October 15
The Latino Commission on AIDS (LCOA), the Hispanic Federation and other organizations organize this day to build capacity for non-profit organizations and health departments to reach Latinx/Hispanic communities, promote HIV testing, and provide HIV prevention information and access to care.
The 2020 theme is, "Living with HIV or Not…We’re in This Together”.
Share These Images with These Links
Get Involved
Join the Oct. 14, 2020, 2:00-3:00pm EST: NLAAD 2020 Webinar: Advancing "Ending the HIV Epidemic" during COVID-19 with speaker, Harold Phillips, Chief Operating Officer of Ending the HIV Epidemic: A Plan for America. Register here.
Use the hashtag #nlaad2020.
Plan an event and register it with the Latino Commission on AIDS so others can join your event.
Find HIV Testing and Other Services
Use the HIV Testing Sites & Care Services Locator.
The Locator now includes PrEP and STI services and is more user friendly. Read about how the new Locator can help you serve your community.
Visit https://gettested.cdc.gov/.
Graphics
Download the badge: PNG (43 KB); EPS (642 KB).
Post this web badge on your site:
<a href="https://www.hiv.gov/events/awareness-days/latino"><img src="https://www.hiv.gov/sites/default/files/images/nlaad-logo.png" alt="National Latinx AIDS Awareness Day Badge" width="150" height="150" /></a>
Get social media images from CDC.
Download posters from the Latino Commission on AIDS.
Federal Resources
CDC’s communication tools and resources support efforts to prevent HIV and to live well with HIV.
The CDC’s Let’s Stop HIV Together campaign materials includes posters, graphics, videos and more.
Translated information from the campaign is available on a Spanish language website. Use the search function on this page to locate campaign resources written in Spanish.
Learn about the Epidemic
Learn about barriers to ART adherence among Hispanic and Latino men who have sex with men.
Learn the HIV Basics. Know the Facts, Take Care of Yourself.
Find out about today’s epidemic (PDF 501KB) and HIV testing and outcomes among Latinos.