field. The book openly challenges you to re-examine your turf in “AIDS.inc," wherever your spot on the trough may be, and seriously question the billions of dollars being spent in the service of… what, exactly? Pisani’s take is that prevention, specifically prevention among gay men, injection drug users, and sex workers, is horribly neglected due to the questionable global strategy of making AIDS “everyone’s problem.” This generalization doesn’t hold true in most of the world, she says, and governments and funders have used it to spend their largesse among those least at risk, conveniently ignoring the politically unpopular messiness of sex, gay sex and drugs. Pisani's blunt account spares no one and offers all of us a chance to reflect on the current state of funding priorities for HIV prevention. For more information about Elizabeth Pisani and her book, please visit, her website.

Tuesday, July 1, 2008

Your Roadmap to XVII International AIDS Conference

XVII International AIDS Conference - Mexico City - August 3-8, 2008

The International AIDS Conference is held every two years, and in 2008 will take place in México City, México. The conference brings together nearly 25,000 activists, researchers, policymakers and government officials, making it the largest regular conference on any health or development issue.

The 2008 conference has a program that includes many satellites, special sessions, abstracts and skills building sessions on a range of topics, including HIV prevention research and advocacy. AVAC (AIDS Vaccine Advocacy Coalition) has begun to compile a list of HIV prevention research-related events, forming the basis of its HIV Prevention Research Roadmap. The roadmap is a work in progress and will continually be updated in the days and weeks leading up to the conference.

Are you planning a related event that we haven’t included? If so, please let AVAC know at avac@avac.org, and we’ll add it to the roadmap.

Click to download the Roadmap:

- HIV Prevention Research at XVII International AIDS Conference

- HIV Prevention Research at XVII International AIDS Conference: In brief


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