These
grants represent EJAF's continuing commitment
to funding demographics and geographic regions
that are seriously impacted by HIV/AIDS and under-served
by traditional funders. The 15 grants awarded
through this funding cycle are distributed over
all of the Foundation's targeted areas: The Southern
United States; Latin America and the Caribbean;
incarcerated populations; men who have sex with
men (MSM); harm reduction; African Americans;
and young people. Many of these grants have overlapping
areas of focus, i.e., Latin America and MSM,
MSM and harm reduction, African American young
people, etc.
"EJAF's
strategic approach allows us to respond adroitly
as the global AIDS epidemic evolves, investing
donor dollars where they are most needed and
will have the greatest impact," stated
EJAF's Executive Director Scott Campbell. "Some
of these grants are requests for renewed funding
for organizations EJAF has partnered with in
the past, and we have been very gratified to
learn about important new issues that have arisen
during the course of their work, resulting in
funding requests for programs that have evolved
to address these issues. The ACLU's Reproductive
Freedom Project is an excellent example, because
it addresses HIV prevention but also reaches
beyond to the more fundamental needs of young
people for comprehensive reproductive health
education."
Mr.
Campbell concluded, "During these uncertain financial
times, all of us at EJAF are particularly pleased
to be able to continue to offer support to organizations
serving populations most affected by HIV/AIDS,
many of which are struggling to secure sufficient
funding."
EJAF
December 2009 Grant List
Major Direct Grants
The Caribbean
Partners in Health, (PIH), Boston, MA, $200,000
Latin America
amfAR, The Foundation for AIDS Research, New
York, NY, $150,000
The Collaborative Fund for HIV Preparedness,
The Tides Foundation, New York, NY, $275,000
Youth and Sexual Health
American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), New
York, NY, $50,000
HIV Prevention for Men Who Have Sex With Men
Community AIDS Resource Coalition (Care Resource),
Miami, FL, $40,000
New Leaf: Services for Our Community, San Francisco,
CA, $40,000
Positive Impact, Inc., Atlanta, GA, $39,998.51
San Francisco AIDS Foundation, San Francisco,
CA, $40,000
HIV/AIDS in Incarcerated Populations
Bailey House, Inc., New York, NY, $30,000
National Prison Project (NPP), American Civil
Liberties Union (ACLU), New York, NY, $150,000
Addressing HIV/AIDS in the Southern United States
Association of Nurses in AIDS Care, Akron,
OH, $37,450
National AIDS Fund (NAF), Washington D.C. ,
$125,000
Sexuality Information and Education Council
of the United States (SIECUS), New York, NY,
$40,000
Southwest Louisiana AIDS Council, Lake Charles,
LA, $39,466
Harm Reduction
Phoenix Center, Springfield, IL, $25,000
Project
Descriptions
The
Caribbean
Partners in Health, (PIH), Boston, MA, $200,000
-- Providing Comprehensive HIV Care in Saint-Marc,
Haiti: Since 1998, Partners in Health (PIH)
has provided high-quality HIV/AIDS treatment
in rural Haiti, through a community-based model
of HIV care that has achieved extraordinarily
positive treatment outcomes. Currently PIH provides
antiretroviral therapy to 4,700 HIV patients
across all sites, the total number of HIV patients
receiving care (including those on antiretroviral
therapy) is more than 19,000. In 2007, PIH expanded
HIV care to the lower Artibonite Department,
including Saint-Marc, a coastal port city with
an adult HIV prevalence rate double that of the
Central Plateau. Scaling up HIV care in Saint-Marc
offers the opportunity to adapt PIH's model to
the challenges of an urban, diverse population,
with lessons learned that will inform further
expansion into other urban settings. EJAF funding
will support PIH's comprehensive HIV care program
in Saint-Marc at the district referral hospital
and a health center, through which PIH will provide
care to 2,500 HIV patients, distribute 150,000
condoms, provide HIV counseling/testing to 11,000
people, and provide comprehensive services to
2,250 orphans and vulnerable children.
Latin America
amfAR, The Foundation for AIDS Research, New York, NY, $150,000 --
MSM Initiative - Latin America: This grant would provide renewal funding
for amfAR's MSM Initiative activities in Latin America. The MSM Initiative's
aim is to significantly improve access to HIV prevention, treatment and care
for men who have sex with men (MSM) populations in low- and middle-income countries
around the world. The Initiative does this through three core strategies: 1)
Supporting and empowering grassroots MSM organizations by providing direct
financial support in the form of community awards, capacity-building and technical
assistance; 2) Building understanding and awareness about HIV epidemics among
MSM and other groups by promoting and supporting relevant research; and 3)
Advocating for effective policies and increased funding for programs that address
HIV/AIDS among MSM. The Initiative has just announced support for nine projects
in the region that provide HIV/AIDS services to, and advocacy for, MSM. amfAR's
funding in the region-made possible by the generous support of the Elton John
AIDS Foundation-has had a powerful impact on the ability of grassroots organizations
to help this gravely under-served population. amfAR is now in its second year
of delivering urgently needed community awards and technical assistance in
Latin America. Worldwide, the Initiative has already awarded nearly US $1.5
million in small grants to more than 55 frontline organizations, and has worked
to spur multi-lateral organizations and bilateral governments to take action
on MSM/HIV issues and provide increased financial support.
The
Collaborative Fund for HIV Preparedness, The
Tides Foundation, New York, NY, $275,000 -- Support
for Community Mobilization in Latin America: Funding
will support continued advocacy, treatment literacy
and community mobilization by the International
Coalition Of Activists In Treatment In Latin
America (The Coalition), which coordinates all
Latin American-focused activities for the HIV
Collaborative Fund and the International Treatment
Preparedness Coalition. During the grant period,
the Coalition will coordinate at least one round
of grant making to community based organizations
providing health literacy, social support, and
advocacy to ensure access to comprehensive HIV
treatment, care and prevention services and for
the protection of human rights. In Latin America,
funded projects have a strong focus on improved
HIV care quality and access for marginalized
populations such as drug users and men who have
sex with men, and a secondary focus on treatment
literacy for people living with HIV/AIDS. The
Coalition will also implement its regional and
national advocacy strategies, develop and implement
communications and media strategies, and provide
on-going technical assistance and capacity building
to its local grantees. Oversight for these activities
is provided through the HIV Collaborative Fund
at Tides Center. Since 2003, the Collaborative
Fund has supported over 800 HIV treatment organizations
in over 75 countries.
Youth
and Sexual Health
American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU),
New York, NY, $50,000 -- ACLU Reproductive Freedom
Project: The ACLU Reproductive Freedom
Project's "Advancing Healthy Sexuality Education" project
aims to promote effective sex education and healthy
sexuality through: 1) communications research
in collaboration with cognitive linguists that
will offer a new model and new messages for how
we think and talk about sex (ultimately boosting
political/policy changes that support comprehensive
sex education); 2) work with educators to help
develop a greater understanding of education
policy and reform, and how to integrate sex education
reform into these efforts; and 3) state-based
advocacy and litigation aimed at rejecting abstinence-only
programs and implementing effective sex ed policies
in communities around the country. The Project
is uniquely positioned to take on this work,
given its longstanding history of pressing for
effective sex education through litigation and
advocacy; its network of ACLU affiliates prepared
to fight sex education battles in towns, cities,
and states around the country; and the ACLU's
communications expertise.
HIV Prevention for Men Who Have Sex With Men
Community AIDS Resource Coalition (Care Resource), Miami, FL, $40,000
-- Youth Health Intervention Project: Care Resource's Youth Health
Intervention Project contributes to the reduction of new HIV infections among
young men who have sex with men (MSM) and increases enrollment of HIV positive
and high-risk negative MSM in appropriate medical care, treatment and other
support services. The Project uses focused outreach providing culturally competent
prevention messages to individuals; offering HIV counseling and testing and
referral services to 100% of HIV positive individuals and high-risk negative
individuals to medical care and other support services and the implementation
of the CDC science-based intervention Brief Group Counseling. Staff goes on
site with a mobile unit in targeted areas and engages individuals in conversation
about HIV, STIs and substance use risks; distributes educational materials
and safe sex kits and invites individuals to be screened for HIV. Individuals
receive pre-test counseling at the mobile unit followed by HIV screening. The
individual can choose the testing type, including rapid testing (Oraquick)
where the client receives his result in 20-40 minutes. If rapid testing results
are reactive, a confirmatory test can be conducted immediately. The individual
also receives post-test counseling. All HIV positive individuals are referred
for comprehensive HIV related care and treatment services at Care Resource.
HIV negative high-risk individuals are referred for risk counseling, STI services
and other prevention services.
New Leaf: Services for Our Community, San Francisco, CA, $40,000 -- HIV Prevention
Program for Gay and Bisexual Men in Treatment for Crystal Methamphetamine
Use: Crystal methamphetamine use is strongly correlated with HIV
risk, and San Francisco is in the middle of a meth epidemic that is fueling
its HIV epidemic. New Leaf's HIV Prevention Program seeks to reduce the risk
of HIV transmission among gay and bisexual men who are in treatment for crystal
methamphetamine use and other substance abuse by providing: 1) individual
therapy; 2) support groups and workshops; 3) linkages to HIV testing and
care, including on-site testing at New Leaf's offices; and 4) a "buddies" group
for friends, partners, and family members. All elements of the program address
the psychological ramifications of homophobia and heterosexism and their
impact on clients' risk-taking behaviors, as well as the issues and needs
of clients that derive from their racial/ethnic identities, class status,
age, and mental or physical disabilities. The program works with 200 men
in treatment each year.
Positive Impact, Inc., Atlanta, GA, $39,998.51 -- STI Screening in
MSM Populations: Positive Impact provides multiple individual-, group-
and community-level HIV prevention and risk reduction programsand free HIV
rapid testing for gay, bisexual and other men who have sex with men (MSM) in
Atlanta, GA. EJAF funding will support the incorporation of screenings for
sexually transmitted infections (STIs) to include syphilis, gonorrhea and Chlamydia
into the HIV Prevention Department. STI detection and treatment is particularly
important, as these diseases increase the body's susceptibility to HIV infection
and transmission. With EJAF funding, MSM who obtain an HIV test through Positive
Impact and who are identified to have had potential exposure to an STI or to
describe symptoms of an STI will also receive STI screening during the same
visit. Postive Impact will conduct a minimum of 650 STI screenings for syphilis,
gonorrhea and Chlamydia annually.
San Francisco AIDS Foundation, San Francisco, CA, $40,000 -- Priority
Appointments for Sexual Partners of Men Recently Testing HIV-positive: Magnet
is a community health center for gay men in San Francisco offering rapid HIV
antibody tests to over 3500 men annually. To identify men with early HIV infection,
Magnet offers HIV RNA tests to clients testing Ab-negative who have recent,
elevated risk. In January 2008-June 2009, Magnet conducted 742 RNA tests, identifying
14 (1.9%) early infections which would not have been detected using conventional
antibody testing alone. Funds from EJAF would be used to support a system Magnet
is developing whereby the sexual partners of men testing HIV-positive can get
a testing appointment within 48 hours and an electronic priority appointment
system, where newly HIV-positive men receive a uniquely coded coupon to give
to their sex partners, either by email, text, or in person. The recipient can
then access Magnet's website to secure a priority appointment for HIV antibody
and RNA tests. The volume of clinical visits at Magnet produces over 36,000
client records annually, which must be kept for seven years. EJAF funds will
also support an Electronic Medical Record system that would allow Magnet to
better track visits, allow clients to schedule return appointments in advance,
generate automatic reminders of appointments, and safeguard client confidentiality.
HIV/AIDS in Incarcerated Populations
Bailey House, Inc., New York, NY, $30,000 -- Project FIRST: Men
and women released from prison face monumental challenges in attempting to
rebuild their lives. This is compounded for the many ex-offenders with histories
of poverty, homelessness, mental illness, addiction, and it is especially challenging
for parolees living with HIV/AIDS. Project FIRST continues as a landmark program
of Bailey House to provide safe, permanent housing and supportive services
to homeless, HIV+ men and women recently released from prison. These services
help individuals successfully reintegrate into their community, find and keep
quality permanent housing, and receive the medical care and HIV/AIDS counseling
needed to maintain optimal health, stop the spread of HIV/AIDS and reduce the
risk of secondary infection. Other services include Independent Living Skills
training, accessing benefits, advocacy, positive socialization and peer support
groups and referrals to educational and vocational training. Project FIRST
clients are low-income, many with substance abuse and/or mental health issues.
National Prison Project (NPP), American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), New
York, NY, $150,000 -- Improving Medical Care and Advancing Rights for Prisoners
with HIV: With this grant, the National Prison Project (NPP) of
the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) Foundation will continue its campaign
to provide prisoners with HIV adequate, equal access to rehabilitative programs,
housing, and medical care. NPP integrates litigation with advocacy and public
education to do this work. NPP's campaign to gain access to work release
programs for prisoners with HIV has helped thousands of men and women rehabilitate
and begin working prior to release. NPP is now poised, after working for
over twenty years on this issue, to end the last remaining ban in the country
in South Carolina. Furthermore, NPP's challenges to inadequate medical care
in a number of states has helped bring about a sea change in national medical
care standards for prisoners, although certain states still neglect the health
of people in their custody. Specifically this year, NPP will: continue advocacy
in Nevada and South Carolina, challenging discriminatory policies that prevent
prisoners from taking part in prison and work release programs; continue
advocacy in Alabama, now focusing on ending segregated housing; and continue
litigation and other forms of advocacy against inadequate medical care in
Michigan, Mississippi, Wisconsin, Nevada, and California. In addition, NPP
will generate public support for this work through a joint investigation
and probable publication with Human Rights Watch on human rights standards
and HIV in prisons in the South.
Addressing HIV/AIDS in the Southern United States
Association of Nurses in AIDS Care, Akron, OH, $37,450 -- HIV Education
for Rural Nurses in the Mississippi Delta Region: The Association
of Nurses in AIDS Care, in partnership with the CAEAR Foundation, has designed
a train-the-trainer HIV education program for nurses in the Mississippi Delta
Region. The program targets nurses at non-profit, publicly funded clinics serving
African American and other underserved populations and provides two distinct
two-hour trainings on consecutive days. The trainings have been developed and
facilitated by nurse members of the Association of Nurses in AIDS Care with
extensive adult learning and HIV practice experience and cover such topics
as testing, symptom recognition, prevention messages, and access to care. Once
the first group of trainers complete the program, they are then responsible
for educating their co-workers and off-site nurses with whom their institutions
have relationships. The Association of Nurses in AIDS Care also provides continued
mentoring and support for the trainers and a formal individual and program
evaluation process. This project will form a template for additional rural
nursing trainings.
National AIDS Fund (NAF), Washington D.C. , $125,000 -- Expansion of
NAF Community Partnership Network in the Southern US: The Deep South
states suffer from some of the worst socio-economic and health conditions in
the country that are giving rise to disproportionate rates of HIV/AIDS. EJAF
funding provides Challenge Grants to each of NAF's newly developed Southern
Community Partnerships serving Alabama, Louisiana, North Carolina and South
Carolina. These Challenge Grants assist these newly developed Community Partnerships
to build collaborative leadership, catalyze private sector investment and strengthen
community-based HIV/AIDS services through local grant-making activities. Challenge
Grants are matched with locally raised funds and granted to community-based
HIV/AIDS organizations through competitive processes based on local priorities.
The funding assists the Community Partnerships to become stable by providing
consistent grant-making support during their formative years and helping raise
their visibility and stature. NAF matches EJAF funding dollar for dollar, turning
a $125,000 grant into $250,000 in resources for the new Southern Community
Partnerships. National grants will in turn be matched 1:2 locally for a total
minimum resource of $375,000.
Sexuality Information and Education Council of the United States (SIECUS),
New York, NY, $40,000 -- Implementing Evidence-Based HIV-Prevention Programs
in the Southern United States: SIECUS provides the knowledge, skills,
and expertise needed to strengthen the core competencies essential for community-based
organizations to provide evidence-based, high-quality HIV-prevention interventions.
The results of such assistance includes increased skills; expanded knowledge;
greater ability to plan and implement evidence-based interventions and activities;
growth in the quality, quantity, and cost-effectiveness of interventions; and
the sustainability of infrastructure systems that support interventions and
activities. SIECUS has two primary goals for this project: 1) Strengthen the
capacity of three community-based organizations in the Southern United States
(FL, LA, and SC) serving young people under the age of 25, especially African-American
and Latino men who have sex with men, to build and sustain their HIV-prevention
programs; and 2) Increase the proportion of community-based organizations in
the Southern United States serving young people, especially African-American
and Latino men who have sex with men, which successfully use evidence-based
HIV-prevention interventions.
Southwest Louisiana AIDS Council, Lake Charles, LA, $39,466 -- Facilitating
Access to Coordinated Treatment (FACT): With EJAF funding, FACT wiill
implement an effective model of care for HIV+ persons living in southwest Louisiana.
The model utilizes two care coordinators who work with newly diagnosed persons
from the time of their diagnosis, linking them to quality HIV medical and supportive
care, working with them to overcome obstacles to staying in care, and re-linking
them to care if they "fall out" of the system. This model is based upon HIV
system navigation, adapted from cancer care programs for disadvantaged populations.
The system navigation model implements services at all stages -- primary and
secondary prevention, screening, treatment, and long-term quality of life.
The goal of FACT is to stabilize people into HIV medical care, meaning that
patients attend their scheduled appointments at least once every six months
and are adherent to their prescribed treatment regimen at least 75% of the
time. FACT would also work with persons with long-standing diagnoses who have "fallen
out" of medical care with the goal of helping them re-link to the HIV care
system and stabilize them in care once again.
Harm Reduction
Phoenix Center, Springfield, IL, $25,000 -- Springfield Harm Reduction
Initiative (SHaRI): After providing housing for homeless individuals
who are HIV+ and doing free HIV testing for the past 10 years, Phoenix Center
has begun concentrating on the primary causes of infection. Phoenix Center
currently works with the MSM population, but they are finding a high rate of
infection resulting from injection drug use among transitional housing residents
and those coming in for testing. While the national infection rate among injection
drug users is around 18%, in Central Illinois it is closer to 23%. The SHaRI
program would allow Phoenix Center to do outreach in Central Illinois, including
rural areas where meth injection is rampant, through both fixed locations and
van outreach. This would include the distribution of clean needles and works,
overdose prevention, offering free HIV testing, checking injection sites for
infection and other medical issues, and providing information about HIV infection
in the process. EJAF funding will support the purchase of supplies for this
program.
Most of these grants constitute second- and
third-year commitments to long-range projects
that further enhance and strengthen the Foundation’s
leadership and investments in the following priority
targeted geographic and demographic areas: (1)
critically under-funded communities of the Southern
United States ($150,000), the Caribbean ($950,000),
and Latin America ($300,000); (2) highly marginalized
populations such as injection drug users ($700,000)
and men who have sex with men ($150,000); and
(3) underserved populations such as African Americans
($200,000) and young people ($375,000). The grant
cycle also includes $165,000 in small discretionary
awards to support ongoing advocacy, stigma reduction,
and treatment information efforts.
Several EJAF awards provide excellent examples
of the Foundation’s growing national and
international leadership, particularly in the
African American community and in the field of
harm reduction and syringe exchange to reduce
HIV transmission among injection drug users.
Scott Campbell, EJAF’s Executive Director
said, “The renewal grant for the Black
AIDS Institute (BAI) will constitute a third
year of EJAF funding for the important work of
this organization. Over the past two years, EJAF
has become deeply involved in helping BAI to
lead the charge on the issue of HIV prevention,
awareness-raising, and service provision for
African Americans. BAI’s Left
Behind report,
which was covered in the New York Times last
year, cited the support and leadership of EJAF
on this issue.” In addition, EJAF was
recently selected by the U.S. Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention (CDC) to serve as a core
partner in support of the Black AIDS Media Partnership
(BAMP), a coalition of media companies convened
by the Kaiser Family Foundation (KFF) for the
purpose of developing and building a national
movement in response to AIDS in Black America.
BAI is a primary partner for this initiative.
EJAF is also moving forward as a national leader
to support syringe exchange programs across the
U.S. through its core partnership with the Syringe
Access Fund and to advocate for the elimination
of the current ban on the use of federal funding
for syringe exchange through its partnership
with amfAR, The Foundation for AIDS Research.
To further underscore both the urgency of syringe
exchange advocacy and the timeliness of EJAF
and amfAR’s leadership, an editorial in
the August 5, 2009 issue of the New York Times
argued that the continued failure of Congress
to lift the ban on federal funding for syringe
exchange programs was a “clear threat to
public health.” The article noted particularly
that “a rider attached to two House appropriations
bills would actually continue the ban – in
a tawdry, passive-aggressive way – by barring
federally financed programs from operating within
1,000 feet of colleges, universities, parks,
video arcades, day-care centers, high schools,
public swimming pools and other institutions
. . . . such a restriction would make it virtually
impossible to have federally funded programs
anywhere in densely packed urban communities.”
Project Descriptions
amfAR, The Foundation for AIDS Research, New
York, NY, $150,000
This grant supports
the continued work of the MSM Initiative in the
Caribbean. Launched in 2007, amfAR’s MSM
Initiative works to significantly improve access
to HIV prevention, treatment and care for MSM
populations in countries across Africa, Asia
and the Pacific, the Caribbean, Eastern Europe
and Central Asia, and Latin America through three
core strategies: (1) Supporting and empowering
grassroots MSM organizations by providing direct
financial support in the form of community awards
and capacity-building and technical assistance;
(2) Building understanding and awareness about
HIV epidemics among MSM and other groups by promoting
and supporting relevant research; and (3) Advocating
for effective policies and increased funding
for programs that address HIV/AIDS among MSM.
amfAR is now in its second year of delivering
urgently needed community awards and technical
assistance in the Caribbean. Worldwide, the Initiative
has already awarded nearly US $1.5 million in
small grants to more than 55 frontline organizations,
and has worked to spur multi-lateral organizations
and bilateral governments to take action on MSM/HIV
issues and provide increased financial support.
Kaiser Family Foundation/Caribbean Broadcast
Media Partnership on HIV/AIDS (CBMP), Christchurch,
Barbados, $425,000
Since its launch in May
2006, CBMP has grown to include 91 leading broadcasters
from 24 Caribbean countries and territories,
committed to expanding public awareness about
HIV/AIDS and related issues. By sharing information
and resources among broadcasters, and building
their own capacity to develop and deliver HIV-themed
programming content, CBMP broadcasters have established
new, coordinated media initiatives that deliver
lifesaving messages to help stem the spread of
HIV/AIDS and fight AIDS-related stigma and discrimination.
CBMP broadcasters cover a total estimated population
of some 30 million people in the second most
highly HIV/AIDS impacted region of the world.
This represents, by far, the single largest mobilization
of media in response to any social issue in the
region. Their annual airtime commitment to HIV
messaging is modestly estimated at US$5 million.
EJAF funding will support four key areas of activity:
(1) Leadership Development and Member Support;
(2) Skills-Building for Media Professionals;
(3) Partnership Expansion to Extend Reach; and
(4) Coordinated Content & Consumer Resources.
Specific outputs will be: (1) Executive Meetings,
Road Shows and workshops in at least seven countries;
(2) Redesigned evaluation tools; (3) More active
Steering Committee; (4) Project awards for production
of HIV/AIDS programming; and (5) Strengthened
connections between media, national AIDS agencies,
community organizations and stakeholders.
Clinton Foundation HIV/AIDS Initiative (CHAI),
New York, NY, $450,000
CHAI’s proposed
work throughout the region over the next year
will fall in four main areas: 1) Access: CHAI
will continue to drive toward lower costs for
national treatment programs by working with drug
and diagnostic manufacturers to lower the price
of key HIV/AIDS commodities and working in-country
to ensure that countries have the required systems,
such as forecasting skills and adequate supply
chains, to allow these commodities to make it
from the port to the patient. 2) Program management:
As a trusted advisor to its government partners,
CHAI will focus on filling national level gaps
around strategic planning, resource mobilization,
and national policies and programs. 3) Health
systems strengthening: Derived from CHAI’s
programs in decentralization and rural expansion
of HIV services, CHAI will facilitate interventions
to help strengthen the systems required to reach
under-served populations and to increase the
capacity of government’s service delivery
structures. 4) Pediatrics/Prevention of Mother
to Child Ttransmision (PMTCT): Having helped
to catalyze the scale up of pediatric treatment
in the developing world, CHAI will continue to
work with governments to increase the scope and
quality of pediatric treatment programs and engage
in targeted interventions to help governments
drive improvements in PMTCT. This proposal is
requesting support for work against these four
goals in the Bahamas, Jamaica, Haiti, the Dominican
Republic and in CHAI’s Caribbean Consortium.
Collaborative Fund for HIV Treatment Preparedness,
New York, NY, $75,000
Funding will support
continued coordination for advocacy, treatment
literacy and community mobilization by the Caribbean
Treatment Action Group (CTAG). CTAG, based in
Puerto Rico, coordinates all Caribbean-focused
activities for the HIV Collaborative Fund and
the International Treatment Preparedness Coalition.
During the grant period, CTAG will coordinate
at least one round of grant making to community
based organizations providing health literacy,
social support, and advocacy to ensure access
to comprehensive HIV treatment, care and prevention
services and for the protection of human rights.
In the Caribbean, funded projects have a strong
focus on improved HIV care quality and access
for marginalized populations such as drug users
and men who have sex with men (MSM), and a secondary
focus on empowerment of people living with HIV/AIDS
(PLWHA) for treatment adherence. Projects are
funded to reach PLWHA in both relatively large
countries such as Dominican Republic and Jamaica,
and also in smaller countries such as Belize,
Suriname, and the islands of the eastern and
southern Caribbean. Also during the grant period,
CTAG will implement its regional and national
advocacy strategies, develop and implement communications
and media strategies, and provide on-going technical
assistance and capacity building to its local
grantees. The HIV Collaborative Fund at Tides
Center oversees these activities.
Aid for AIDS, New York, NY, $250,000
Cuanto
Sabes de VIH y AIDS? (How Much Do You Know about
HIV and AIDS?) is an HIV primary-prevention initiative
targeted at teenagers in the developing world.
Its long-term goal is to ensure that every youth
in the Caribbean and Latin America have access
to effective, potentially life-saving HIV prevention
education. It was developed in 2004 by an Aid
for AIDS (AFAI) program director who had worked
as a psychotherapist in Venezuela, along with
various Venezuelan peer educators and AFAI's
medical team. These peer educators provided workshops
in schools across Caracas, Venezuela, dramatically
increasing basic knowledge regarding HIV and
AIDS among the youths in that city. By 2006,
AFAI expanded the program to the Dominican Republic,
Guatemala, Honduras, Panama, Peru and Venezuela.
The peer educators, by then totaling 311, continued
to provide comprehensive informational workshops,
reaching over 35,000 youths in those countries.
In 2007, the program continued to grow as AFAI
expanded operations to Colombia and Ecuador.
The U.S. Fund for UNICEF, New York, NY, $50,000
This
grant support the U.S. Fund for UNICEF’s
work addressing vertical transmission (mother
to child transmission) of HIV in Guatemala. Programs
strengthening access to voluntary testing will
take place together with counseling in prenatal
clinics and emergency rooms of hospitals in Guatemala.
Access will be strengthened through procurement
and distribution of needed supplies including
HIV, syphilis and hepatitis B test. Effective
interventions carried out by qualified medical
professionals have dramatically reduced the rate
of vertical transmission in Guatemala. UNICEF
is continually updating and expanding training
courses to reach a wide spectrum of medical professionals
including counselors, medical doctors, nurses,
pharmacists, chemists and laboratory technicians.
Funding will support training in areas including
review and updating of protocols; propper administering
of ARV treatment; treatment adherence; and psychosocial
counseling training. Workshop and trainings will
focus on the departments of Escuintla, Baja Verapaz,
Quiche, Quetzaltenanago, Sacatepequez, Suchitepequez,
and Retalhuleu. UNICEF technical supervisors
will provide oversight with health officials
responsible for monitoring and evaluation to
determine progress toward objectives. Oversight
will take place through field visits to hospitals.
American Airlines will match EJAF's grants to
UNICEF, thereby doubling the impact of EJAF's
funding.
National Urban Technology Center, New York, NY,
$300,000
This renewal grant supports
Urban Tech’s efforts to build on the success
of the Get Healthy, Get Smart! (GHGS) pilot program
within New York City under-served public middle
and high schools. Urban Tech’s aim is to
promote positive school-wide instructional models
that include student and parent input and increase
HIV/AIDS awareness (and prevention), while promoting
healthier habits overall. The foundation of GHGS
is rooted in the Youth Leadership Academy (YLA)
curriculum series. Tier 1: Continue to support
and sustain the accomplishments of the initial
30 schools; and Tier 2: Expand into 40 new schools
in 5 districts located in northern Manhattan,
east Brooklyn and south Bronx. Goals include:
(1) Integration of YLA’s social and emotional
skills for leadership training and healthy living
into the New York City Dept. of Education core
curriculum and arts enrichment specialty areas;
(2) Professional Development workshops, co-teaching
and mentoring of teachers over the 2-year time
frame to support and enhance instruction in the
classroom; (3) Parents as Partners Programming – provide
Get Healthy, Get Smart learning opportunities
and instruction to parents within the selected
school communities; (4) Development of distance
learning tools for professional development to
provide 24/7 availability of Urban Tech’s
innovative approach to teaching and learning,
ongoing support of teachers in the program and
sustainability after funding ends; and (5) Ongoing
evaluation of Urban Tech’s activities.
Advocates for Youth, Washington, DC, $75,000
This
grant supports the continuation of Advocates
for Youth’s efforts through its 25,000-member
Youth Activist Network (YAN) and the Anti-Homophobia/Transphobia
Initiative. Activities include: (1) Continuing
broad outreach through Amplify, the online home
of the YAN. Advocates for Youth expects that
the site’s high level of traffic (500,000
visitors this year) will recruit another 10,000
YAN members. Staff will assist the youth to write
over 30,000 letters to policy makers and launch
at least nine issue-specific campaigns, among
other activities; (2) Working with a core group
of 17 YAN members who serve as college organizers
to conduct on-the-ground advocacy (e.g., organizing
a “week of action” around a specific
issue and participating in local policy maker
education days); (3) Assisting 1,500 college-age
YAN members to distribute 750,000 condoms and
conduct advocacy and education around HIV prevention
and youth-friendly condom availability; and (4)
Disseminating materials on gay/lesbian/bisexual/transgendered
(GLBT) youth to 10,000 organizations serving
youth of color; training 10 of them on GLBT youth;
and providing in-depth assistance to 4 organizations
to redress homophobia and transphobia.
Black AIDS Institute, Los Angeles, CA, $200,000
The
Black AIDS Institute (BAI) proposes to extend
and expand the National Black AIDS Mobilization
(NBAM) campaign. In the next phase of NBAM, BAI
will focus on one of the major impediments to
an effective response to AIDS in Black America
-- inadequate rates of HIV testing. Building
on the progress made in implementing NBAM --
including the development and implementation
of national strategic AIDS plans by 14 leading
national Black institutions -- BAI will launch
the "Test 1 Million" (T1M) initiative,
which aims to ensure that at least 1 million
Black Americans get tested for HIV each year.
As the cornerstone of T1M, BAI will help create,
or support existing, community-driven HIV testing
task forces in six high-prevalence states and
25 cities with significant numbers of Black Americans
living with HIV. The project will particularly
emphasize the promotion of HIV testing in the
Southeast US, the region where HIV infection
rates are increasing the fastest. With support
from BAI, the HIV testing task forces will bring
together individual volunteers, local AIDS organizations,
Black institutions (including churches), and
state/local health departments to plan and implement
focused campaigns to promote HIV testing in Black
communities. The proposed funding here will support
a full-time T1M coordinator; the development,
launch and updating of a T1M website; training
and capacity-building for local testing task
forces, and the production of testing promotion
materials.
AIDS Community Research Initiative of America
(ACRIA), New York, NY, $150,000
ACRIA
proposes to provide training, technical assistance,
and capacity building services to 75-90 participants
from 45-60 HIV/AIDS service providers at three
conferences sites in the southern US during a
one-year period. Each package will include a
total of four days of intensive tailored training
and capacity building from over 20 modules related
to HIV and the provision of services to people
living with the virus, conducted by a trained
capacity building team in ACRIA’s HIV Health
Literacy Program (HHLP). The group trainings
will utilize ACRIA’s comprehensive Training
Manual, and all curriculum modules and training
materials will be individually tailored to each
site’s specific needs. An automated digital
audience response and assessment system (i.e.,
TurningPoint) will enable the educators to assess
the training instantly and to make needed modifications
as the training progresses. In addition, the
trained HIV health educators in ACRIA’s
HIV Health Literacy Program (HHLP) will work
individually with each participating agency to
develop a service integration plan to incorporate
HIV health literacy and treatment and healthcare
information into its existing service menu. Ongoing
technical assistance and capacity building services
will be available both to help each agency implement
its integration plan and to keep participants
abreast of new developments. In each location,
two trainees will be brought to New York City
to spend a week at ACRIA’s offices to shadow
and receive coaching from HHLP staff.
Syringe Access Fund, New York, NY, $600,000
EJAF
has been a participating funding partner of the
Syringe Access Fund for the past 3 years. EJAF
will commit $300,000 per year over two years
(total $600,000) to the Syringe Access Fund to
support grants to community based organizations
engaged in direct service programs that expand
access to clean syringes and to advance advocacy
efforts directed at local and state level policy
change.
amfAR, The Foundation for AIDS Research, New
York, NY, $100,000
A unique opportunity
exists in 2009 to take an important step toward
a more effective and evidence-based approach
to HIV prevention in the United States: removal
of the ban on use of federal funds for syringe
exchange. President Obama has signaled his desire
to remove the ban, both during the campaign and
through comments by his staff when the Administration’s
budget proposal was released in May 2009. More
than 100 members of Congress have co-sponsored
legislation to remove the ban, and a recently
compiled vote count of members of the House of
Representatives indicates broad support for removal
of the ban. Realizing this opportunity will require
sound evidence and sustained advocacy both on
Capitol Hill and in the Congressional districts
of House and Senate members who have not yet
decided whether to support an end to the ban.
This grant will enable amfAR to significantly
increase its advocacy work and continue to fund
policy-relevant research on syringe exchange
programs (SEPs) in the US. Specifically, amfAR
plans to launch a grassroots advocacy campaign
that conveys the public health benefit of SEPs
to these undecided, or tentatively supportive,
Representatives and Senators and to continue
to support the National Syringe Exchange Survey,
conducted by Dr. Don Des Jarlais at the Beth
Israel Medical Center, which collects vital information
about SEPs and how they operate. The expanded
scope of work for this project to include both
the survey and related advocacy was initiated
by EJAF to increase our impact and leadership
in this field.
AEGiS, San Juan Capistrano, CA, $50,000
AEGiS
is an open access, Internet based 'living' HIV/AIDS
library. The website provides current research
information, human resources, treatment, prevention,
product, and policy information, with worldwide
news and event coverage. The documents contained
in the living library chronicle the history of
HIV/AIDS. Information is organized in sections
by publication type, with clearly stated sources,
authors and publication dates. AEGiS’ broad
scope of information elucidates the human experiences
and reactions related to HIV/AIDS. Objectives:
(1) Maintain computer equipment-the gateway to
the AEGiS database; (2) Provide access to a wealth
of HIV/AIDS history and knowledge; (3) Perpetually
include the latest information on all aspects
of HIV/AIDS in chronological order with the highest
set of Internet standards to ensure clarity for
site visitors; (4) Present data from the most
recent scientific meetings and those from the
past to improve the general public’s access
to this information and data; (5) Offer services
by facilitating access to HIV specialists to
assure competent care and accurate health information;
(6) Connect site visitors to specific on-line
resources, local walk-in AIDS services, and related
organizations for support; and (7) Provide individual
answers to site visitors’ queries requesting
information. All services are conducted with
the purpose of providing educational information
regarding HIV/AIDS.
AIDS Foundation of Chicago (AFC), Chicago, IL,
$25,000
This grant will support the International
Rectal Microbicide Advocates’ (IRMA) global
advocacy across six continents. Since AFC launched
IRMA with three other North American partners
in 2005, this coalition has grown to include
more than 800 scientists, advocates, and policy
makers promoting the research and development
of safe, effective, and acceptable rectal microbicides
for the women and men who need them. Through
concerted global advocacy, IRMA has brought visibility,
legitimacy, and respect to the emerging rectal
microbicide development field and set the stage
for researchers to develop these new, lifesaving
tools more quickly and effectively. Thanks to
support from EJAF in FY09, IRMA further expanded
its reach and capacity, forming a close strategic
collaboration with the AIDS Vaccine Advocacy
Coalition (AVAC); supporting the launch of a
sister organization in Latin America, IRMA – ALC
(América Latina y El Caribe, based in
Lima, Peru) and in Africa through the launch
of IRMA-Nigeria; and increasing its global membership
by 60% since 2006. During this time, UCLA completed
and reported on the first Phase I human rectal
safety trial, and up to three additional Phase
I rectal safety studies are about to begin. In
FY10, AFC sees great potential for the rectal
microbicides field, as there has never been more
global recognition or support for the development
of these new prevention tools.
International Center for Research on Women,
Washington, DC, $20,000
This grant supports
ICRW’s efforts to launch the Global Knowledge
Network on HIV Stigma Reduction, which will serve
as a mechanism for researchers, programmers and
advocates to share information and tools, build
capacity of network members and coordinate and
expand research, intervention and advocacy strategies
for reducing HIV stigma and discrimination worldwide.
The funds for this activity will contribute to
a 4-month planning process to define the structure
and functioning of a Global Knowledge Network
on HIV Stigma Reduction and develop a proposal
and budget to support the network’s core
aims and activities by supporting: (1) the participation
of 5 experts with demonstrated experience in
HIV stigma-reduction programming in a small,
2-day working meeting to be held at the end of
the planning process; and (2) ICRW staff time
to facilitate the participation of experts and
incorporate their feedback into the final proposal
and budget. The impetus for this activity springs
from the consensus among global stigma experts
at the MAC AIDS Fund/ICRW Meeting on HIV Stigma
held on November 17th, 2008 – that the
creation of a knowledge network on HIV stigma
would mobilize and maximize investments in stigma
reduction globally, thereby strengthening the
global response to HIV.
Ms. Foundation for Women, New York, NY, $50,000
Through
the National Women and AIDS Collective (NWAC)
and the Women and AIDS Fund (WAF) the Ms. Foundation
for Women raises the visibility of HIV-positive
women as policy experts, building their power
to secure changes at the local, state and national
level. In 2009-10, the Foundation will accomplish
this through grant making, technical assistance
and networking opportunities, including approximately
$300,000 dollars in grants to 10-12 local and
state-based partners. The Ms. Foundation will
also provide infrastructure and capacity building
resources to NWAC, and host the only annual national
women and AIDS advocacy conference in the US.
Grantee partners and NWAC will be working locally
and at the national level: for example, grantee
HIV Law Project, with NWAC, will evaluate public
health laws in communities nationwide to identify
those that leave women vulnerable to discriminatory
HIV/AIDS policies, and help grantee partners
in these communities effect needed policy changes.
Further, the Ms. Foundation will continue to
support NWAC by providing a full-time staff position
(NWAC Organizer) and operations and capacity
building resources, while continuing to move
forward in the transition process that will ensure
that NWAC can continue to grow independently
in the coming years.
Treatment Action Group (TAG), New York, NY,
$20,000
Requested funding will be used
to support three critical TAG programs: (1) Antiretroviral
Program; (2) HIV/Hepatitis Coinfection Program;
and (3) U.S. & Global Health Policy Program.
These programs, in concert with TAG's other two
programs (TB/HIV Coinfection Program and the
Basic Science, Vaccines and Prevention Program)
work together to provide TAG’s various
stakeholders with the most up-to-date treatment
information. TAG's overarching initiatives are
to increase length and quality of life among
all people with HIV until a vaccine and a cure
are available. TAG does this through: (1) Community
education and mobilization; (2) Coordinating
and mobilizing peers and HIV advocates and activists
to present a united front in advocating with
government for more funding and better research
agendas; (3) Publishing information that arms
people living with HIV and their caregivers with
the latest treatment information so they can
advocate for the best possible care; and (4)
Ensuring drug trials are safe, effective, ethical
and include the priorities of people living with
HIV and coinfections.
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