Campaigns and Materials
The campaign resources on this page are part of the larger Act Against AIDS initiative. They focus on various populations, including gay and bisexual men; racial and ethnic groups with a higher risk for HIV; health care providers; and the general public. Please use these resources in your organization and in your online prevention efforts.
Campaigns Targeted to the General Public
Doing It
Doing It is a new national HIV testing and prevention campaign designed to motivate all adults to get tested for HIV and know their status. As part of the Act Against AIDS initiative, Doing It delivers the message that HIV testing should be a part of everyone’s regular health routine to keep ourselves and our community healthy. He’s doing it. She’s doing it. We’re doing it. YOU should be doing it, too.
Let’s Stop HIV Together
The Let’s Stop HIV Together campaign raises awareness about HIV and its impact on the lives of all Americans, and fights stigma by showing that persons with HIV are real people — mothers, fathers, friends, brothers, sisters, sons, daughters, partners, wives, husbands, and co-workers.
Let’s Stop HIV Together Website and Campaign Materials
Target Audience: The general public
Start Talking. Stop HIV.
Start Talking. Stop HIV. seeks to reduce new HIV infections among gay and bisexual men by encouraging open discussion about a range of HIV prevention strategies and related sexual health issues between sex partners.
Start Talking. Stop HIV.
Target Audience: Gay and bisexual men
HIV Treatment Works
This campaign features people from across the United States who are living with HIV, talking about how sticking with care and treatment helps them stay healthy, protect others, and live longer, healthier lives.
HIV Treatment Works Website and Campaign Materials
Target Audience: People living with HIV
Campaigns Targeted to Health Care Providers
Prevention Is Care
A campaign to encourage health care providers who treat patients with HIV to screen their HIV-infected patients for risky transmission behaviors, and reiterate to HIV-infected patients the importance of protecting themselves and others by reducing risky behaviors.
Prevention IS Care. Website and Campaign Materials
Target Audience: Infectious Disease Specialists and Primary Care Providers who treat HIV
One Test. Two Lives.
A campaign to encourage health care providers to test pregnant women for HIV infection and help reduce the number of infants born with HIV.
One Test. Two Lives.Website and Campaign Materials
Target Audience: OB/GYNs, Certified Nurse Midwives
Archived Campaigns
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We Can Stop HIV One Conversation at a Time
Encouraging Hispanics to talk openly about HIV/AIDS. -
Reasons/Razones
Encouraging Hispanic gay and bisexual men to get tested for HIV. -
HIV Screening. Standard Care. Testing and Linking Minority Patients to Care
Improving outcomes for African American and Hispanic patients.
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Take Charge. Take the Test.
Encouraging African American women to get tested for HIV. -
Testing Makes Us Stronger
Encouraging African American gay and bisexual men to get tested for HIV.
- Page last reviewed: August 7, 2017
- Page last updated: August 7, 2017
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