Doing It
Part of CDC’s Let’s Stop HIV Together initiative, Doing It is designed to motivate all adults to get tested for HIV and know their status. The campaign delivers the message that HIV testing should be a part of everyone’s regular health routine. Resources are available in English and Spanish.
Target audience: All adults; focus on populations most at risk for HIV in the U.S.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) sponsors this campaign.
HIV Treatment Works
Part of CDC’s Let’s Stop HIV Together initiative, HIV Treatment Works shows how people with HIV have been successful getting in care and staying on treatment. It focuses on helping people with HIV stay healthy and live longer, healthier lives.
Target audience: People with HIV
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) sponsors this campaign.
Start Talking. Stop HIV.
Part of CDC’s Let’s Stop HIV Together initiative, Start Talking. Stop HIV. focuses on gay and bisexual men and encourages open communication between sex partners and friends about HIV prevention strategies.
A Spanish-language version, Inicia la conversación. Detén el VIH, is also available.
Target audience: Gay and bisexual men
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) sponsors this campaign.
Stop HIV Stigma
Part of CDC’s Let’s Stop HIV Together initiative, Stop HIV Stigma highlights the role that each person plays in stopping HIV stigma and gives voice to people living with HIV, as well as their friends and family. Campaign participants share their stories and call on everyone to work together to stop HIV.
Target audience: The general public
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) sponsors this campaign.
Let’s Stop HIV Together
The Let’s Stop HIV Together campaign (formerly known as Act Against AIDS) includes resources and partnerships aimed at stopping HIV stigma and promoting HIV testing, prevention, and treatment.
Target audience: The general public
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) sponsors this campaign.
Drugs + HIV > Learn the Link
Learn the Link educates youth about how drug and alcohol use put individuals at risk for HIV infection.
Target audience: Teens and parents, teachers, and others who influence teens
The National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) sponsors this campaign.Get Checked
This campaign seeks to increase HIV testing in VA facilities by encouraging all healthcare providers, especially those in primary care, mental health, homeless programs, and substance-use treatment clinics, to offer routine HIV testing to all patients in order to diagnose HIV infection at the earliest possible stage.
Target audience: Veterans and healthcare providers who work with them
The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) sponsors this campaign.
Transforming Health
Part of CDC’s Let’s Stop HIV Together initiative, Transforming Health helps health care providers offer patient-centered care, reduce new HIV infections among transgender people, and improve the health of transgender people who have HIV.
Target audience: Health care providers
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) sponsors this campaign.
Get Yourself Tested
Get Yourself Tested (GYT) is an empowering campaign that encourages young people to get tested for HIV and sexually transmitted diseases (STDs). GYT for High Schools helps high schools carry out GYT activities and events with a student planning group.
Target audience: Young people up to age 25
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) sponsors this campaign.
Know Hepatitis B
Know Hepatitis B is a multilingual national education campaign that increases awareness of hepatitis B among Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders and promotes hepatitis B testing.
Target audience: Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) sponsors this campaign in partnership with Hep B United.
Know More Hepatitis
Know More Hepatitis is a national education campaign that increases awareness about hepatitis C and encourages people who may be chronically infected with hepatitis C—particularly those born between 1945-1965—to get tested.
Target audience: The general public, especially “baby boomers”
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention(CDC) sponsors this campaign.
Campaigns Targeting Providers
Prescribe HIV Prevention
Part of CDC’s Let’s Stop HIV Together initiative, Prescribe HIV Prevention encourages health care providers to prescribe pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) and post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP) to prevent new HIV infections.
Target audience: Healthcare providers
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) sponsors this campaign.
HIV Screening. Standard Care.
Part of CDC’s Let’s Stop HIV Together initiative, HIV Screening. Standard Care. encourages primary care providers (including internal medicine and family practice physicians, nurse practitioners and physician assistants) to promote routine HIV screening during patient visits per the CDC HIV Testing recommendations.
Target audience: Primary care providers
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) sponsors this campaign.
One Test. Two Lives.
Part of CDC’s Let’s Stop HIV Together initiative, One Test. Two Lives. focuses on preventing transmission of HIV from mother-to-child and gives obstetrics providers new tools to help ensure all their patients get tested early.
Target audience: Primary care providers
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention(CDC) sponsors this campaign.
Prevention IS Care
Part of CDC’s Let’s Stop HIV Together initiative, Prevention IS Care provides tools and information to help health care providers start the conversation with patients about HIV treatment, care, and transmission prevention.
Target audience: Health care providers
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) sponsors this campaign.