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National Native American HIV/AIDS Awareness Day was first observed in 2007. This day is observed on the first day of Spring each year. For example, the 2023 observance is recognized on March 20, 2023. Therefore, the date will change from year to year as the first day of spring changes. The awareness color red represents HIV/AIDS.
The National Native HIV Network plans the observance each year. Moreover, the observance is a national mobilization effort. It encourages education, testing, prevention and treatment for HIV in Native people (American Indians, Alaska Natives, and Native Hawaiians) across the United States and Territorial Areas.
You can learn more about HISstory, HERstory, THEIRstory, OURstory: Storytelling as Resilience. This initiative is aimed at increasing awareness and knowledge of HIV. In other words, story tellin breaks down the barriers of HIV/AIDS stigma in indigenous communities. For example, uou can see some of these stories here.
To support the development of comprehensive solutions to end the HIV epidemic, see The Indigenous HIV/AIDS Syndemic Strategy: Weaving Together the National HIV, STI, and Viral Hepatitis Plans. This document contains emerging practices and existing initiatives. In addition, it includes traditional Indigenous knowledge to help Tribal decision-makers to develop community-tailored interventions. These intervensions address the syndemics of HIV, STIs, and viral hepatitis. A syndemic or synergistic epidemic is the aggregation of two or more concurrent or sequential epidemics or disease clusters in a population with biological interactions, which exacerbate the prognosis and burden of disease.
In 2019, among AI/AN population, there were an estimated 230 new HIV infections (HIV Incidence, CDC). From 2015 to 2019, diagnosis of HIV infection among men who have sex with men increased by 24 percent. During the same time period, the rate of deaths of adults and adolescents with HIV in this population decreased by 19 percent (HIV Surveillance Report, CDC). Some of the challenges Native communities face include lack of awareness of their HIV status. In addition, alcohol and illicit drug use, data limitation, high rates of sexually transmitted infections (STI), stigma and confidentiality, and socioeconomic issues also contribute to the challenges.
The U.S. government recognizes National Native HIV/AIDS Awareness Day.
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