News

HIV remains a persistent public health challenge in the United States. While infection rates have steadily declined over the ...
Nashville Mayor Freddie O'Connell warned that $11 billion in potential federal cuts could impact local programs for newborns ...
In 1989, Ronald Johnson did not think he would live to see old age. Johnson, a Black gay man, was diagnosed with HIV that ...
After a group of employers refused to provide their employees access to free HIV prevention treatment, the Supreme Court may ...
Many Americans were relieved when the Supreme Court left the Affordable Care Act in place following the law's third major ...
In drastically cutting down its public health workforce, the Trump administration is potentially undoing decades of work combatting the HIV epidemic and delaying upcoming advances. When Health and ...
Organizations working to combat HIV in Louisiana are bracing for potential funding cuts and warning of a possible resurgence of the virus, after the Trump administration eliminated staff at the ...
Despite the silence that stigma often brings, the joy and power of Black people living with HIV are loud when you know where ...
It’s been over 40 years since the virus responsible for the AIDS crisis was identified, yet HIV is still mired in uncertainty. In Bristol, nearly a thousand people live with the condition, but one ...
Mothers and children, husbands and wives, doctors, truck drivers and religious leaders are all grappling with the fallout ...
Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s purge of tens of thousands of federal workers has halted efforts to collect data on everything from cancer rates in firefighters to mother-to-baby transmission ...
Lynae Darbes, PhD, discusses what her research results mean when it comes to implementation of self-testing and counselling ...