Day Two of AIDS 2016: Women and girls, new prevention research, stigma and discrimination

“What a Girl Wants” was the title of a Tuesday Special Session at AIDS 2016, and understanding what HIV prevention tools and information girls and young women want and need, and how to provide them, is a continuing theme at the conference. Throughout AIDS 2016 we are reminded — and are reminding the world — of the enormous impact of HIV on adolescent girls and young women, especially in sub-Saharan Africa.

AIDS 2016 symposia sessions on the impact of HIV on adolescent girls and young women, and how to reverse it, featured The United States President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) leader Ambassador Deborah Birx, humanitarian and former South African Frist Lady Graça Machel, actor and activist Charlize Theron, Global Fund chief Mark Dybul, UNAIDS Executive Director Michel Sidibé and other towering figures in the fight to achieve female health and empower girls and women to stay safe from HIV. The sessions gave voice to a growing global consensus that prioritizing the needs of girls and young women is essential to saving lives and ending AIDS.

Maintaining the spotlight on HIV in times of political upheaval, budget shortfalls, and new epidemics such as Ebola was another Tuesday conference theme, with sessions and media events offering strategies for keeping HIV treatment and prevention moving forward in the face of earthquakes, armed conflicts, the refugee crisis, and a decline in donor funding that advocates called “unprecedented in the history of the AIDS response.”

Justice Edwin Cameron of the Constitutional Court of South Africa, the first senior South African official to state publicly that he was living with HIV, received a standing ovation when he gave the lecture named for pioneering AIDS researcher and advocate Dr. Jonathan Mann at Tuesday’s plenary session. Cameron, whose stirring talk included a frank acknowledgement of the impact of HIV stigma on his own life, paid tribute to South Africa’s Treatment Action Campaign (TAC), praised the national effort that has made antiretroviral treatment (ART) accessible to more than 3.1 million South Africans, and brought the house down when he invited sex workers, transgender people, and lesbians and gay men from Africa and the Caribbean to take the stage and share the Jonathan Mann honour with him.

One of the most encouraging elements of AIDS 2016 is the strength of research presented here on progress in HIV prevention. Incoming IAS President Linda-Gail Bekker christened AIDS

2016 as “the dawn of the global PrEP era,” and encouraged delegates to move science into practice for people at risk for HIV, especially key populations. Final results from the Partners Demonstration showed the near elimination of HIV transmission among serodiscordant couples with PrEP and ART, while a number of other studies offered new insights on PrEP uptake, acceptability and adherence.

Participants at AIDS 2016 also heard results from HVTN 100, a South African study of a modified version of the RV144 regimen, the only HIV vaccine regimen to show efficacy to date. HVTN 100 adapted the RV144 regimen to make it specific to the southern Africa’s Clade C HIV subtype, changed the adjuvant to elicit a more powerful immune response, and added a booster to prolong protection. The successful study provided the green light for a larger efficacy trial of the improved regimen, which, if successful, could lead to a licensed HIV vaccine in South Africa and the world’s first preventive HIV vaccine.

90-90-90 provides a useful framework and an ambitious set of targets for measuring progress towards achieving HIV diagnosis, referral to treatment and viral suppression – the three pillars of efforts to slow and ultimately stop the epidemic. In the session “Measuring Progress Towards 90-90-90,” presenters contrasted efforts and progress towards the goal across South Africa, Botswana, Namibia, and Zimbabwe. While each setting presents different opportunities and challenges, one striking similarity across the countries appears to be the comparative challenge of engaging men and adolescents in testing. More detailed reports on this and many other sessions from Tuesday, and throughout the conference week, are available on the AIDS 2016 Rapporteur Summary page.

Finally, the detrimental impact on the HIV response of laws that criminalize homosexuality, and punish sex workers, drug users and people living with HIV, has long been decried by health workers and advocates. But the appearance on the AIDS 2016 stage of high-ranking political figures working to repeal these laws may represent a turning point in the effort to make these regressive statutes a part of history. Strategizing in an AIDS 2016 Symposium on Tuesday on building the political will to overturn such laws was U.S. Congressperson Barbara Lee, Justice Zak Yacoob of South Africa’s Constitutional Court, and former Presidents Festus Mogae of Botswana, Joyce Banda of Malawi, and Ruth Dreifuss of Switzerland. We hope their words in Durban will echo through the corridors of power worldwide.

For more details and scientific highlights, click here

with an HIV positive partner, a study showed on Tuesday, raising hopes of reducing HIV rates among one of Africa’s highest risk groups… The results were announced on Tuesday at the Durban International AIDS Conference in South Africa, where delegates are discussing the U.N. target of ending AIDS as a global health crisis by 2030.

Sex workers continue call for decriminalisation at Aids conference
The Witness

With estimates that 77% of sex workers in Durban are HIV-positive, local and foreign sex workers on Monday called on delegates at the 2016 International Aids Conference to decriminalise sex work.

New HIV vaccine to be trialed in South Africa

CNN (video available here)

A vaccine against HIV will be trialed in South Africa later this year after meeting the criteria needed to prove it could help fight the epidemic in Africa. In 2015, 2.1 million new infections were reported — two-thirds of which occurred in sub-Saharan Africa. A small trial, known as HVTN100, took place in South Africa in 2015 to test the safety and strength of immunity the vaccine could provide, ahead of any larger-scale testing in affected populations….The results were presented on Tuesday at the 21st International AIDS Conference in Durban, South Africa.

¿Se puede curar el sida?

ABC (Spain)
La pregunta es ¿se puede curar el sida? Desde hace unos años ese es el objetivo de los científicos y en 2014 la Sociedad Internacional de SIDA (IAS) presentó una Estrategia Científica Global ‘Hacia una Cura del VIH 2016’ en la que se marcaban las directrices para alcanzar este objetivo. Ahora, en vísperas de la 21ª Conferencia Internacional sobre el SIDA (AIDS 2016) que se celebra en Durban, Sudáfrica, la IAS presenta una versión 2.0 de su estrategia global.

Researchers warn of no quick HIV cure

Agence France Presse
Researchers on Tuesday praised progress made towards developing an HIV cure, but said it was impossible to tell when or even if a cure for the devastating epidemic would be found. Some 18,000 delegates from around the world have converged on the coastal city of Durban for the 21st International AIDS Conference where the latest advances in research are being presented.

TMAD – Beginners Ballroom Dance Class With Robin Windsor

Robin Winsdor, Star of Strictly Come dancing, will be taking a one hour ballroom dance class as a charity event to raise money for TheatreMAD – The make a Difference Trust.
The class is for same sex and mixed couples and is aimed at people new to ballroom dancing who would like to take their first lesson.
THIS IS A BEGINNERS CLASS
please note that here are limited spaces for the class so please book early.

BOOK HERE for an experience of a lifetime!

Broadway for Orlando: See The Exclusive Music Video:

A chorus of Broadway celebrities raised their voices in song in response to the June 12 Orlando shooting massacre, the worst in U.S. history. Sara Bareilles, Carole King, Nathan Lane, Audra McDonald, Lin-Manuel Miranda, Brian Stokes Mitchell, Sarah Jessica Parker and dozens more gathered June 15 at Avatar Studios to sing a benefit single of “What the World Needs Now is Love.” Playbill was on hand to capture the moment for an accompanying music video of the song, which is produced by Seth Rudetsky, James Wesley and Van Dean of Broadway Records. Click here for the digital download of the single. 100% of the proceeds will benefit the LGBT Center of Central Florida.

 

“Dirty Dusting” Raises £150

The Carlton Players, a London-based civil service acting group, raised £150 for MAD Trust through programme sales at their recent production of Dirty Dusting.

The play, written by Ed Waugh and Trevor Wood, tells the story of three pensioner cleaning ladies who set up a secret telephone sex chatline from their office workplace to boost their failing income and thwart their nasty boss. Needless to say things don’t quite go according to plan!

This critically-acclaimed production, which ran at the Phoenix Artist Club in March 2016, was directed by Jack Harris and starred Bethan Campbell, Rebecca Golding, Sharan Hunjan and Tony Heavey.

David Pendlebury Leaves MAD Trust

On behalf of the trustees of the Make A Difference Trust, we are sad to announce that David Pendlebury, founder of MAD Trust, and more recently our Charity Director will be stepping down as of January 2016. The Board and all the individuals involved in MAD Trust and its benefactors would like of thank David for all the work he has done over the past 25 years. His dedication and commitment to The Trust, in all its forms, has been unbending and it was with great sadness that we lose someone who has been a vital and integral force behind the charity. He is a dear friend as well as a valued colleague and I want to personally wish him every happiness and success in his return to theatre.

We will continue with the work started by David and we are delighted to announce that we have just approved a grant of £13,100 to the Waverley Care Children and Families Project and also £20,000 to Ubuntu After-School and Performing Arts Project working with children affected by HIV and AIDS.

With warmest wishes,

Melanie Tranter, Chair on behalf of MAD Trust