looking for the latest information on herpes research and treatment?
personal stories from people with genital herpes?
answers to your questions about herpes?
Then you're looking for The Helper, ASHA's quarterly newsletter on genital herpes.
The Helper is ASHA's award-winning quarterly newsletter on herpes. The Helper offers: News items on the latest on HSV research, vaccine development, testing and other news in the field of sexually transmitted infections; Features that address the social and emotional aspects of herpes, from relationships and dating to local support groups and online resources, and; Personal stories from individuals just like you.
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Further Reading:
Managing Herpes: Living & Loving with HSV
is the #1 handbook for people with herpes, partners, and healthcare providers.
Date of Last Revision:
July 2007
Book now available!
Get your copy today!
by Charles Ebel and
Anna Wald, M.D., M.P.H.
Managing Herpes has been updated to include the latest research. This book provides a balanced, reassuring view of the medical and emotional
issues surrounding genital herpes.
Nineteen chapters cover recurrences, treatment options, transmission, pregnancy, telling your partner, impact on sexuality, longterm relationships, vaccine research, and more.
Includes a glossary, resource list, bibliography, and further reading list.
Click here to order.
Our Price: $21.95 |
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From The
Helper, ASHA's quarterly newsletter on herpes:
Getting the message across with awarenesswear
Looking for a way to educate and inform others about herpes while raising awareness of this common infection—and look stylish doing it? Then you might be interested in AwarenessWear from OBGear. The brainchild of Joanna Giansanti, a graphic designer from upstate New York, AwarenessWear t-shirts and buttons present some basic facts about herpes in a bold and playful manner designed to not only attract the eye but spark conversation as well.
OBGear (the “OB” stands for “outbreak”) began in 2005, as Giansanti was looking for a new creative outlet for her artistic skills that would also make a broader impact. As she explains, “I wanted to do something fun that meant something to me, something I believe in.” Giansanti developed clever designs to highlight herpes infection rates and the risks of transmission through oral sex as way to “get a message out in a graphic way that you don’t usually see.”
While working on her original designs, Giansanti was fortunate to have the feedback . . .
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