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by Mimi Melles, Program Manager, iYAN Project
It can often be hard to imagine a meeting where young people and leaders such as the Executive Director of the Global Fund, Michel Kazatchkine, Executive Director of UNICEF, Anthony Lake, and the South African government, Hendrietta Bogopane Zulu, Duputy Minister of Public Works, all in one room talking about youth leadership and accountability. Well, at the International AIDS Conference in Vienna—it’s not only possible, it happened!
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by James Wagoner, President For the first time in nearly a decade, HIV/AIDS policy is truly being driven by science and public health, rather than by ideology. If the Obama administration’s new National HIV/AIDS Strategy is accompanied by an equal commitment of resources and political will, the United States has the opportunity to begin eliminating health disparities and to build a generational firewall against this epidemic.
The National HIV Strategy shines a spotlight on the central fact of the current epidemic-- that HIV disproportionately impacts those most affected by poverty, racism, homophobia and health care disparities. While public health experts have worked to address the reality of health disparities for some time, the NHAS brings a long overdue shift in the political framework that underpins our country’s response to HIV and AIDS. In addition to current prevention and treatment efforts, we also have a responsibility to address the socioeconomic, cultural, and demographic factors that contribute to the epidemic.
Education, prevention, and treatment will always be necessary. But, without addressing the systemic and systematic causes that underlie the dramatically disparate rates of HIV and AIDS in America, these interventions will never be sufficient.
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The 2010 International AIDS Conference, July 18-23, is almost here! Check out the Vienna YouthForce website for more information about the conference and youth-specific activities.
What is the Vienna YouthForce?
The Vienna YouthForce is a global platform for international, regional and local youth organizations that focus on HIV and AIDS, as well as on youth sexual and reproductive health and rights, to work together to organize youth activities and advocacy campaigns prior to and during the International AIDS Conference. The Vienna YouthForce organizing partners include ten youth organizations, including Advocates for Youth, Community Forum Austria, Global Youth Coalition on HIV/AIDS (GYCA), International Federation of Medical Students’ Associations (IFMSA), the World AIDS Campaign, Youth Coalition on Sexual and Reproductive Rights, YouAct, Y-Peer, CHOICE for youth and sexuality and Youth R.I.S.E.
This year, the Youth Programme Working Group and the Vienna YouthForce are working closer than ever to act as a common body for young people at this year’s International AIDS Conference. Activities implemented prior and during the conference include an advocacy campaign, a youth Pre-Conference, the Youth Pavilion, and media and communications. To learn more, visit the Vienna YouthForce web site at: http://youthaids2010.tigweb.org/.
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by Mimi Melles, Program Manager, International Youth Activist Network
Over a week ago, I visited Kampala, Uganda for a brief trip (four days to be exact) to attend the annual Reproductive Health Supplies Coalition meeting where members came together to discuss the challenges and actual solutions to increasing access to reproductive health supplies around the world. This meeting was unique to any gathering I had attended in the past because it literally brings all stakeholders involved for a very specific discussion on reproductive health supplies. This meeting included the private sector, governments (including our host, the government of Uganda), institutions working on systems strengthening like the Global Fund and UNFPA, and advocates like myself working to leverage political will and support for increased access.
We discussed the many challenges that hinder both men and women's access to reproductive health supplies and services. Stock-outs, limited contraceptive options, uncertainty in the arrival of supplies, oversupply in urban areas, undersupply in rural areas, lack of funding to provide the supplies and services… and the list goes on and on.
There’s good news though: we have solutions! The coalition has made a significant amount of progress to address many of these challenges. In the past year, we have developed mechanisms to expedite procurement so that supplies are on the shelves when men and women need it; we’ve set up a database that potentially provides providers with accurate information on the status of their delivery; we’ve scaled-up advocacy efforts at all levels, from the district level to the international level.
However, despite the technical language and overuse of acronyms in our discussions, the screening of a remarkable film (details soon!) reminded us that—at the end of the day--we’re talking about the lives of women and men and their right to plan their families, carry a safe pregnancy, and live healthy and productive lives.
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