Q & A with First Lady of Ghana and OAFLA President, H.E. Dr. Nana Lordina...
The Organization of African First Ladies (OAFLA) was founded by 37 African First Ladies in 2002 as a collective voice for Africa’s most vulnerable people: women and children infected and affected by...
View ArticleOn the Road to an AIDS-Free Generation, WhatsApp Shortens the Distance
Turkana, Kenya’s largest county, juts out of Kenya’s barren northwest into Uganda, South Sudan, and Ethiopia. Swaths of the county are regularly beset by drought, flash floods, and bandits. The...
View ArticleSocial Protection for Children Must Benefit Children
On August 25 - 26, 2016, Nairobi, Kenya hosted the second East African Community (EAC) Child Rights conference organized to launch the EAC Child Policy (adopted in March 2016) and to access progress...
View ArticleSenior US Officials, Members of Congress & Partners Recommit to Ending...
UNAIDS and the Elizabeth Glaser Pediatric AIDS Foundation hosted a high-level Congressional briefing in the United States Senate to increase momentum around an ambitious Super-Fast-Track...
View ArticleFive Ways Health Care Workers are Improving HIV Services for their Community...
Despite Malawi’s success in expanding HIV prevention, care, and treatment services, the proportion of people living with HIV who know their HIV status is only 53%; well below the 90% target set in the...
View ArticleCounselor on a Motorbike
Alice Tinga welcomes us into her tiny earthen home on the outskirts of a Maasai village near Aitong in Narok County, Kenya. Alice, 37, is one of the founding members of a peer support group for...
View ArticleEGPAF Ambassador Josephine Nabukenya Visits Capitol Hill
Last week during her whirlwind visit to the United States, EGPAF Ambassador, Josephine Nabukenya, took time out of her busy schedule to join me on a visit to Capitol Hill. While the Elizabeth Glaser...
View ArticleEGPAF Quickens Its Pace in Cameroon
In July 2016, Chip Lyons, the president of the Elizabeth Glaser Pediatric AIDS Foundation (EGPAF), traveled to Cameroon, for the ribbon cutting of a new office in Youndé, the capital city. EGPAF began...
View ArticleA Peer Educator in Rural Malawi
Emily Njerengo is a peer educator in rural Malawi. She is living with HIV; she lost her two children and husband to AIDS-related illnesses. Emily credits a safe motherhood support group with having...
View ArticleA Walk Through Points of Care
Hellen Abura, 53, is a businesswoman and mother living in Homa Bay, Kenya. She purchases dagger fish on the beach in Mbita and transports them inland to sell. Hellen has been living with HIV for the...
View ArticleStory of Hope: Baby Simon
Tina Louise Dassé has been working as a community counselor since 2009 for Femmes Active, a local organization that works with the Elizabeth Glaser Pediatric AIDS Foundation (EGPAF) at General...
View ArticleEGPAF in Mozambique Implements Communication Campaign to End AIDS
The Elizabeth Glaser Pediatric AIDS Foundation (EGPAF) in Mozambique is implementing the Accelerating Children Treatment (ACT) initiative in priority districts in the country’s Gaza province....
View ArticleEGPAF Celebrates Milestones in Kenya, Launches New 5-Year Project
On October 28, 2016, the Elizabeth Glaser Pediatric AIDS Foundation (EGPAF) celebrated milestones of its project, Pamoja. Pamoja is the Swahili word for “together”. Funded by the US President's...
View Article“I Was Not Scared to Receive the Results”
Fourteen years ago, at the height of the HIV crisis in Zimbabwe, Linda Ngerenge gave birth to twins. One year later, Linda’s husband and one of her twins passed away because of AIDS-related illnesses....
View ArticleEGPAF’s Ariel Clubs Keep Youth Alive
In 1993, when Javis Ndugutse was three years old, he was diagnosed with HIV. At the time, Uganda did not have access to lifesaving antiretroviral (ARVs) drugs. Fortunately, a combination of good...
View ArticleDisclosure Means Life
Gertrude Mwiinga, 40, says that she used to be ashamed about living with HIV and was afraid to tell her son, Sholdon, that he, too, had been infected with the virus. However, through the support of...
View ArticleAntenatal Care Keeps Ugandan Women and Their Babies Alive
At Kikyenkye Health Centre III near Ibanda, Uganda, I met 26-year-old Janipher Kyarimpa. We sat inside the maternity room, the walls lined with multiple posters about the benefits of antenatal care on...
View ArticleBetter Care for Tiny Infants
Elise Ngabouloup, the head nurse of the neonatal unit at the Chantal Biya Foundation Mother and Child Center in Youndé, Cameroon, has a close relationship with her patients. Many of the infants arrive...
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