A Proclamation on National Black History Month, 2024
February 1, 2024There Are Still Too Many Barriers to Mental Health Care
February 2, 2024February 7
#NBHAAD
2024 THEME
Engage, Educate, Empower: Uniting to End HIV/AIDS in Black Communities.
February 7 is National HIV/AIDS Awareness Day (NBHAAD), which was first observed in 1999. This observance is a day to acknowledge how HIV disproportionately affects Black people.
Black communities have made great progress in reducing HIV. Yet racism, discrimination, and mistrust in the health care system may affect whether Black people seek or receive HIV prevention services. These issues may also reduce the likelihood of engaging in HIV treatment and care. NBHAAD is an opportunity to increase HIV education, testing, community involvement, and treatment among Black communities.
This year’s theme is “Engage, Educate, Empower: Uniting to End HIV/AIDS in Black Communities”.
- Engage: Discussing ways to better involve the black community in HIV/AIDS prevention and treatment efforts. This can include outreach programs, community partnerships, and utilizing local leaders and influencers to promote HIV testing and destigmatize the conversation around HIV/AIDS.
- Educate: Focusing on improving HIV/AIDS education among black youth and adults. This could cover the latest research, treatment options, understanding of PrEP and PEP medications, and debunking myths that contribute to stigma and discrimination.
- Empower: Highlighting success stories and strategies that have effectively empowered black individuals living with HIV/AIDS. Empowerment can be through advocacy, policy change, access to care, and support systems.
Join My Brother’s Keeper, CDC’s Robyn Fanfair, Us Helping Us’s DeMarc Hickson, and Let’s Stop HIV Together ambassador Christopher Walker on February 7 at 2 PM ET for the NBHAAD webinar. The panel will explore this year’s theme. Register for the webinar hereExit Disclaimer!
Share and use CDC’s NBHAAD digital toolkit and/or visit nbhaad.orgExit Disclaimer for additional graphics.