Exciting new volunteering opportunity for African people!
posted: 29/11/2011
Building on the success of the last year, George House Trust is looking for enthusiastic, committed and reliable people from African communities who are living with HIV, to join our team of African Support Volunteers.
African Peer Support is the perfect volunteering opportunity for anyone who feels that they have wisdom to share, or if you are looking to gain voluntary experience of working in the health and social care sector. In fact, many of our previous volunteers have now gone on to paid work or vocational training as a result of their developing their experience through volunteering here at George House Trust.
You will receive full training to enable you to provide one-to-one support to other African people who are living with HIV through things like:
• sharing your own experiences to help other individuals
• providing basic information about HIV
• offering emotional support
By volunteering on this project, you could help change someone’s life for the better. That is because nobody understands what it is like to be an African person living with HIV more than you.
To apply for this role, fill in this simple application form and return it to George House Trust by Tuesday 13th December, 2011.
Successful candidates will be invited for a volunteer interview on either 17th or 18th January, 2012 and those chosen at interview will be invited to induction sessions on 30th January, 3rd February and 6th February, 2012
For further information contact Susie
Please read a copy of the volunteer role description here
You can apply online here for the role or you can download copies of the application fom
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HIV Positive at NAT
posted: 02/03/2011
NAT (National AIDS Trust) have updated their website by adding a new welcome page for people with HIV. Here you can find all the information from NAT that is most useful for people with HIV.
It saves you from tripping up over the things on their website that you won’t need, like NAT’s guides for employers.
Try the new NAT web door for people with HIV
If you are living with HIV in the UK, this section of NAT's website is designed to provide up-to-date and useful information on issues such as rights, confidentiality, employment, benefits, and much more.
There is also information on how you can become involved with NAT’s work for example by joining their Press Gang.
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Hear About HIV First Hand
posted: 24/11/2009
Often the best support comes from people who have the same kind of experiences. For people who do not have HIV, hearing people who do have HIV talk about their experiences can be powerful, help end misunderstandings and prevent stigma and discrimination.
The websiite Healthtalkonline's HIV section lets you find out about other people's experiences of HIV. You can watch or listen to videos of a wide mix of people living with HIV, read about their experiences and find reliable useful information about HIV, treatment choices and support.
Healthtalkonline is from the charity Dipex and is based on research into people’s experiences, led by experts at the University of Oxford. These personal stories help people with HIV, families and healthcare professionals, and the whole public to benefit from other people’s experiences.
Healthtalkonline has sections for many other conditions, as well as HIV, for example, depression.
HIV at HealthTalkOnline
They interviewed 50 people about their experiences of HIV infection and this is all organised into topics
It also has a section with information resources and a forum. Like many of the health forums on this site, the HIV forum is hardly used; anyone can read questions and comments, and to ask a question or reply, you need to register and log-in.
A more popular forum for people with HIV
A far more popular UK HIV+ people’s forum is run by a man with HIV, Hortilad
This has almost 1000 members and is active - 358 Posts on 182 Topics. You can see what the Hortilad HIV+ forum looks like here.
To use the Hortilad forum you need you to register, by choosing a user ID (made of any letters and numbers), a user name (shown on the forum when you post), and a valid email address (tick the box when you sign up, to keep your email address hidden).
Click here for HealthTalkOnline HIV Topics
Experiences of health care :
Getting a diagnosis
Getting health and social care
Making decisions about treatment
Taking anti-HIV drugs
Challenges of anti-HIV drugs
Looking after yourself :
Coping with mental health problems
Dealing with your thoughts
Talking about it
Becoming informed
Gaining power and strength
Spirituality and religion
Holistic health
Disclosure, discrimination and other challenges :
Secrecy and telling people
Support groups
Dealing with difficulties, finances and benefits
Work and routine
Prejudice, stigma and discrimination
Telling children and parents
Negotiating Sex :
How people became infected
Casual sexual encounters
Sex in relationships
Telling sexual partners
Looking ahead :
Living now & in the future
Illness and death
Finally, what people with HIV want you to know
The USA's Positive Project has more than 100 first-person stories told by people infected or affected by HIV/AIDS.
On their site you can pick videos of positive speakers by gender, age, where they live, ethnicity, sexuality, topic.
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