The historical archive of HIV
Kayo Chingonyi's latest poetry collection is a powerful meditation on the cycle of infection, death, and mourning wrought by HIV.
Kayo Chingonyi's latest poetry collection is a powerful meditation on the cycle of infection, death, and mourning wrought by HIV.
COVID-19 is teaching us lessons we should have learned from the HIV epidemic.
South Africa mustn’t forget the public—and that includes migrants and refugees—in its public health response to COVID-19.
It’s not even news that women and children leads AIDS activism in places like Botswana, except when it’s scanted. So, here’s a primer.
Kenyan activists raise their voices, placards and fists over US$500 million allocated but not yet spent for anti-retroviral medications. That’s a lot of money, drugs, and lost lives.
The Guardian reports: “Cash payments help cut HIV infection rate in young women, study finds: Research
Sick mineworkers condemned to rural South Africa, die there with little or no continuation of care, follow up, or chemotherapy.
The health news - with major implications for Africans living on the continent - that made the headlines in 2011.
The leader of the opposition Democratic Alliance makes offensive remarks about AIDS, then smears her critics, AIDS activists and journalists, as Nazis.
The pernicious belief, is founded on ignorance and prejudice, that certain women, including those with HIV, have no right to have children.
Before we close out the year we have to give a nod to the Centre for
The campaign is accompanied by print ads featuring celebrities in coffins to represent their digital deaths. Can this stop, please?