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Founded in 2011
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The 30 for 30 Campaign is dedicated to ensuring that the unique needs of women living with and affected by HIV, including transgender women, are addressed in the national HIV response.

Company Overview
The 30 for 30 Campaign is dedicated to ensuring that the unique needs of women living with and affected by HIV, including transgender women, are addressed in th...e national HIV response. We are especially committed to illuminating and eliminating the gaps in prevention and care services for Black and Latina women who currently make up over 80% of the epidemic among women but only 12% and 14% of the US female population respectively.
The Campaign is concerned with the current state of HIV prevention and care for women as studies continue to show that women, especially women of color, have consistently poorer health outcomes despite there being no significant clinical difference in treating men or women living with HIV. See More
The Campaign is concerned with the current state of HIV prevention and care for women as studies continue to show that women, especially women of color, have consistently poorer health outcomes despite there being no significant clinical difference in treating men or women living with HIV. See More

30 for 30 Campaign Priorities
1. Expand and expedite the provision of women-centered supportive services and housing services for women living with and affect...ed by HIV. Linking and retaining women in HIV care requires supportive services such as adequate transportation assistance, childcare options, nutritional adequacy, assurance of transgender-competent care and services, case management, and peer support services to guide and support women’s efforts to obtain HIV testing, medical and social services. Access to stable housing is an evidence-based HIV prevention strategy, as well as an essential component of effective, sustained medical care.
2. Make women-centered, integrated care more widely and readily available. Relevant agencies must work to integrate service delivery and provider training in the three health care delivery areas of greatest importance to women living with or affected by HIV: 1) HIV prevention, treatment and care; 2) sexual and reproductive health services; and 3) intimate partner violence prevention and counseling.
3. Produce better data and more targeted research to identify and address women’s needs. All data must be disaggregated by sex and gender. Women-controlled prevention tools must be developed and made available. Available data on service and treatment delivery is rarely disaggregated by sex or gender, making it impossible to accurately quantify existing gaps in services and their impact on women and girls, including transgender women and girls. As yet there are no women-controlled prevention tools available. Male condoms aren’t enough and female condoms cannot be used without a partner’s knowledge and consent. Women urgently need expanded investment in and research into current and future HIV prevention tools including female condoms, Treatment as Prevention (TasP), Pre-exposure Prophylaxis (PrEP), microbicides and a better understanding of the impact of hormonal contraception use on HIV risk. See More
1. Expand and expedite the provision of women-centered supportive services and housing services for women living with and affect...ed by HIV. Linking and retaining women in HIV care requires supportive services such as adequate transportation assistance, childcare options, nutritional adequacy, assurance of transgender-competent care and services, case management, and peer support services to guide and support women’s efforts to obtain HIV testing, medical and social services. Access to stable housing is an evidence-based HIV prevention strategy, as well as an essential component of effective, sustained medical care.
2. Make women-centered, integrated care more widely and readily available. Relevant agencies must work to integrate service delivery and provider training in the three health care delivery areas of greatest importance to women living with or affected by HIV: 1) HIV prevention, treatment and care; 2) sexual and reproductive health services; and 3) intimate partner violence prevention and counseling.
3. Produce better data and more targeted research to identify and address women’s needs. All data must be disaggregated by sex and gender. Women-controlled prevention tools must be developed and made available. Available data on service and treatment delivery is rarely disaggregated by sex or gender, making it impossible to accurately quantify existing gaps in services and their impact on women and girls, including transgender women and girls. As yet there are no women-controlled prevention tools available. Male condoms aren’t enough and female condoms cannot be used without a partner’s knowledge and consent. Women urgently need expanded investment in and research into current and future HIV prevention tools including female condoms, Treatment as Prevention (TasP), Pre-exposure Prophylaxis (PrEP), microbicides and a better understanding of the impact of hormonal contraception use on HIV risk. See More

General Information
Member Organizations:
The Afiya Center HIV Prevention & Sexual Reproductive Justice, African Services Committee, AIDS Alabama, AIDS Alliance for Children Youth... & Families, AIDS Foundation of Chicago, AIDS United, Bailey House, Campaign to End AIDS (C2EA), Center for Health and Gender Equity (CHANGE), Center for HIV Law and Policy (CHLP), Community Healthcare Network, HIV Law Project, HIV Prevention Justice Alliance, Housing Works, International Community of Women Living with HIV/AIDS (ICW), IRIS Center, Memphis Center for Reproductive Health, National AIDS Housing Coalition (NAHC), National Black Leadership Commission on AIDS (NBLCA), National Black Women's HIV/AIDS Network (NBWHAN), National Health Law Program (NHeLP), National Women and AIDS Collective (NWAC), Sisterlove. Inc., SMART University, South Carolina HIV/AIDS Council, Southern HIV/AIDS Strategy Initiative (SASI), U.S. Positive Women’s Network (PWN), The Well Project, The Women’s Collective, Women Organized to Respond to Life-threatening Diseases (WORLD), Women with a Vision See More
The Afiya Center HIV Prevention & Sexual Reproductive Justice, African Services Committee, AIDS Alabama, AIDS Alliance for Children Youth... & Families, AIDS Foundation of Chicago, AIDS United, Bailey House, Campaign to End AIDS (C2EA), Center for Health and Gender Equity (CHANGE), Center for HIV Law and Policy (CHLP), Community Healthcare Network, HIV Law Project, HIV Prevention Justice Alliance, Housing Works, International Community of Women Living with HIV/AIDS (ICW), IRIS Center, Memphis Center for Reproductive Health, National AIDS Housing Coalition (NAHC), National Black Leadership Commission on AIDS (NBLCA), National Black Women's HIV/AIDS Network (NBWHAN), National Health Law Program (NHeLP), National Women and AIDS Collective (NWAC), Sisterlove. Inc., SMART University, South Carolina HIV/AIDS Council, Southern HIV/AIDS Strategy Initiative (SASI), U.S. Positive Women’s Network (PWN), The Well Project, The Women’s Collective, Women Organized to Respond to Life-threatening Diseases (WORLD), Women with a Vision See More

Founding date
2011
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