For World AIDS Day - which takes place on December 1st - Terence Higgins Trust launched a new online platform to make sure love ones lost to the HIV epidemic are still remembered this year.

World AIDS Day remembers the millions lost since the start of the HIV epidemic in the 1980s, with people across the globe wearing a red ribbon in solidarity with all those living with the virus today.

It is also an opportunity to celebrate the huge medical progress made in the fight against HIV, as well as focusing on the challenges ahead – including the stigma and discrimination still faced by people living with HIV.

During the pandemic, commemorating World AIDS Day is significantly tricker. That's why the Terence Higgins Trust have brought World AIDS Day online with its first ever digital remembrance platform, where users can share a short dedication message to someone who has passed away or in solidarity with those living with HIV. There’s also the opportunity to read other people’s poignant memories and stories.

This is part of a digitisation of the charities existing work in light of the pandemic with the vast majority of its vital services for people living with HIV – including free counsellingpeer support and HIV testing via post – now being delivered online.  

The charity’s chief executive, Ian Green, was diagnosed with HIV in 1996. He has shared his own message in memory of dear friends Michael, Mark, Stuart and John who – unlike him – died before effective treatment to suppress the virus became available. Mr Green will now live as long as anyone else his age, but sadly his contemporaries weren’t so lucky.

His message reads: ‘Dear Michael, Mark, Stuart and John. You all impacted my life so very positively. I miss you all.’

‘Millions of people – sons, and daughters, mothers and fathers, husbands and wives – have been lost to the HIV epidemic over the last 40 years and it’s vital we never forget them. That’s why, despite the coronavirus restrictions, we knew we had to find a way to bring people together to remember lost loved ones. Mr Green commented. 

'Unlike Terry Higgins, not everyone who’s died since the start of the epidemic has a charity in their name, but every single person will have had a huge impact on those they left behind.

‘An HIV diagnosis in the UK has changed a huge amount since the 1980s with medical progress and effective treatment meaning you can now live a long, healthy life with the virus. But we can’t ever forget our history as we stand on the shoulders of those who died of AIDS-related illnesses before effective treatment was found, including the early activists who wouldn’t stay silent, demanded change and helped us get to where we are today.’

To support the Terence Higgins Trust & find out more about getting involved with their volunteering, fundraising and to donate, head to https://www.tht.org.uk/take-action 

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