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News 2013

Coming Out: Marvene Edwards



One in a series exploring the lives of people who have chosen to be out about their positive HIV status.


As Marvene Edwards was walking home from a bar, a group of men assaulted her. After discovering that she had no money to steal, one pulled a gun and shot her. The next morning a woman walking her dog found Edwards and called an ambulance.

Read more: Coming Out: Marvene Edwards

How Harlem United Integrates Services in the Big Apple


The last in a three-part series about the need for AIDS service organizations that serve Black communities to adapt to the changing landscape.

Harlem United was founded in 1988 as the HIV epidemic was exploding in the New York City neighborhood that many have long regarded as the capital of Black America. From its roots as a small paraprofessional organization, Harlem United has grown into a $40 million, 400-employee agency and has one of the most expansive, integrated service portfolios of any AIDS organization in the country.

Read more: How Harlem United Integrates Services in the Big Apple

Increased Risk of Neurological, Cognitive Deficits in Youth with HIV


NIH network finding underscores need for youth with HIV to obtain prompt treatment

More than 65 percent of HIV-infected youth had mild to moderate impairments in fine-motor skills, memory, and other cognitive skills, although not enough to affect day-to-day functioning for most, according to a National Institutes of Health network study.

Read more: Increased Risk of Neurological, Cognitive Deficits in Youth with HIV

NIH Observes 20th Anniversary of Women's Interagency HIV Study



The largest and longest-running study to investigate the impact of HIV on women in the United States marks its 20th anniversary this month. Findings from the Women's Interagency HIV Study (WIHS) have helped define how best to treat HIV-infected women in the United States and globally.

Read more: NIH Observes 20th Anniversary of Women's Interagency HIV Study

Let's Have a Big Converstation


Last week we all commemorated the 50th anniversary of the 1963 March on Washington. It is a very interesting time in our nation's history. Fifty years after Dr. King shared his dream with the world, no one can deny that we have made much, much progress. But as Bill Russell said during the 50th-anniversary commemoration, progress can be measured by both how far we have come and by how far we have left to go.

Read more: In This Issue

  1. Black AIDS Institute Presentations at USCA 2013
  2. How the Community Education Group Remains Relevant in the City Hit Hardest by HIV
  3. The National HIV/AIDS Strategy at Three: Time for Recommitment to Ending AIDS in America
  4. Colin Powell Talks Race, March on Washington and Voter ID

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Black AIDS Institute | 1833 West 8th Street #200 | Los Angeles, CA 90057-4920 | 213-353-3610 | 213-989-0181 fax