POPULARITY
J.R. Harrison is the director of the National Family Foundation while Rob Pue is the founder - publisher of Wisconsin Christian News.--The natural family is under attack and targeted for destruction. Just look at how America has redefined terms such as -marriage-, -family-, -male- and -female-. When changed, what's to stop them from expanding to unknown levels-- --Consider the hijacking of our calendar. Gay pride day has turned into gay pride month. Now the GLAAD LGBTQ calendar has the following- February 7th--National Black HIV-AIDS Awareness Day. The week after Valentine's Day--Aromantic Spectrum Awareness Week. February 28--HIV is Not a Crime Awareness Day. March--Bisexual Health Awareness Month. Also in March--National LGBT Health Awareness Week. There's many more that could be listed from throughout the year but you get the point.--Instead of reacting by cursing the darkness, Rob Pue and J.R. Harrison is instead lighting a candle in celebration of what's being called, -Natural Family Month-, which extends from Mother's Day to Father's Day. It's not about complaining. Instead, it's an attempt to take a positive approach by citing a historical, best practice.--To find out how you can get a Natural Family Month celebration started in your community and what's involved in the natural family promise, listen to this broadcast and then go to the link below.
J.R. Harrison is the director of the National Family Foundation while Rob Pue is the founder - publisher of Wisconsin Christian News.--The natural family is under attack and targeted for destruction. Just look at how America has redefined terms such as -marriage-, -family-, -male- and -female-. When changed, what's to stop them from expanding to unknown levels-- --Consider the hijacking of our calendar. Gay pride day has turned into gay pride month. Now the GLAAD LGBTQ calendar has the following- February 7th--National Black HIV-AIDS Awareness Day. The week after Valentine's Day--Aromantic Spectrum Awareness Week. February 28--HIV is Not a Crime Awareness Day. March--Bisexual Health Awareness Month. Also in March--National LGBT Health Awareness Week. There's many more that could be listed from throughout the year but you get the point.--Instead of reacting by cursing the darkness, Rob Pue and J.R. Harrison is instead lighting a candle in celebration of what's being called, -Natural Family Month-, which extends from Mother's Day to Father's Day. It's not about complaining. Instead, it's an attempt to take a positive approach by citing a historical, best practice.--To find out how you can get a Natural Family Month celebration started in your community and what's involved in the natural family promise, listen to this broadcast and then go to the link below.
J.R. Harrison is the director of the National Family Foundation while Rob Pue is the founder - publisher of Wisconsin Christian News.--The natural family is under attack and targeted for destruction. Just look at how America has redefined terms such as -marriage-, -family-, -male- and -female-. When changed, what's to stop them from expanding to unknown levels-- --Consider the hijacking of our calendar. Gay pride day has turned into gay pride month. Now the GLAAD LGBTQ calendar has the following- February 7th--National Black HIV-AIDS Awareness Day. The week after Valentine's Day--Aromantic Spectrum Awareness Week. February 28--HIV is Not a Crime Awareness Day. March--Bisexual Health Awareness Month. Also in March--National LGBT Health Awareness Week. There's many more that could be listed from throughout the year but you get the point.--Instead of reacting by cursing the darkness, Rob Pue and J.R. Harrison is instead lighting a candle in celebration of what's being called, -Natural Family Month-, which extends from Mother's Day to Father's Day. It's not about complaining. Instead, it's an attempt to take a positive approach by citing a historical, best practice.--To find out how you can get a Natural Family Month celebration started in your community and what's involved in the natural family promise, listen to this broadcast and then go to the link below.
J.R. Harrison is the director of the National Family Foundation while Rob Pue is the founder - publisher of Wisconsin Christian News.--The natural family is under attack and targeted for destruction. Just look at how America has redefined terms such as -marriage-, -family-, -male- and -female-. When changed, what's to stop them from expanding to unknown levels-- --Consider the hijacking of our calendar. Gay pride day has turned into gay pride month. Now the GLAAD LGBTQ calendar has the following- February 7th--National Black HIV-AIDS Awareness Day. The week after Valentine's Day--Aromantic Spectrum Awareness Week. February 28--HIV is Not a Crime Awareness Day. March--Bisexual Health Awareness Month. Also in March--National LGBT Health Awareness Week. There's many more that could be listed from throughout the year but you get the point.--Instead of reacting by cursing the darkness, Rob Pue and J.R. Harrison is instead lighting a candle in celebration of what's being called, -Natural Family Month-, which extends from Mother's Day to Father's Day. It's not about complaining. Instead, it's an attempt to take a positive approach by citing a historical, best practice.--To find out how you can get a Natural Family Month celebration started in your community and what's involved in the natural family promise, listen to this broadcast and then go to the link below.
J.R. Harrison is the director of the National Family Foundation while Rob Pue is the founder & publisher of Wisconsin Christian News.The natural family is under attack and targeted for destruction. Just look at how America has redefined terms such as "marriage", "family", "male" and "female". When changed, what's to stop them from expanding to unknown levels? Consider the hijacking of our calendar. Gay pride day has turned into gay pride month. Now the GLAAD LGBTQ calendar has the following: February 7th--National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day. The week after Valentine's Day--Aromantic Spectrum Awareness Week. February 28--HIV is Not a Crime Awareness Day. March--Bisexual Health Awareness Month. Also in March--National LGBT Health Awareness Week. There's many more that could be listed from throughout the year but you get the point.Instead of reacting by cursing the darkness, Rob Pue and J.R. Harrison is instead lighting a candle in celebration of what's being called, "Natural Family Month", which extends from Mother's Day to Father's Day. It's not about complaining. Instead, it's an attempt to take a positive approach by citing a historical, best practice.To find out how you can get a Natural Family Month celebration started in your community and what's involved in the natural family promise, listen to this broadcast and then go to the link below.
The Pride in our Health Podcast is BACK! February 7, is National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day–a day dedicated to raising awareness of the disproportionate impact of HIV on Black Americans and the importance of increasing access to HIV education, testing, treatment, and prevention services. Today's guest is Kelvin Powell, Laboratory Research Assistant at the Fenway Institute. Kelvin Powell is excited to be back at the Fenway Institute, where he is currently working with the Biomedical Research team aiding with Laboratory and Recruitment support on several NIH study grants and COVID-19 Vaccine Trials. Kelvin has experience with educating the community on research by informing the community of latest practices within prevention and biomedical research by breaking down myths about research within the communities of color. Intro and Outro music: https://pixabay.com/music/upbeat-good-vibe-resonance-165302/ Fenway Health Board of Director Application: https://tr.ee/ulQQJ2qJK_ The Pryde Housing Lottery Application: https://www.pennrose.com/apartments/massachusetts/pryde-the/?utm_source=newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=application-announcement
In this special episode of Public Health Matters for National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day, Dr. Christina Madison and special guest Alsean Bryant discuss Bryant's work in addressing health and racial disparities within the HIV community. They also highlight Bryant's journey to becoming a PrEP provider as well as the intersection of pharmacy, public health, and music in his life and career. Key Takeaways: Pharmacists play a vital role in public health, particularly in addressing health disparities within the HIV community, and their expertise in medication management and patient counseling are essential for improving health outcomes. Normalizing conversations about sexual health and HIV prevention in primary care settings is essential, and integrating these discussions into routine care can improve prevention and reduce barriers to testing. Despite advancements in HIV prevention, challenges such as access to care and medication adherence persist and addressing these challenges requires collaborative efforts among health care providers, policy-makers, and community organizations. Collaborative practice agreements and advocacy efforts are key to expanding the roles of pharmacists in public health and HIV care.
HIV related stigma negatively impacts the fight to end the HIV epidemic in the US. In this episode, host Terrell Parker brings together a panel of guests to discuss ending HIV stigma, specifically in the Black community, so we can end the HIV epidemic in the US. Terrell and guests honor National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day, a day that provides an opportunity to increase HIV education, testing community involvement, and treatment among black communities. Together, they discuss why we need an awareness day, what HIV stigma looks like across the multiple sectors of the Black community including HIV criminalization laws, how stigma impacts individuals living with HIV, the importance of conversations that address one another's humanness, and a story about educating DaBaby after making comments that further drove negative HIV stigma. Guests:Kenneth Pettigrew, Director for the NMAC Training Center to End the EpidemicDaniel Driffin, HIV/AIDS ActivistDr. Joyce Turner Keller, Bishop, CEO and founding Executive Director of ASPIRATIONS, a nonprofit HIV service organization Marnina Miller, Influencer raising awareness about HIV stigmaLibra Davis, Member of NMAC Constituary Advisory Panels (CAPs)To connect with us further, or to find more resources on race and HIV/AIDs, visit our website. You can also find us on Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter.
Not only is it Black History Month, but this week marked the 23rd anniversary of National Black HIV/Aids Awareness Day. It began as a grassroots effort to let people know about HIV and AIDS prevention, care and treatment in a community that is still disproportionately affected by the epidemic. Allison speaks with Marc Meachem at ViiV Healthcare, who serves on the Presidential Advisory Council on HIV/AIDS about why this continues to be an issue.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
On the "CBS News Weekend Roundup," host Allison Keyes gets the latest on the controversy over Covid-19 mask restrictions from CBS News Medical Contributor Dr. David Agus, as well as how women have been hurt by the pandemic from CBS's Nikki Battiste. We'll hear about Super Bowl betting and ads ahead of the big game on Sunday. In the Kaleidoscope, for Black History Month, Allison marks the 23rd anniversary of National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day. She speaks with Marc Meachem at ViiV Healthcare and the Presidential Advisory Council on HIV/AIDS, about why that community continues to be disproportionately affected. These stories and much more on the "CBS News Weekend Roundup."See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
This observance is an opportunity to increase HIV education, testing, community involvement, and treatment among black communities. The first National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day (NBHAAD) was marked in 1999 as a grassroots-education effort to raise awareness about HIV and AIDS prevention, care, and treatment in communities of color. National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day is February 7 and is a day to address the impact of HIV on Black communities. When we work to overcome structural barriers to HIV testing, prevention, and treatment, we can #StopHIVTogether. https://bit.ly/3GkAgra #NBHAAD
COVID-19 hospitalizations are back under 1200…for the first time since mid-December. Today is National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day. We'll hear from a doctor and advocate on how racial disparities affect access to treatment. Plus a conversation with Baltimore's director of homeless services, on ongoing and future efforts to get people safely sheltered – and rehoused. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
A video montage of Joe Rogan saying the n-word numerous times during his podcast appeared online, forcing Rogan to issue an apology and explaining the use of the n-word in context. Also as a result, over 100 episodes of Rogan were removed by Spotify. Then Joe addresses a pastor in Tennessee who held a book burning event and lastly, today is National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day and Dr. Laura Cheever converses with Joe about the importance of knowing your status and also getting treatment if one does have HIV.
With the National Black HIV/AIDs Awareness Day coming February 7th, this week KYW's Racquel Williams sits with the Health Resource and Services Administrations, Dr. Laura Cheever on their efforts to raise awareness on HIV/ AIDs and the stigma impacting the community of colors. The Newsmaker of the week highlights Self Inc's President and COO, Mike Hinson, Jr. Self Inc, is the largest provider for emergency housing services for the homeless in Philadelphia. Mike Hinson Jr, is also an HIV/AIDS educator and civil rights advocate. Hinson shares his work in keeping marginalized communities at the forefront of priorities for policymakers throughout Philadelphia. The Philly Rising Changemaker caught up with Mykey Cooper, a 16-year-old star in the making, from North Philadelphia with many talents including acting, rapping, entertainer, and named one of the youngest writers for the Jimmy Fallon kid show. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
The African American Children's Book Fair Celebrates 30 years of bringing Childrens and Young Adult Literature's most celebrated authors and illustrators to Philadelphia. The event takes place February 26th at the Pennsylvania Convention Center. I speak Paralee Knight, Vice President of Social Impact for Wells Fargo, a major sponsor, about the critical importance of representation in children's literature and its impact on her life. https://theafricanamericanchildrensbookproject.org/Here's a sobering statistic –At current rates, an estimated 1 in 2 African American men who have sex with men will be diagnosed with HIV in their lifetime. February 7th is National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day - an opportunity to increase awareness of care and treatment services for those facing stigma and HIV-related health disparities and encourage those who are undiagnosed to get tested for HIV and, if they test positive, to get appropriate care and medication. https://www.hiv.gov/events/awareness-days/blackFirst, I speak with U.S. Army Captain Logan Hunter, Commander of the Philadelphia Metro Recruiting Company about new opportunities and benefits designed to compete with private industry careers.https://www.goarmy.com/
Dizz is the founder and lead songwriter/choreographer for Canadian musicgroup, rIVerse. rIVerse recently released their music video for "BaeBeeBoo" off their critically acclaimed sophomore album "Poison IV', a deeply personal and eclectic pop and R&B record that explores themes such as Black Lives Matter, systemic racism, body positivity, self-love and more. Dizz recently came out as HIV Positive in solidarity with National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day and has since been using his platform to end the stigma around HIV and AIDS. On this episode, we chat with Dizz about the behind the scenes of the singing group, coming out as HIV positive in the modern world, and the importance of self love...we also put it out in the world that Beyonce should play Dizz in the movie version of rIVerse...c'mon Bey! Hosted by Alexander Rodriguez
February 7th is National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day! I am joined by none other than the marvelous Dr. Justin Terry-Smith to talk about it all, basically. HIV/AIDS impact on black Americans, long-term survivors, changing attitudes towards PrEP, and U=U, how black Americans can get better access to healthcare, the COVID/HIV comparisons, Black Lives Matters and HIV, and much more! You also might find out why otters are so intimidating! Like, subscribe and listen now! Ren Morrill (Host) - Ren is The Three Letter Podcast’s creator and host. He is a Maine native with a life long passion for HIV. He works for Frannie Peabody Center as the prevention program coordinator. He also serves as the co-chair of Pride Portland’s HIV Advisory Board.Dr. Justin Terry-Smith - Dr. Justin Terry-Smith - My guest today is Dr. Justin Terry-Smith. Dr. Terry-Smith is an HIV positive activist, actor, educator, speaker, and writer. He has contributed to many publications including Black AIDS Institute, thebody.com, as well as regional and national news video and radio outlets. Justin created ‘Justin’s HIV Journal’ on Youtube.com to advocate for HIV/AIDS education, prevention, awareness, and his experience living with HIV. Justin has his Doctorate in Public Health with a concentration in Infectious Disease. His dissertation “Factors Influencing Use of Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis: Among Men Who Have Sex With Men" was recently published. Dr. Terry-Smith is also a Black Gay Jewish man, and a professor at Anne Arundel Community College. He resides in Maryland with his husband Dr. Philip Terry-Smith. They have two children. His website is: www.justinterrysmith.com•Justin’s Website•www.justinterrysmith.com•Tuskegee Syphilis Experiments• CDC Timeline of the Study•Your Wrong About Podcast did a wonderful two-part episode on the Tuskegee study. It’s irreverent but very informative.•Black AIDS Institute - https://blackaids.org/•Last Men Standing - https://projects.sfchronicle.com/2016/last-men-standing-film/•Whitman-Walker Health - https://www.whitman-walker.org/•Us Helping Us - https://www.ushelpingus.org/
We’ve got the founder of an organization that deprograms extremists, yep it kind of sounds like conversion therapy for racist, but very interesting! Also, what we can learn and we are reflecting on National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day that happened over the weekend and how racial justice is key to ending HIV in those communities. Plus, all your 'What's Trending" news from impeachment to stimulus package. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
February 7th is celebrated annually as National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day. We want to celebrate this awareness day and its theme of "we're in this together!" Join Mario Harper from Avita Pharmacy, Steve, and Taara as they discuss what this day means and different ways to address stigma within ourselves and our communities. National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day #NBHAAD#NBHAADAvita PharmacyCenter for Health EmpowermentCHE ReliefTelecheQCare+ storyblocks.com
In recognition of National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day, Ash and Kita discuss the topics of HIV, STIs, and Mental Health with CDC Ambassador & HIV Advocate Ciarra Covin. Ciarra “Ci Ci” Covin is known for her transparency and realness when engaging with her audiences. Her amazing personality and her love for life has touched so many lives, and we are honored to experience all the vibes live and in session on this episode. Facebook: @thenittygrittywithashandkita FB Group: @chatwithashandkita Instagram: @thenittygrittywithashandkita Email: thenittygritty.ak@gmail.com --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/thenittygrittyak/message
Today: There've been a lot of concerns voiced about how safe it is to travel in elevators during the coronavirus pandemic -- but very little solid research into those concerns. Otis Worldwide commissioned Purdue University mechanical engineering professor Yan Chen to look into it, and Otis engineer Stephen Nichols is on "Regionally Speaking" to reveal the study's findings. February 7th is National Black HIV-AIDS Awareness Day and Dr. Laura Cheever with the Ryan White HIV-AIDS Program in Washington DC speaks about the significance of the day and of the legacy of Ryan White himself. The Hoosier teenager died from the disease in April 1990. And Andy Campbell, the lead person on the renewable assets team with NIPSCO, and NIPSCO spokesperson Tara McElmurry join us to talk about the solar and wind projects that the utility is working on... or, in the case of two wind farms, has put online. It's part of the utility's renewable energy initiative to be "coal-free" by 2028.
On this episode, Edmonson and Mistertelltales have their weekly check ins that includes Style Coaching updates and a part time relocation across country. This episode marks the one year anniversary of the original episode, Living with HIV and MIstertelltales gives us a yearly update as well as a discussion around medical mistrust in black communities. February 7th is National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day and Edmonson BDAY!!!!! Please like, comment, and follow us wherever you listen to podcasts and follow us across social media at WHAT WORKS FOR US.
This episode is dedicated to National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day. Edmonson and Mistertelltales discuss the latest CDC data around HIV in black communities and HIV prevention campaigns like U=U. Mistertelltales also opens up around his fears of being a HIV positive black queer man in today's America and its health disparities in communities of color. Lets end HIV stigma and Pozphobia together and check out THE ART HEALS PROJECT on Instagram. Please leave comments and rate us wherever you listen to our show and show us LOVE!
This coming Friday on February 7th we will recognize the 21st annual National Black HIV & AIDS Awareness Day. As the name suggests, this day was created to focus on the specific epidemic of HIV & AIDS in black communities. And like everything that racism and bigotry touches, the AIDS crisis has been no different. We are not going to go into the full history behind AIDS as we will discuss that in June when we finally cover the AIDS epidemic. However, in this episode we will discuss the many biases and overt as well as subtle racism that prevented early treatment in black and brown communities. We will also give a fairly thorough explanation of HIV and AIDS and address some of the stigma around the virus. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/yourqueerstory/message
In support of National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day, Dr. P has a candid conversation with Rev. Savalas R Squire Sr. on living with HIV and the response of the Black church community.
On this episode of Collectively Speaking, we're discussing the importance of National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day and a little later we discuss healthy relationships and the Black community.
Shirley Strawberry and Carla Ferrell discuss the importance of knowing your HIV/AIDS status in honor of National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://news.iheart.com/podcast-advertisers
In this week’s episode, we bring to you a special edition of the podcast in observance of February 7th being National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day, Chris is talking with Kecia Johnson, better known as Kecia J. Kecia Johnson is an author, AIDS educator, Talent Manager and Truth Strategist that travels the country sharing her story with the masses. With over 7 years of HIV/AIDS activism work, Kecia is most known for her direct and real life way of educating folks about the virus. After starting in the music industry at the age of 19, almost 2 years into finding her way in her career, Kecia found herself diagnosed with AIDS and near death.
Joining “CAN WE TALK FOR REAL”, cohosts Teresa Jackson and Michelle E. Brown on Wednesday, February 3, 2016 to address the Asian/Pacific HIV/AIDS awareness strategy and [Prep] will be Jens Tamang from the Minnesota Aids Project who before joining MAP he provided care coordination for individuals living with HIV in adult foster care and served as a Projects Administrator for several LGBTQ youth programs funded by the Minnesota Regional Arts Council. Joining him will be also be Kayden Hoang Bui he will discuss his vision on how to expand the MAP’s work into hard-to-reach populations to promote HIV/STI education, awareness, and testing through increased outreach and media presence.In recognition of Feb.7th National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day, joining CWT4R, will be Pastor Anthony Sullivan Jr. a Pastor-Leader, Preacher, Challenger, Trainer, Teacher, Resource, Initiator, Counselor, Guide and a justice advocate committed to the liberation of persons and groups who suffer from all forms of oppression. He is a graduate of the Samuel DeWitt Proctor School of Theology at Virginia Union University having earned the Master of Divinity degree. He is especially concerned about those impacted and affected by the pandemic of HIV/AIDS. He will talk about, “What does faith has to do with the mobilization initiative aimed at Blacks to help reduce the HIV/AIDS spread and to bring more awareness”.
This year, February 7, 2015 marks the 15th year for National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day (NBHAAD). This is a national HIV testing and treatment community mobilization initiative targeted at Blacks in the United States and the Diaspora. The Black Aids Institute is the only organization that focuses their attention solely on black people with HIV/AIDS. This year there are some shocking findings and scientific evidence that speak about treatment and opportunities in the black community when it comes to the HIV/AIDs epidemic.National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day is a call for Black American to recognize that HIV is indeed a Black phenomenon & the reality that HIV disproportionately affects Black people and especially Black men who have sex with men (MSM) and Black women. Hank Millbourne will discuss information about the number of Black MSM diagnosed with HIV and the myth of black men and how they engage in sex. Hank will also talk about how the community should educate themselves, become more involved, and know what their status is and if you are infected to get treated.
This week on TALK! with AUDREY: REVEREND KERON SADLER, NAACP National Health Program Manager is my guest. February 7th is National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day. Did you know that the African American community bears the largest burden of the HIV epidemic over any other racial or ethnic group in the United States? Reverend Sadler has information about the NAACP's partnership with Black Church's to provide training for faith leaders and a first-of-its-kind manual to offer a framework to integrate HIV education in churches and seminaries.
This week on TALK! with AUDREY: REVEREND KERON SADLER, NAACP National Health Program Manager is my guest. February 7th is National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day. Did you know that the African American community bears the largest burden of the HIV epidemic over any other racial or ethnic group in the United States? Reverend Sadler has information about the NAACP's partnership with Black Church's to provide training for faith leaders and a first-of-its-kind manual to offer a framework to integrate HIV education in churches and seminaries.
In honor of the 12th annual National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day, we are pleased to welcome one of the national spokespeople—Christopher Barnhill, an award-winning HIV/AIDS youth advocate and public speaker—to our program. Join us as we discuss the importance of this day, his passion for his work with youth, how he learned to stand shamelessly as his authentic self and how this has blessed his life.