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Blackburn Cathedral Vigil

posted: 24/11/2010

A candlelit HIV vigil at Blackburn Cathedral is one of the events in East Lancashire organised for World AIDS Day. The cathedral vigil will be on Thursday December 2nd 2010 at 7.15pm. The service is to be led by Canon Andrew Hindley. There will be speakers from Thrivine and music from the Cathedral Choir and Blackburn People’s choir.
 

Buffet and exhibitions in the Crypt

After the service wine and a light buffet will be served downstairs in the Crypt Cafe where you will also have the opportunity to view the exhibition of The Positive Picture, the results of a project funded by the NHS Dragon’s Apprentice. Painted lanterns and art works by local youth groups will also be on display.

 

Thrivine logo

 

 

Thrivine awards success
This year the East Lancashire HIV charity Thrivine was nominated for a CVS Community Award, and has recently won the Gilead “Putting patients 1st” Award for England and Northern Ireland, for 'Integrity, Teamwork and Excellence, thereby making a significant contribution to the lives of people living with HIV.'
 

Thrivine are very proud of their achievements so soon after their founding and welcome people to attend the vigil and help put an end to HIV related stigma.

More information
email Thrivine



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More HIV Testing Urged

posted: 08/10/2010

The NHS health advice body NICE has produced its first HIV guidance, about HIV testing. The draft HIV testing guidance recommends that mainstream health services offer much more HIV testing to the two communities most affected by HIV in England, black African people and to men who have sex with men. The guidelines also call for more testing to be offered in places such as bars and saunas, using rapid point-of-care tests.
 

NICE HIV testing: open for comments
The National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE) tells the NHS which are the best and most cost-effective treatments and public health interventions. NHS bodies are legally required to fund the medicines and treatments recommended by NICE.
 

Making HIV testing guidelines work
Other organisations have produced HIV testing guidelines before, notably the British HIV Association (BHIVA) and the British Association for Sexual Health and HIV (BASHH). But these were not backed by the UK National Screening Committee, nor by NICE, and many parts of the NHS simply ignored them.

The most recent BHIVA and BASHH testing guidelines recommended that HIV testing should be offered in a wide range of healthcare settings, including GP surgeries and most hospital departments. Little was done about this.
 

NICE will force more testing action
To increase testing, the Department of Health asked NICE to produce public health guidance to increase HIV testing both among men who have sex with men and among black African communities. The new NICE guidance supports most of the BHIVA and BASHH testing recommendations, and goes further with some recommendations.
 

There are two guidelines - one to increase testing in men who ave sex with men, and a the other for increasing testing among black African people.
 

Local strategies needed

For both men who have sex with men and for black Africans in England, NICE recommends preparing local strategies to increase HIV testing, developed in consultation with community organisations and the people affected. These strategies should focus on sections of the community who are less likely to use services. Community engagement and involvement is particularly important for black African communities.
 

Africans - involve people as champions and leaders
NICE recommends that black Africans in England should be recruited and trained to act as ‘health champions’ and ‘role models’. HIV testing work must deal with people’s misunderstandings and ignorance about HIV, testing and treatment, and must promote the benefits of early diagnosis and tackle HIV-related stigma.
 

The guidance for black African communities includes providing HIV testing outside sexual health clinics. This is because the evidence from the literature is that HIV testing in sexual health clinics is seen by some black Africans as stigmatising, complicated and time-consuming, while HIV testing in other healthcare settings was welcomed.
 

NICE recommends that general practitioners should routinely offer an HIV test to black Africans who have not tested before or who have had a new sexual partner since the last negative test. In hospitals and other healthcare settings, an opt-out test should be routinely provided to black Africans who are having blood taken for other reasons.
 

Testing in sex venues to reach gay men
Health promotion interventions promoting testing to men who have sex with men should include venues, such as saunas, clubs and cruising areas, or websites, which facilitate sex between men.
NICE appears more enthusiastic than BHIVA about community testing in sex on the premises venues. In gay venues, NICE says rapid tests (using mouth swabs or finger-prick blood samples) should be provided by trained staff, in a secluded or private area.
 

NICE’s guidance for men who have sex with men encourages testing in primary care (GPs), but not in secondary care (hospitals). The BHIVA guidelines are different, and recommend that all healthcare settings should offer an HIV test to any man who says he has sex with other men.
 

NICE recommends that GP surgeries should recommend all males to have HIV tests where the surgery is in an area with a large gay community or theer is a high rate of HIV.
 

Carl Burnell, of the gay men’s health charity GMFA, questions whether this will is work, because of the many other demands on GP surgery capacity. “The strategy assumes that other services are running like clockwork and have capacity to offer HIV testing,” he said.
 

Clear path from testing to services
All testing services need clear pathways for people to obtain any necessary confirmation of the HIV test result, HIV treatment services and HIV support groups. People who test negative may need help through counselling and safer sex interventions.
 

The draft guidance comes before results are published on several Department of Health funded pilot projects evaluating new testing strategies.
 

NICE’s guidance is open for feedback and comments until late November. The final NICE HIV testing guidance will appear in March 2011.

HIV testing guidelines for MSM 

HIV testing guidleines for black Africans in England
 

Source


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Body Positive Blackpool Saved

posted: 05/10/2010

Body Positive Blackpool banner design - the Blackpool tower, an AIDS ribbon, sea and beachBody Positive in Blackpool has been saved by two local councillors who donated £6,500. Body Positive in Blackpool feared it would only survive until next year after it discovered its employee Bianca Campbell had stolen £4,127 using its bank card to buy things for her own botox company, Fresh Face.
Redundancies and cuts

As a result of Campbell's theft and a £15,000 cut in local authority funding, Body Positive Blackpool made two staff redundant and cut its services.  But last week the charity was giving a reprieve after Labour councillors Simon Blackburn and Gary Coleman donated £6,500 to keep the charity running.
Bianca Campbell, who was sacked in March when her theft was discovered, pleaded guilty to fraud at Preston Crown Court.
 

The court heard Campbell used a Body Positive Blackpool bankcard to order products for her own business. Campbell was given a total of six months prison, suspended for a year, with 12 months supervision.
 

Body Positive Blackpool 
 

Source
 


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Positive Steps Bury

posted: 09/08/2010

Andrew, a gay man living in the Bury area, is setting up a social and support group for HIV positive gay men living around the whole of the north side of Manchester. Are you interested?
 

He hopes the group will be a chance to socialise and get to know other positive gay men, share information, advice and support, feel less isolated and share ideas on how to challenge stigma locally.
 

Interested men who would like to meet in Bury to plan future events, or who just want to find out about what’s arranged, should contact Andrew by email, or mobile 078 95194 575, or leave a message on the website contact page
 

Positive Steps Bury aims to develop and provide activities and services for gay men living with HIV in Northern Greater Manchester – the Bury, Bolton, Rochdale, Oldham, and Wigan districts and nearby parts of Lancashire.
 

The plan is for a social drop in - an opportunity to share experiences, views and ideas as well as access information and advice, organising activities together - visiting places of interest, walking, cycling, away weekends and other activities, and going to social events such as theatre, drinks, meals out, bingo, etc.
 

Positive Steps Bury
 



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Blackburn Positive Picture Project

posted: 17/06/2010

a row of paint brushes against a palette of acrylic paintIt does not matter if you are doing really well, or going through a bad time. We all have times when we find it difficult to express our thoughts and feelings in words.

In Blackburn, Thrivine is offering Art Therapy on summer Saturday afternoons.  Art Therapy offers you a way to express and communicate your thoughts and feelings in paints, clay, or other materials.

 

 

You do not need to be artistic, or know about art, to benefit.

It is fun and very enjoyable.

Thrivine's Art Therapy - the Positive Picture Project - will be facilitated by qualified people, in a safe space.

If you are infected, or affected by HIV, this could benefit you.

You can choose to come to one or more sessions, or all of the sessions.

Public transport expenses can be reimbursed, should you require.

Positive Picture Project
Saturdays, 2pm to 5pm on these dates

  • 17th   July
  • 24th   July
  • 31st   July
  • 7th   August
  • 14th   August 
  • 21st   August 
  • 28th   August 

Where Thrivine will tell you where Positive Picture Project meets after you book, for confidentiality

Book your place     email, or call Adrienne on 07890 147806
Find out more           email, or call Adrienne on 07890 147806
 


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