HIV intersectionality

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Being a Black woman and wearing the badge of honor of being strong is exhausting to say the least.

Submitted on: Apr 16, 2024

Life gives you chances, and you have to take advantage of them... HIV made me stronger. It empowered me even more.

Submitted on: Oct 23, 2023

Have you ever felt invisible? As a child I felt invisible. In my home there were just three of us: my mother, my brother, and me.

Submitted on: Sep 25, 2023

Recently, I had the extreme pleasure of attending the 2023 Motown Experience: Birth & Breastfeeding Conference hosted by the Black Mothers' Breastfeeding Association in Detroit, MI.

Submitted on: Aug 1, 2023

I started Aunty Lou's Hour to: (a) support people living with HIV who feel lonely; and (b) do what I can to reduce stigma associated with HIV.

Submitted on: Jun 12, 2023
Samantha Rose Montemayor.

The Well Project interviews Samantha Rose Montemayor, Community Advisory Board member and A Girl Like Me blogger, for our "Spotlight: Women Making a Difference" series.

Submitted on: May 24, 2023

The trajectory of HIV has changed dramatically in just a few decades.

Submitted on: Mar 31, 2021
Marissa Gonzalez, sitting on a sofa, smiling.

The Well Project interviews Marissa Gonzalez, Community Advisory Board member and A Girl Like Me blogger, for our "Spotlight: Women Making a Difference" series.

Submitted on: Mar 29, 2021
Three pictures, side by side, of Destiny Smith's face.

The Well Project interviews Destiny Smith, Community Advisory Board member and A Girl Like Me blogger, for our "Spotlight: Women Making a Difference" series.

Submitted on: Feb 19, 2021

Seeing how free people felt about sharing their COVID results but knowing if it were HIV they wouldn't - well DON'T - do the same.

Submitted on: Feb 16, 2021

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