Issue Jul - Aug 11
TH A N K YO U FO R JO IN IN G U S IN S O LI D A R IT Y ore than 100 people came together at the National Gallery of Australia on Sunday 15 May for the 28th International AIDS Candlelight Memorial. Murray Proctor, Australia’s HIV/AIDS Ambassador to the United Nations, spoke of the power of solidarity in the response to HIV in Australia and in the region.
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A very special thank-you goes to the Canberra Gay and Lesbian Qwire for a moving performance and the young people from Bit Bent for presenting the Canberra AIDS Ribbon. Photography: Douglas Robinson and Keith Jeffers (Fauxtografix)
Upfront: Andrew Burry
Volunteers are a central part of the heritage of the AIDS Action Council, and over the last 26 years have made a valuable contribution to the consistent delivery of high quality services to clients, and continue to provide key outreach activities and to support a range of public events.
Our demand for volunteer support has varied considerably over the last quarter century, and at the same time, the types of services our volunteers provide and support has also changed. In the early days, when AIDS diagnoses were common, the greatest demand was in providing care and support to our community members affected by the virus. In the beginning, we needed to be more ‘activist’ than we are perhaps today, even though issues of discrimination, stigma and equitable access to services remain with us. From the introduction of effective treatments in the mid 1990’s, AIDS diagnoses became less frequent and there has been reduced demand for outreach care and support and our numbers of active volunteers in this area has declined. However, our mission remains the same: To minimise the personal and social impacts, and the transmission of HIV. What has changed is that people living with HIV have a changing prognosis and those who have lived with it for a decade or more are growing older. continue reading ➠