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March 10th is National Women & Girls HIV/AIDS Awareness Day – a time to educate, include and empower communities across the country about the impact that HIV and AIDS has had on women and girls.
This year’s theme is “Every Moment is a Deciding Moment” to show that you are greater than this disease and you have empowered yourself and your community to get educated, get involved, get treated.
Women have been hit hard by this disease and now it is time for us to confront it head on.
So on March 10th we are asking that you join the movement with these steps:
#1: Bring Awareness on your Social Media Networks.
Step 1: Change your Facebook Profile Picture:

Step 2: Follow our Twitter account @ywoc_lc or @amplify
Step 3: Retweet Retweet to #NWGHAAD
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by Ashley, Youth Activist and Amplify Blogger
Representative Tom Price (R-GA) does not believe any women have EVER had problems accessing birth control. Specifically, he stated, “Bring me one woman who has been left behind. Bring me on. There’s not one.” I am a woman, a woman with a lot of privilege in my life. I have always had insurance coverage and many other resources, yet I have had challenges accessing birth control. I asked my friends on Facebook if they had experienced challenges as well. Many women responded. You wanted to be brought women who have be left behind. Here we are, and here are the barriers we have faced.
Money
In college my birth control cost 60 a month. That was about the same as my gas bill, or groceries for a week. Others have told me their birth control cost anywhere between two dollars to 100 dollars per month. In these tough economic times when students are burdened with increasing student debt and lack of access to good paying jobs with benefits there is little money young people can spare.
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by Julia Reticker-Flynn, Manager, Youth Activist Network
Last week thousands of students on campuses across the country voiced their frustration with Members of Congress who are spending their time coming up with pieces of legislation that aim to restrict access to no-copay birth control. As Members of Congress hold hearings with all-male panels that demonstrate their disrespect of young people and women, young people refuse to be silent. Within two weeks you have:
- sent thousands of petitions to Congress
- held press conferences testifying to your experiences
- distributed thousands of condoms and talked to your peers about the importance of birth control and sexual health
- organized hundreds of events on campuses
- and submitted over 1,000 Valentines to Congress, putting a face on the people directly impacted by these dangerous pieces of legislation. (View the Birth Control 4 Us photo album below — you can also view it at www.flic.kr/s/aHsjyJEVWe.)
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by Sarah Audelo, Senior Manager, Domestic Policy
After last week's birth control hearing debacle (at which initially, no women were permitted to speak), House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi has announced that the House Democratic Steering and Policy Committee will be hosting a hearing on “Women’s Health” According to the announcement:
“The sole witness at the hearing will be Ms. Sandra Fluke, a third-year law student at Georgetown University, who was blocked from testifying at a recent Oversight and Government Reform Committee hearing by Chairman Darrell Issa . Instead, Chairman Issa brought forward a panel of all men to testify on this topic.”
While great to give Sandra a space to testify (the story she shares is incredibly compelling-you can click here to listen to what she would have said last week at the Oversight hearing), I must admit that my initial reaction was disappointment in the fact that Sandra is the only person sharing testimony. Why? Because there are many more perspectives Congress needs to hear from on the important topic of contraceptive access…especially when it comes to contraceptive access for women who use birth control to (get ready for it) prevent unintended pregnancy. Here is a quick list of folks I’d love to see testifying before Congress on this important issue as well as a little background to show why their voices are so important (and why they’re so great). Rev. Debra Haffner of the Religious Institute. Quoted from their own website, “Founded in 2001, the Religious Institute is a multifaith organization dedicated to advocating for sexual health, education, and justice in faith communities and society. The Religious Institute has emerged as the national leadership organization working at the intersection of sexuality and religion. “ Dr. Renee Jenkins, Professor and Chair of the Department of Pediatrics and Child Health at Howard University. Dr. Jenkins is an active member of the American Academy of Pediatrics, Chair of the Pediatric Section of the National Medical Association, member of the Institute of Medicine and serves on the Board on Children, Youth and Families of the National Academy of Sciences.
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