AIDS service organization

AIDS service organizations are community-based organizations that provide support for people affected by HIV/AIDS. This article focuses on HIV/AIDS service organizations in the United States only. However, similar organizations in other countries, such as Canada, also played significant roles during the HIV/AIDS crisis and share many common experiences and challenges.

There is a huge variety of these organizations in order to provide for the wide variety of needs of HIV/AIDS patients and their families. The majority of these organizations are healthcare-based, providing assistance with testing, treatment, preventative medicines like pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP), needle and syringe exchanges[1] and more. Another prominent type of AIDS service organization is education-based, working to raise awareness and public understanding of topics like the transmission of HIV, safe sex, treatment resources, as well as eliminating rampant misconceptions about HIV/AIDS. Other organizations provide services like legal advice and/or advocacy, mental health and counseling services, and fundraising and community outreach.

These organizations are vital in providing for patients needs,[2] as well as reducing the economic impact of HIV/AIDS,[3] strengthening global health, and countering the social and political imbalances which disproportionately impact HIV/AIDS patients.

  1. ^ "Needle and syringe programmes (NSPs) for HIV prevention". 2015-07-20.
  2. ^ Smith, Dawn K.; Maier, Emily; Betts, Joshua; Gray, Simone; Kolodziejski, Brian; Hoover, Karen W. (2016). "What Community-Based HIV Prevention Organizations Say About Their Role in Biomedical HIV Prevention". AIDS Education and Prevention. 28 (5): 426–439. doi:10.1521/aeap.2016.28.5.426. PMID 27710082.
  3. ^ Arno, P. S. (1986). "The nonprofit sector's response to the AIDS epidemic: Community-based services in San Francisco". American Journal of Public Health. 76 (11): 1325–1330. doi:10.2105/AJPH.76.11.1325. PMC 1646723. PMID 3766829.