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San Francisco AIDS Foundation works to end the HIV epidemic in the city where it began, and eventually everywhere. Established in 1982, our mission is the radical reduction of new infections in San Francisco because we refuse to accept HIV as inevitable. Through education, advocacy and direct services for prevention and care, we are confronting HIV in communities most vulnerable to the disease.
To improve the quality of life for those infected and affected by HIV/AIDS through care and education in the communities we serve.
NashvilleCARES’ MISSION is to end the HIV/AIDS epidemic in Middle Tennessee. We work toachieve this through education, advocacy and support for those at risk for orliving with HIV. Our VISION is acommunity where HIV infections are rare, and when they do occur, everyone withHIV/AIDS has access to the care, treatment and support to achieve optimalhealth and self-sufficiency without stigma or discrimination.
To provide housing and support services for people living with HIV/AIDS and advocate on their behalf.
The mission of the Life Foundation is to stop the spread of HIV and AIDS in Hawaii, to empower those affected by HIV/AIDS to maximize the quality of their lives, to provide leadership and advocacy and to apply lessons learned in the AIDS epidemic to other related areas of public health or concern.
The mission of Thrive Health Connection is to provide advocacy, care, and education to those affected by HIV/AIDS and sexually transmitted diseases (STDs).
From the website: "HIPS advances the health rights and dignity, of people and communities impacted by sex work and drug use by providing non-judgmental harm reduction services, advocacy, and community engagement led by those with lived experience."
Grassroot Soccer uses the power of soccer to educate, inspire, and mobilize communities to stop the spread of HIV.
Cutting-edge medicine and advocacy, regardless of ability to pay. It is through this mission we are striving to reach 30 countries and save over 100,000 lives. Some see it as an impossible goal. We see it as a necessary one. AHF pledges to fight this disease no matter whom it afflicts, or where it is found. We will not rest until AIDS is eradicated from the globe.
ASD currently operates four Special Care Facilities licensed by the Texas Department of Health: The Ewing Center, Revlon Apartments, Hillcrest House, and Spencer Gardens. ASD serves an average of 175 men, women and children in 152 total bedrooms within 125 privately configured units. Seventy-six percent (76%) of the agency's resident population are racial or ethnic minorities, 24 percent were women. One hundred percent (100%) of the people served by ASD are significantly below the federal poverty line and are classified either as low- or very-low income. The agency has provided more than 326,000 person/nights of housing to more than 1,100 individuals and family members living with AIDS. Along with a home and a mutually supportive community environment, residents at each facility are provided with a range of services individually tailored to empower them to cope with the cyclical impact HIV/AIDS has on people who are living with a disease that often compromises their complete independence.
One Heart Source, founded by university students at UCLA, grew out of the need to help vulnerable orphans and street children due to HIV/AIDS. One Heart Source is breaking the cycle of poverty and disease through social and economic support and education for communities hardest hit by the epidemic, especially for orphans and street children made vulnerable by HIV/AIDS.
The mission of AIDS Action Committee is to stop the AIDS epidemic and related health inequities by eliminating new infections, maximizing healthier outcomes of those infected and at risk, and attacking the root causes of HIV/AIDS. To achieve this mission AAC provides services to the individual and addresses the root causes of the epidemic