Spring edition
One reason why we welcome spring with open arms is surely because the sun’s return heralds a season of growth and thriving.
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Survival in adversity is about doing what we have to in order to stay alive – In winter we need burning fires, warm clothes and hearty meals.
• In stressful workplaces we need role clarity and boundaries.
• In violent relationships, we need to hold our tongues and keep away.
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• With illness we need to mitigate risk to avoid worsening conditions.
That’s in order to survive.
The growth that comes with spring reminds us that we are meant to thrive. Yet, thriving doesn’t happen in isolation – it requires, community, connection and support, in the same way that a seed needs soil, sun and rain.
This publication is an initiative of the Health Promotion Program at the Tasmanian Council on AIDS, Hepatitis and Related Diseases, (TasCAHRD).
Editor:
Matt Anning Contributors:
Matteo Senesi
• Productive workplaces are founded on skills development and collaboration.
Views expressed in Man2Man are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of TasCAHRD.
Sarah Lenehan
Grant Blake
• Healthy relationships are founded on mutual respect and encouragement.
Matt Newell
Tracey Wing
• Robust physical and mental health requires nutrition, exercise and, at times, professional support.
Phone: 03 6234 1242
Our colleagues at TasCAHRD
It’s time to decide. What do you need in order to thrive?
Email: projects@tascahrd.org.au
Post: GPO Box 595 Hobart
Tasmania 7001
Web: tascahrd.org.au
Facebook: Man2ManTas
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TasCAHRD receives funding from the Crown, through Department of Health and Human Services, to provide these services.
Design & Layout: Ede Magnussen
Printing courtesy of: Xerox Hobart
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Contact TasCAHRD for rates – projects@tascahrd.org.au.
CONTENTS
WARNING: some of the content of this magazine may be offensive to some readers.
TasCAHRD receives funding from the Crown, through the Department of Health, to provide these services.
Views expressed in Red thread are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of TasCAHRD.
This publication is an initiative of the Health Promotion Program at the Tasmanian Council on AIDS, Hepatitis and Related Diseases (TasCAHRD).
Would you like to see your business or service advertised in this mag? Contact TasCAHRD for rates – projects@tascahrd.org.au
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CONTRIBUTORS:
Randos Korobacz
TasPRIDE
Stefanie Ferguson
Jen Wiedman
Claire Johnston
Liv Hogarth
Scarlet Alliance
Advantage Pharmacy
Hannah Jane
Did you know you can buy beppy
TasCAHRD
319 Liverpool Street Hobart
Open 9.00 am – 5.00 pm
Great prices on these items at TasCAHRD:
• Condoms
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PREP SAVVY GPS
Dr Jennifer Mission – Sandy Bay Clinic
270 Sandy Bay Road | Ph 62236822
Book online at www.sandybayclinic.com.au
Dr Natasha Lovatt – Aboriginal Health Service
56 Patrick Street | Ph 6234 0777
and Eastern Shore Doctors – Bellerive 48 Cambridge Road | Ph 6282 1399
Dr Wole Olomola – City Medical Practice 10 Marine Terrace Burnie
Dr Jane Cooper – Don Medical Clinic Shop 7 / 48-54 Oldaker Street | Ph 6441 5299
Dr Mark Ryan – Newdegate St Medical Clinic 107 Newdegate St West Hobart | Ph 62314109
By Randos Korobacz
The power of quilting
DECEMBER 1ST IS WORLD AIDS DAY, WHICH AN OPPORTUNITY FOR PEOPLE WORLDWIDE TO UNITE IN THE FIGHT AGAINST HIV, TO SHOW SUPPORT FOR PEOPLE LIVING WITH HIV, AND TO COMMEMORATE THOSE WHO HAVE DIED FROM AN AIDS-RELATED ILLNESS.
Since the dawn of the HIV/AIDS epidemic, the road to recognition and support has been hard fought and has come in various forms of activism. When we think about support and activism, food drops, protests and ‘sit ins’ are some of the first that come to mind. Yet one of the most powerful and moving displays of HIV/AIDS activism has come in the form of handmade quilts.
Originally identified as a “gay disease” because gay men were one of the primary groups afflicted, the Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) targets the immune system and weakens people’s defence against infections. The most advanced stage of HIV infection is acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS), which develops over many years if not treated, depending on the individual.
When the HIV/AIDS crisis began in 1981, chaos and fear ripped through the fabric of the western world. Gay men, people who inject drugs, immigrants and racial minorities, were largely blamed for the epidemic. In the early days, particularly in the United States, government organisations were simply not interested in researching the disease or caring for the infected. It really was an awful time. Hospitals, doctors, schools, and families rejected the infected. People were driven out of their homes and excluded from society. Although the gay, lesbian and transgender communities created dynamic networks of self-help groups in response to the crisis, yet scores of people died impoverished and alone.
Among the projects of activism that prevailed in the 1980’s, was the AIDS Memorial quilt project. The idea was conceived in San Francisco in 1985, by AIDS activist Cleve Jones. At that time many people who died of AIDS-related causes did not receive funerals,
due to both the social stigma of AIDS felt by surviving family members and the outright refusal by many funeral homes and cemeteries to handle the deceased’s remains. Lacking a memorial service or grave site, the quilt was often the only opportunity survivors had to remember and celebrate their loved ones’ lives. On 11th October 1987, activists gathered 1,920 individual quilt panels, each roughly the size of the average grave and inscribed with the name of a person lost to AIDS, and laid them before the National Mall in Washington, D.C. The goal of the AIDS memorial quilt project was to bring awareness to how massive the AIDS pandemic really was, and to bring support and healing to those affected by it.
The overwhelming response to the quilt’s inaugural display led to a four-month, 20city, national tour of the quilt in the spring and summer of 1988. The tour raised nearly $500,000 for hundreds of AIDS service organizations. More than 9,000 volunteers across the US helped display the quilt. Local panels were added in each city, tripling the quilt’s size to more than 6,000 panels by the end of the tour. To this day the AIDS memorial quilt is an epic 54-ton tapestry that includes nearly 50,000 panels dedicated to more than 105,000 individuals. It is the symbol of the AIDS pandemic, a living memorial to a generation lost to AIDS and an important HIV prevention education tool.
With hundreds of thousands of people contributing their talents to making the memorial panels, and tens of thousands of volunteers to help display it, the quilt is considered the largest community arts project in history.
The Tasmanian Pride Awards recognise the outstanding commitment made to the Tasmanian LGBTQ+ Community over the past year.
You can nominate people and businesses in the following seven awards categories:
Lifetime Achievement for a person who has made sustained contributions in LGBTQ+ initiatives and communities.
Community Support for an organisation or initiative that has encouraged our community by providing resources and spaces for community activities and events.
Artistic Merit for an artist who has entertained our community as a musician, drag artist, cabaret, painter, sculptor, writer, or any category of art, or as a driving force behind an artistic event.
Sports Achievement for an individual, or a team or organisation who has been open and accepting and made great strides to be inclusive and embrace members of our community.
Outstanding Organisation for a commercial, community or government organisation or business that supports our community, provides a supportive structure within the work environment, or is peer-run.
Outstanding Ally for someone who is not directly part of the community but who provides ongoing support to the community.
Youth Advocate for a young person who has made contributions to the community or developed programs within our community.
Make your nominations via the TasPride website.
Please provide a short description of your nominee’s contribution to our community and reasons why you believe they deserve the award and upload any supporting material:
What do they do for our community?
How important are they for our community?
What impact has their contribution had on our community?
The judging panel will be made up of community advocates.
The awards will be announced at the Tasmanian Pride Awards Gala Cocktail Party on Wednesday evening, December 1st at the Hobart Town Hall.
By Stefanie Ferguson
Change for the better
INNOVATIVE NEW NATIONAL PROGRAM KEEPING MEN ENGAGED IN CHANGING THEIR BEHAVIOUR
Men who want to change their abusive behaviour can sometimes face delays when accessing support through national family violence programs.
Now, men can now call the Brief Intervention Service on 1300 766 491. The service is free, short term, multi-sessional, and provides support from qualified counsellors.
The Brief Intervention Service is facilitated by the Men’s Referral Service, a national men’s family violence telephone counselling, information and referral service operated by No to Violence. It is the central point of contact for men taking responsibility for their behaviour.
The Brief Intervention Service is not meant as a replacement for behaviour change programs or groups.
Instead, the service engages men who are experiencing delays in accessing immediate family violence support, by providing short-term interim support.
The delays happen due to COVID-19 restrictions or waiting lists for family violence support.
The Brief Intervention Service also focuses on supporting men who live in remote or regional areas, men who have barriers to attending group programs and men who are from a non-English speaking background.
Men in Tasmania who wish to access the Brief Intervention Service can call the Men’s Referral Service on 1300 766 491 for an initial assessment or can be referred by other services.
Learn more at mrs.org.au
By Jen Wiedman
Partner Violence
YOU NEVER THOUGHT IT’D HAPPEN TO YOU, AND IT’S A BIT TRICKY TO WRAP YOUR HEAD AROUND. YOU FIND YOUR PARTNER ACTING UNUSUALLY TOWARDS YOU. YOU DON’T KNOW WHY. THEY LOVE YOU, RIGHT? WHY ARE THEY STONEWALLING YOU.
Checking up on you all the time. Making subtle - or not so subtle - threats. Giving orders or making all the decisions. It’s confusing. But it must be ok, because you love each other, and you’ve worked hard to get where you are. So best to just let it be.
LGBTIQ folks experience intimate partner violence at similar rates to those who identify as heterosexual. It’s just that we don’t talk about it as much.
Some experiences of intimate partner violence in LGBTIQ relationships include:
• threatening to ‘out’ you to others
• telling you that no one will help because the police and the justice system are homophobic
• saying you ‘deserve it’ because you identify as LGBTIQ
• saying their behaviour is not domestic violence, but an expression of masculinity
• pushing your boundaries in the bedroom or with other partners
• trying to convince you that the behaviours are mutual or consensual acts
If you need help, keep these things in mind:
• you are not alone and you can get help
• your partner can get help too
• you don’t have to leave or break up unless you want to (often folks just want the behaviour to stop)
• share what’s happening with a trusted person, friend or professional, and get their perspective
• expand your support network – it’s critical to stay connected to others
• you deserve to be treated with respect and equality
• find ways to reconnect to yourself, work on your own self-esteem and keep engaged in activities you enjoy as much as possible
• try writing your thoughts or feelings down or expressing them in some way especially if talking directly to your partner isn’t safe or possible - sometimes the act of getting it all out can help you see things more clearly and to feel lighter e.g. writing a letter, doing some art or movement, or perhaps a vogue dance workshop
As part of the queer community, it’s important we support each other and stand up against intimate partner violence in our relationships.
If this is happening to someone you know, then you should acknowledge your role as a bystander and the difference you can make. Listen without judgement. Validate their concerns. Show empathy. Ask what they need. Believe them and walk alongside them.
For a confidential, friendly ear or to explore what’s happening in your relationship, contact Jen Wiedman on 0422 500 006 or jen@ jenwiedman.com or check out my approach and resources at www.wildcalmtherapies.com.au
By Claire Johnston
Introducing This Way//That Way Radio @crocodilecowboy
A YOUTH-LED COMMUNITY RADIO SHOW ABOUT SEXUAL AND REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH, RELATIONSHIPS AND CULTURE.
When Susannah and Jane arrive at Nigel Mallett house for our This Way//That Way Radio meeting, I’m already sitting in the meeting room with Frankie and Corey. We’re listening to ‘The Shit’, a piece about poo and sex by USA-based queer audio art project, The Heart. Frankie had arrived earlier that morning to catch-up about his idea for a prerecorded audio series about support for trans and gender diverse people in Hobart. It would be an audio resource containing information about medical and legal pathways interspersed with personal stories and local personalities. It’s the kind of information Frankie wished he’d had access to, but instead had to seek out from peers (once he found those, too).
Our meeting is full of ideas for making radio content. We dream up a series of snappy pieces covering the basics of sexual and reproductive health; 2-3 minutes about condoms, STIs, termination of pregnancy, HIV and bloodborne viruses and more. Susannah chimes in with, “Real mates don’t let mates get STIs.” Everyone laughs.
Later that day I meet Jane at UTAS Sandy Bay campus. Tucked away in the Arts Building lives Edge Radio, a youth community radio station. The studio is small and dark with enough room to fit a couple of desks, computer screens and 3x microphones plugged into a vintage audio desk. It’s a modest audio set-up for a host and a couple of guests. Jane and I co-host our show, programming local and interstate female and gender diverse artists and casually chatting about initiatives to support LGBTIQ+ young people. The hour flies by.
I started This Way//That Way Radio as part of my work at The Link Youth Health Service to create sexual and reproductive health resources with and for young people. This kind of collaborative health promotion work is called co-design and is based on the idea that health resources and other activities are more impactful when they’re developed and delivered in collaboration with the people who they are for.
With support from TasCAHRD, five young volunteers and myself completed radio training with Edge Radio and have been gradually working towards building everyone’s confidence in running the studio and producing an exciting show.
This Way//That Way Radio is now based at TasCAHRD and is open to anyone aged 25 and under to get involved. Maybe you or someone you know would like to become part of the team!
We meet monthly, and there are additional opportunities to come on the weekly show at the Edge Radio studio or participate in pre-recording audio content in the podcast studio at TasCAHRD. If you have a passion for radio and sexual health, you can contact TasCAHRD at projects@tascahrd. org.au. You can also follow us on Instagram @thiswaythatway_hobart.
Frankie (he/they)
“I first joined This Way//That Way Editorial Collective around 2020 after seeing a project made by the group shown at The Loop. After learning a bit more about the project I was keen to get involved, went along to one of the meetings and have been involved since. This Way// That Way has evolved, and will no doubt continue to evolve and be shaped by the participants and the ideas they bring to the table. I’m super excited.”
Susannah (she/her)
“I’ve been with This Way//That Way since July 2020. I joined so I could help spread awareness about sexual health and relationships as this is something I wish I knew when I was growing up.”
Corey (he/him)
“I have been working on This Way//That War project for about 12 months now – almost from the start. I joined the project as I am passionate about positive health education, specifically regarding mental and sexual health. I moved to the Hobart areas about 4 years ago and it was the best choice I ever made – moving my smalltown-gay-ass to the big city has been a blast!”
Jane (she/her)
“I live in Hobart and have been involved in This Way//That War since March. I got involved in this because I think there should be sexual health resources for young people by young people, and to help destigmatise sex.”
By Liv Hogarth
Inclusion starts with education and learning
WHETHER WE EDUCATE OURSELVES THROUGH INFORMAL PATHWAYS SUCH AS CONVERSATIONS, VARIOUS FORMS OF MEDIA, OR A GOOD OLD TRIP TO THE LIBRARY, OR SEEK OUT MORE FORMAL LEARNING OPPORTUNITIES, EDUCATION IS GENERALLY AGREED TO BE THE KEY TO INCLUSION.
Inclusion is more than acceptance, and certainly more than tolerance, which are often terms used to indicate what a progressive and modern society we are. You ‘tolerate’ a fly – it’s there, you know it’s there, you’d probably rather it wasn’t there but you’re not going to take any action to remove it. Acceptance is little more, implying there is something to accept, and that there is a power difference between the person being accepted and the person offering acceptance.
True inclusion is much more. It’s actively seeking a deeper knowledge of the historical and contemporary experiences of the people and communities concerned. It’s having an empathetic understanding and applying that to allyship through support, admiration, appreciation and celebration of people and communities. It’s being active advocates for people’s rights, for safe access to appropriate services, for the value of diversity, and for the celebration of culture.
For LGBTIQ+ people and communities, inclusion can be as serious as life or death. Statistics around LGBTIQ+ people thinking about or attempting suicide remain unacceptably high, along with poorer mental health outcomes. Even in terms of physical health, it’s not uncommon to hear stories of people not seeking medical help due to fears of judgement, misgendering, mistreatment and poor service in general. In fact, across most measures of wellbeing and life satisfaction, research continues to indicate poorer outcomes for LGBTIQ+ communities.
If you find that alarming and want to know how we change it, the simple answer is: education. Education gives us a better understanding of the stories behind those statistics. We are at a point in history where LGBTIQ+ people’s stories and lived experiences are being toldthrough books, film, TV, radio, podcasts – both real life, and more accurate representations through fiction.
We also have more access than ever to formal training. Working It Out, Tasmania’s gender, sexuality and intersex status support and education service, provides a whole suit of training packages in different formats and targeting different sectors, for a range of affordable fees or even at no cost.
Go to the Working It Out Website to find out more about:
• 2 and 3 hour generalised LGBTIQ+ inclusion packages, available to be booked in-house for delivery in-person state wide, or live online;
• public sessions available both in person (in Hobart only so far) or online;
• the Silver Rainbow program offers education and consultation services for the ageing and aged care sector via funding from the Federal Department of Health;
• the Valuing Diversity Framework offers education and support to schools across Tasmania via funding from the Tasmanian Department of Education;
• WIO designed programs targeting the midwifery, disability and sport sectors; and
• the HOW2 Program, which is a series of 4 full-day sessions supporting organisations to work towards sustainable, service-wide inclusion, and potentially the Rainbow Tick - a QIP accreditation for LGBTIQ+ inclusion.
To start your own or your organisation or business’s LGBTIQ+ learning for inclusion contact Liv, WIO’s Manager of Learning and Aged Care Programs, for more information or to make a booking.
Olivia (Liv) Hogarth, training@workingitout.org. au, 03 6231 1200
Sex Worker Awareness Training
Scarlet Alliance’s Tasmanian Project provides training to service providers, including sexual health, alcohol and other drugs, and criminal justice services. Our aim is to enhance awareness of sex worker issues with the goal of improving access and equity.
We provide short, engaging workshops free of cost, which we deliver in a way that suits your organisation and team. They are designed to provide health, community, alcohol and other drug and youth worker professionals with an introduction to the sex industry and the people who work in it
Sex work can be a hidden and stigmatised profession, largely influenced by myth, morals and the media. Our workshop aim is to demystify some of the stereotypes to provide participants with accurate information about the sex industry.
The workshop will provide participants with practical skills in identifying, engaging and addressing the needs of sex industry workers.
Participants will have the opportunity to:
learn about different sectors of the sex work community
explain laws relating to sex work
identify several sexually transmissible infections
promote their service to sex workers
reflect on their current work practice
Learning outcomes:
to raise awareness of the key issues encountered by people working in the sex industry
to identify risks and promote safety
to identify available resources and services, and barriers to accessing services
to gain an understanding of issues relating to the law, police and public attitudes
Contact Scarlet Alliance’s Tasmanian Project to schedule your training today!
Peer Outreach & Education Officer
Program Coordinator
outreachtas@scarletalliance.org.au 0481 264 925
tas@scarletalliance.org.au 0451 835 897
New Town Health is located at 127 New Town Road, New Town TAS 7008.
Book an appointment online with Hotdoc, or by calling the clinic. Tele health available.
Phone: 03 6228 7285
By Hannah Jane
Poz Flix
WITH WORLD AIDS DAY ON DECEMBER 1ST, MORE PEOPLE ARE TALKING ABOUT HIV AND BLOOD BORNE VIRUSES. THESE CONVERSATIONS ARE PIVOTAL TO DECREASING STIGMA AND SPREADING AWARENESS.
Recently voices like Trinity K. Boney on RuPaul’s Drag Race spoke openly about her HIV status, using her platform to educate people on the reality that ‘Undetectable = Untransmittable’.
Voices like hers reaching mainstream audiences highlight another important aspect of reducing stigma - society is impacted by what is shown on media and what enters the cultural psyche through popular culture and celebrities. Some people today might only be able to think of Queen front-runner Freddie Mercury when you ask them about AIDS. Here are some books and movies that feature HIV, which can be a source of discussion about how the landscape has changed in the past forty years and how HIV can be a point of reference to many intersectional issues.
1. Philadelphia
A 1993 starring Tom Hanks and Denzel Washington, it follows a man dying from AIDS as he fights for his rights in court after being fired.
2. Push / Precious
A 1996 novel and later 2009 film by the name Precious, this story follows a young girl from an abusive home environment and is given the chance to find passion in education.
3. Angels in America
Originally a 1991 play and later adapted into a 2003 miniseries, this story depicts a symbolic examination of HIV and homosexuality in America in the 1980s.
4. An Early Frost
A 1985 television drama that was the first of its kind to depict a gay man living with HIV to American audiences.
5. Two Boys Kissing by David Levithan
A 2013 young adult novel, inspired by true events, it follows two boys wanting to break the Guinness World Record by kissing for 32 hours.
6. Holding the Man by Timothy Conigrave
A 2009 novel that follows a a young gay couple in the seventies and eighties that weathers disapproval,separation and the HIV epicdemic in Australia.
7. Like A Love Story by
Abdi Nazemian
A 2019 novel set in 1989 New York as three teenagers are affected by the AIDS crisis in different ways together.
8. April Fool’s Day by Bryce Courtney
A 1998 memoir that follows the author’s son who was born a hemophiliac and contracts HIV through a blood transfusion.
9. The Line of Beauty by Alan Hollinghurst
A 2004 novel that is set in three time periods, 1983, 1986, and 1987 as it follows Nick Guest a gay man in Britain during the emerging AIDS crisis.
10. Positively by Courtney Sheinmel
A 2009 novel about a thirteen year old girl who was diagnosed with HIV, it follows her experiences with isolation after her mother’s passing.
11. Bohemian Rhapsody (2018)
A 2018 musical biography film on Freddie Mercury and all the band members from Queen up until his death in 1991.
12. And the Band Played On
Originally a 1987 book by journalist, Randy Shilts, it was later adapted into a movie featuring Sir Ian McKellen in 1993. It chronicles the emergence of HIV in an extensive investigation that details the impacts on the gay, medical, and political communities.
13. Howard
A 2017 documentary about Howard Ashman, the man behind the lyrics of Disney movies like Beauty and the Beast, The Little Mermaid, and Aladdin. This movie shows his success and how it was impacted by HIV.
NSP OUTLETS
PRIMARY
Northwest
Youth, Family and Community Connection
62 Stewart Street Devonport
Anglicare 51 Wilmot Street Burnie
South
Bridgewater Community Centre 6 Bowden Drive Bridgewater
Anglicare 436 Main Road Glenorchy
Anglicare 18 Watchorn Street Hobart
Clarence Integrated Care Centre 18-22 Bayfield Street Rosny
North
Salvation Army 111 Elizabeth Street Launceston
SECONDARY
Northwest
Burnie Community House
24 Wiseman Street Burnie
North West Regional Hospital
23 Brickport Road Burnie
King Island District Hospital and Health Centre 35 Edwards Street Currie
Devonport Community Health Centre 23 Steele Street Devonport
Rosebery Community Hospital Hospital Road Rosebery
Smithton District Hospital
74 Brittons Road Smithton
Wyndarra Centre Inc.
43 Smith Street Smithton
South
The Link 57 Liverpool Street Hobart
Tasmanian Aboriginal Centre 56 Patrick Street Hobart
Gagebrook Community Centre 191 Lamprill Circuit Gagebrook
Tasmanian Council on Aids, Hepatitis and Related Diseases 319 Liverpool Street Hobart
North
Cape Barren Community Health Centre 5 Everett Court Cape Barren Island
Flinders Island Multi-Purpose Centre James Street Flinders Island
Flinders Island Aboriginal Association Inc 16 West Street Lady Barron
Tasmanian Aboriginal Centre 182 Charles Street Launceston
Ravenswood Community Health Centre 39-41 Lambert Street Ravenswood
St Helens District Hospital 10 Annie Street St Helens
VENDING MACHINES
Northwest
40-48 Best Street, Devonport –Ground level, Multi-level carpark
South
Anglicare 18 Watchorn Street Hobart
North
Invermay Local Post Office 52 Invermay Road Invermay
Salvation Army 111 Elizabeth Street Launceston
Youngtown Pharmacy 369 Hobart Road Youngtown
These NSP locations have been reproduced from the DHHS webpage.
NSP PHARMACIES
NORTH
West Tamar Pharmacy, Beaconsfield
Bicheno Pharmacy, Bicheno
Bridport Pharmacy, Bridport
Healthpoint Pharmacy, Campbell Town
Amcal Pharmacy, Deloraine
George Town Pharmacy
Capital Chemist, King Meadows
Priceline Pharmacy, Launceston
Amcal Pharmacy, Legana
Chemmart Pharmacy, Longford
Longford Pharmacy, Longford
Capital Chemist, Mowbray Heights
Capital Chemist, Newstead
Chemmart Pharmacy, Ravenswood
Galloway’s Pharmacy, Scottsdale
St Helens Pharmacy, St Helens
St Marys Pharmacy, St Marys
Westbury Pharmacy, Westbury
Young Town Pharmacy, Young Town
NORTH WEST
Bolands Pharmacy, Burnie
Pharmacy One, Burnie
Wilkinson’s Pharmacy, Burnie
Chemmart Pharmacy, Upper Burnie
Healthpoint Pharmacy, Burnie
King Island Pharmacy, Currie
Mersey Pharmacy, East Devonport
Coventry’s Pharmacy, Latrobe
Penguin Pharmacy, Penguin
Turnbull’s Pharmacy, Sheffield
Smithton Pharmacy, Smithton
Somerset Pharmacy, Somerset
Strahan Pharmacy, Strahan
Priceline Pharmacy, Ulverstone
Peter Thompson’s Pharmacy, Ulverstone
Westside Pharmacy, Ulverstone
Dixon’s Pharmacy, Wynyard
Healthpoint Pharmacy, Wynyard
Zeehan Pharmacy, Zeehan
SOUTH
Bellerive Quay Pharmacy, Bellerive
Rhys Jones Pharmacy, Bellerive
Priceline Pharmacy, Bridgewater
Brighton Pharmacy, Brighton
Bruny Island Pharmacy, Bruny Island
Chigwell Pharmacy, Chigwell
Claremont Pharmacy, Claremont
Derwent Park Pharmacy, Derwent Park
Chemmart Pharmacy, Dodges Ferry
Dover Pharmacy, Dover
Geeveston Pharmacy, Geeveston
Elizabeth Hope Priceline, Glenorchy
Central Advantage Pharmacy, Glenorchy
Priceline Pharmacy, Hobart Mall
Davey St. Discount Pharmacy, Hobart
Your Hobart Chemist, Hobart
Shoreline Amcal Pharmacy, Howrah
Wentworth Pharmacy, Howrah
Huonville Pharmacy, Huonville
Priceline Pharmacy, Kingston
Terry White Chemist, Kingston
Chemist Outlet, Kingston
Kingborough Medical Centre Pharmacy
Lauderdale Pharmacy, Lauderdale
Amcal Pharmacy, Lenah Valley
Village Chemmart, Lindisfarne
Rosetta Pharmacy, Montrose
Amcal Max Pharmacy, Moonah
Amcal Community Pharmacy, New Norfolk
New Norfolk Pharmacy, New Norfolk
Friendly Care Chemmart, New Town
North Hobart Pharmacy, North Hobart
Tasman Pharmacy, Nubeena
Risdon Vale Pharmacy, Rison Vale
Eastlands Priceline Pharmacy, Rosny Park
Discount Pharmacy, Sandy Bay
Magnet Court Chemmart, Sandy Bay
Healthpoint Pharmacy, Snug
Chemmart Pharmacy, Sorell
Chemist Warehouse, Sorell
Sorell Plaza Pharmacy, Sorell
South Arm Community Pharmacy, South Arm
Capital Chemist, South Hobart
Swansea Pharmacy, Swansea
Triabunna Pharmacy, Triabunna
Warrane Pharmacy, Warrane
Amcal Pharmacy, West Hobart
SIGNPOST
A guide to inclusive organisations in Tasmania
Bronwyn’s Driving Instruction
Care Forward
City Organics
Clarence City Council
Colony 47
Convict City Rollers
Danu Herbs
Ella Haddad MP
Emily Parkinson – Registered Psychologist
Equal Opportunity Tasmania
Eye Am Hair
Fiori Florist
FRIENDZ LGBTIQ SOCIAL GROUP
Glenview Community Services
Hairy Legs Cafe
Halcyon South
Hamlet
Hobart Brewing Company
Hobart Cat Café
Hobart Functions & Conference Centre
Hobart North Uniting Church
Hobart Out Tennis Inc
Holyoake
Hospice volunteers South inside Hobart
Ironic Party Planning
Joyous Celebrations
Junction Motel
LIMBO Party
Lindisfarne Psychology & Wellbeing Centre
Locker Room Hobart
Mr. Good Guy Bar + Asian Kitchen
Moto Vecchia Cafe
Mures Tasmania
New Town Chiropractic
Ogilvie Jennings Lawyers
Peppermint Bay
Positive Solutions
Pulse Youth Health
QTAS Arts
Queer Sporting Alliance
Rainbow Youth Events Hobart
RBK Business Services
Red Parka
Relationships Australia Tasmania
Tassie Bird and Poultry Supplies
Terry White Chemmart Lindisfarne
Terry White Chemmart Rosny Park
The Art of Tea Bouteaque
The Grand Poonah
The Hobart Bookshop
The Huon Domestic Violence Service
The Link Youth Health Service
The Page And Cup
Thistle Witch Gardening
Tranquility Float and Reflexology Hobart
Van Diemen Fencing Club
Viridi Natural Therapies
Warrane Mornington Neighbourhood Centre
Wellington Wanderers
West Winds Community Centre
Wild Calm Therapies
Youth Arts & Recreation Centre
NORTH:
Attitude Counselling
Beaconsfield Child and Family Centre
Beaconsfield Mine and Heritage Centre
Bright Beginnings Yoga
CVGT Launceston
Deloraine House Inc
Diversity Launceston
Dorset Community House
Enterprising Aardvark Counselling and Consultancy
Launceston Community Legal Centre
Launceston Football Club
May Shaw Health Centre
National Joblink Launceston
Northern Children’s Network
Ochre Medical Centre
Pinky Community Support
Positive Solutions
Respect at Work
Salveo Healthcare
Tamar Visitor Centre
The Blue Door
Tresca Community Centre
YMCA Launceston
Mike Gaffney MLC
Patrick Street Clinic
Psychology Caffe
Sacred Circle Dance
Serenity House
Victoria Street Clinic
Weddings For Everyone
Youth, Family & Community Connections
TASMANIA WIDE:
Anglicare Tasmania
Australian Unemployed Workers Union
Tasmania
Baptcare Family and Community
Services Tasmania
Care2Serve – Carer Gateway
Community and Public Sector Union
Council on the Ageing
Daydream Photography
Engender Equality
Equal Together
Equality Tasmania
Heidi Harrison Psychotherapy
Independent Living Centre Tasmania
Family Violence Counselling and Support Service
Marry Me, Memily
Mental Health Council of Tasmania
Pride Society of UTAS
Rainbow Communities Tasmania
Rebecca White MP
Scarlet Alliance Tasmanian Sex Worker
Project
Sensual Potential
Sexual Assault Support Service
St John Ambulance
Statewide Sexual Health Service
Tasmania Police
TasPride
TasTAFE Student Support Team
Tender Funerals
Transgender Tasmania
Uniting AgeWell
UTAS Ally Network
Working It Out
SERVICES DIRECTORY
EQUAL OPPORTUNITY TASMANIA
https://equalopportunity.tas.gov.au
Ph 1300 305 062
The office of the anti-discrimination commissioner
SCARLET ALLIANCE TASMANIAN SEX
WORKER OUTREACH PROJECT
outreachtas@scarletalliance.org.au
Ph 0451 835 897 www.scarletalliance.org.au
TASPRIDE
www.taspride.com
Celebrating and uniting the Tasmanian LGBTIQQ community
ATTITUDE COUNSELLING
Attitudecounselling.com
Ph 0499 184 088 (Launceston)
Diversity inclusive counselling service specialising in sexual and mental wellbeing
WORKING IT OUT
www.workingitout.org.au
Sexuality and gender support and counselling
SEXUAL HEALTH SERVICE
http://www.dhhs.tas.gov.au/sexualhealth
Toll Free: 1800 675 859
Clinic 60 – 60 Collins St Hobart
Ph 03 6166 2672
Mon – Fri 8:30am – 4:30pm
Clinic 34 – 34 Howick St Launceston Ph 03 6777 1371
Mon – Fri 8:30am – 4:30pm Devonport – Ph 03 6777 1371 by appointment only
Counselling, support, referrals, STI/HIV testing and PrEP prescriptions
TASCAHRD – TASMANIAN COUNCIL ON AIDS, HEPATITIS & RELATED DISEASES
www.redthread.org.au
Ph 1800 005 900
TAS POLICE LGBTIQ LIAISON OFFICERS
www.police.tas.gov.au
Ph 03 6230 2111 (Hobart)
Ph 03 6336 7000 (Launceston)
Ph 03 6434 5211 (North West)
ATDC TAS – THE ALCOHOL, TOBACCO & OTHER DRUGS COUNCIL OF TASMANIA
http://www.atdc.org.au/
Advocating and initiatives
THE LINK YOUTH HEALTH SERVICE & HEAD SPACE FOR PEOPLE AGED 12-24
http://www.thelink.org.au
57 Liverpool St Hobart | Ph 03 6231 2927
Mon – Fri 9:00am – 5:00pm
Counselling, outreach, case management, support for mental and sexual health, alcohol and drugs (incl NSP), family planning
HOBART COMMUNITY LEGAL SERVICE
www.hobartlegal.org
166 Macquarie Street, Hobart | Ph 03 6223 2500
Shop 3, Covehill Fair, Bridgewater
Ph 03 6263 4755
SENSUAL POTENTIAL RICHELLE MENZIES
richelle@sensualpotential.com.au www.sensualpotential.com.au
Ph 0408 843 221
Sexologist offering relationship and sexuality education and counselling
FAMILY PLANNING TASMANIA
http://www.fpt.asn.au
421 Main Rd Glenorchy
Ph 03 6273 9117 | Mon – Fri 9:00am – 5.00pm
269 Wellington St Launceston
Ph 03 6343 4566 | Mon – Fri 9:00am – 5.00pm
1 Pine Ave Burnie
Ph 03 6431 7692 (Mon, Wed and Thurs)
Contraception and pregnancy counselling, sexual health checks, pap smears, information and referrals.
POSITIVE LIVES TASMANIA
Peer-led HIV social group
0478 909 949
To have your service listed in this directory contact TasCAHRD on 03 6234 1242 or Health@tascahrd.org.au
TASMANIAN PRIDE AWARDS
WEDNESDAY EVENING, 1ST DECEMBER, 2021
HOBART TOWN HALL
TasCAHRD | TasPRIDE | New Town Health