Showing posts with label NYC. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NYC. Show all posts

Thursday, August 4, 2011

Size Matters?

 via Sandelson's posterous

A document that came from a large National Institutes of Health study that began in 2006, titled: “The Association Between Penis Size and Sexual Health Among Men Who Have Sex with Men” has been receiving a great deal of media attention.

This attention originated from Fox News and the Traditional Values Coalition, both seemingly pushing a political agenda. The attention is not simply because of the study’s conclusions, but because of the cost of original grant that came from the federal government and its link this study that examined penis size and sexual health .

The press discussing this article focused on some of the key findings that are easily sensationalized , namely; “Those gay men who felt they had small or inadequate penis sizes were more likely to become “bottoms,” or anal receptive, while gay men with larger penises were more likely to identify themselves as “tops,” or anal insertive. Another finding is also mentioned in most of the articles, a finding stating that men with smaller penises were more likely to be psychologically troubled than those with larger genitalia.

After reading the full publication, I can report that there was more to the study that just sexual positioning. It sought to explore four questions: First, to what extent is perceived penis size associated with penis size satisfaction? Second, understanding that condoms are often limited to a narrow range of available sizes, to what extent is perceived penis size associated with condom use, HIV, and STIs? Third, to what extent is perceived penis size associated with men’s sexual positioning (anal insertive vs. receptive)? Finally, to what extent is perceived penis size associated with psychosocial outcomes (e.g., adjustment in the GLBT community)?

Read more. 

Friday, July 8, 2011

A Gay Marriage Etiquette Guide

via Gawker, By Brian Moylan

I have everything I need. Now it's time to get hitched!

For those who don't want to go through all the fuss, there's going to be a free pop-up chapel in Central Park on July 30th that will be giving out the quickie weddings that heterosexual couples who visit Vegas have been rubbing in our faces for decades. But for the rest of you who want to figure out how to have your own elaborate affair, it's going to take more than just planning, but problem solving as well.

If you're a heterosexual man or woman, what you're supposed to do and when has been determined by centuries of social norms. While many gay people will want to maintain many of the traditions they're used to seeing at straight weddings, it's often hard to translate things that are designed for opposite-sex couples to two people of the same sex. Here are some suggestions on what to keep and what to ditch.

The Proposal

The man is supposed to get down on one knee and offer the woman a ring, right? At least that's the way it happens on The Bachelor. What to do if you're on an episode of The Confirmed Bachelor? I think it's fine for either partner to ask.

You can't say that the butch or the top should do the proposing, because we know it's the femme or the bottom who wears the pants in the relationship—most of the time anyway. So whoever gets to it first gets to do the proposing. Expect to see "Sheila, Will You Marry Me? Love Debbie" on the Jumbotron at every Giants home game next season.

Read more.

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

NYC Forum: WHAT IS THE MESSAGE?! A community discussion on HIV prevention campaigns targeting gay and bisexual men

[Remember that awful campaign the NYC department of health launched a while back?]

WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 2011
6:30 pm to 8:00 pm
GMHC - The Tisch Building
119 West 24th Street – 12th floor
(between 6th and 7th Avenues NYC)


Guest panelists include:

Oriol R. Gutierrez Jr., Deputy Editor, POZ; Editor-in-Chief, Tu Salud

Jacoby Johnson, Managing Director - Black Men’s Initiative, Harlem United

Les Pappas, President & Creative Director, Better World Advertising

Tokes Osubu, Executive Director, Gay Men of African Descent (GMAD)

Daniel Siconolfi, MPH, Project Director - Center for Health, Identity, Behavior, & Prevention Studies (CHIBPS)

Monica Sweeney, MD, MPH, Assistant Commissioner – HIV/AIDS Prevention and Control, NYC Department of Health and Mental Hygiene


Guest moderator: Sean Cahill, PhD, Managing Director - Public Policy, Research & Community Health, GMHC


Topics to be discussed include:

  • What are effective HIV prevention messages that reach gay and bisexual men?
  • Do scare tactics work?
  • How should AIDS service organizations and government agencies involve community in the development of campaigns

The discussion is free and open to the general public. Please bring your ideas for future HIV prevention campaigns.

For more information, please call (212) 367-1016 or write to krishnas@gmhc.org.

Wednesday, January 5, 2011

'It's Never Just HIV' Ad Campaign Oversimplifies the Issue - Sean Strub on HuffPo

via Huffington Post, by Sean Strub

If the NYC Department of Health pursued a campaign to combat transmission of HPV, does anyone think they would, for a moment, consider using a close-up image of a horribly diseased vagina? 
Excerpt 1:



I think this advertising campaign is terrible, mostly because it may contribute to further spread of the virus. The only good it has accomplished is that it has provided a brief moment when a few more people are thinking about and paying attention to HIV-prevention issues. That is an opportunity that I hope we will not waste.

Supporters of these ads claim HIV prevention has been a failure, and they are angry that the epidemic has disappeared from the media and fallen off the list of priorities for LGBT organizations and others who once were leaders in the fight against AIDS.

I share that anger. It is profoundly frustrating, disempowering and, quite frankly, depressing to see so many one-time activists, caring friends and neighbors, concerned journalists, political and public policy leaders disappear like a puff of smoke once combination therapy brought a relative cure to those with the privilege of healthcare access.

Excerpt 2:

In 1983, very early in the epidemic, Joseph Sonnabend, MD, famously and courageously said, "the rectum is a sexual organ and it deserves the respect a penis gets and a vagina gets." Eric Rofes, Walt Odets and other pioneering thinkers about gay male health and sexuality have subsequently explored similar themes.

I couldn't help but think of this when I saw the close-up image of a man's anus, covered in cancerous lesions, in the NYC DOH ad. Anal cancers are preceded by genital warts, which are caused by strains of HPV, the Human Papiloma Virus. Last year, 4,000 women in the U.S. died of cervical cancer; in virtually every case the cancer was caused by HPV.

If the NYC Department of Health pursued a campaign to combat transmission of HPV, does anyone think they would, for a moment, consider using a close-up image of a horribly diseased vagina?

The bodies and sexuality of gay and bisexual men are seen as dangerous and our sexuality as threatening. We are so little respected that it is acceptable to show an exceptionally intimate part of a gay man's body, one visibly riddled with cancerous lesions, and put it on television as a tool to frighten us.
Read the rest.

Sunday, December 12, 2010

The Role of Fear in HIV Prevention


We've been rather animated on this topic of late, owing to the repugnant new "It's Never Just HIV" campaign from the wizards at the NYC Dept of Public Health.

Guess what, fear doesn't work. Check out this short, well-sourced brief on the role of fear in HIV prevention strategies and learn why.

And if you're too lazy, here are the 5 key points:

• Fear arousing imagery can be good at attracting attention and is often memorable.

• Fear-based campaigns are more persuasive for individuals who are already engaging in the desired, health-protective, behaviour.

• Arousing fear in individuals can have many unintended consequences, such as denial or othering.

• Most homosexually active men are already fearful of HIV.

• Arousing fear is not an effective means of facilitating sexual behaviour change.


*** Also of interest, from the American Journal of Public Health (1988) Effective and ineffective use of fear in health promotion campaigns.

 

Thursday, December 9, 2010

Totally F'd Ad on "Living" with HIV from the NYC Dept of Health - you gotta see this garbage

This ad is, hmmmmm, let's see, absolutely hateful and totally stigmatizing to all of us living with HIV. For a start. Thanks NYC Dept of Health for making us out to be demented lepers. Thanks for saying that even if we take our meds, our lives will be hell, with brittle bones and anal cancer. And thanks for the super scary voice-over to make sure we're all appropriately terrorized.Who consulted on this? Focus on the Family? Concerned Women of America? David Bahati, our friendly Ugandan legislator who wants gays imprisoned or dead? Satan?How many guys who don't know their status - and should know their status - will be convinced by this horror show to get tested? Would you want to know your status if this told the truth about what lay in store for you? Negative guys - will the lovely glimpse of anal cancer make you wear a condom every single time, maybe scare you into a full latex body suit?  Will this ad make you run for the hills when the guy you're cruising tells you he's POZ (aka DERANGED DISFIGURED?




POZ guys - how do you like this? 
Neg guys? 
Status unknown guys?  
TELL US.

Friday, October 1, 2010

I Love My Boo Campaign Launches October 4 NYC



We LOVE the gawjuss "I Love My Boo" campaign. The images of loving/caring gay boy-next-door/on the block couples - sans the ubiquitous nipple pony, gleaming 8-pack, pornstrosity look - is so refreshing and so needed. Eye candy is nice, love it, okay, but is that all there is? Really? Is our only value as gay men in how little body fat we have and how bubbly our booties are?

The campaign images send a powerful message to those who would demean us and worse - and there are plenty, hello. Besides the haters, we need to see ourselves represented in ways that demonstrate our love and commitment to one another - which can happen in the context of a couple as well as single men and their friends and families. We all got a boo, whether we're banging each other or not.

Frankly, we are sick and tired tired tired, and OVER the worn out and false meme that "all gay men are dogs" and we're all selfish, irresponsible, and incapable of loving anyone or anything outside the image we see in the mirror.

Blech.

Bravo to GMHC for this great work.

The campaign kicks off Monday, October 4th on the New York City MTA subway system with ads in 1,000 trains and on 150 platforms. There is a rally that day at Christopher Street Park (7th Ave & Christopher St) - so show up if you are in NYC, eh?



Check out their FB page. And make an "I Love My Boo" image your profile pic in support of the campaign. You should also post a pic of you and your boo. Do it.

Lovin the boo!

Tuesday, December 1, 2009

Remember Respond Resolve

This film was produced by GMHC for a ceremony at New York's Catherdral of St. John the Divine in 1991 to commemorate the 10 year anniversary of the AIDS health crisis. It was shown on a large screen during a service that included a speech by GMHC founder Larry Kramer and a musical performance by Leontyne Price.



That we love each other is all that matters.

Producer / Editor: Victor Mignatti
GMHC Producer: Elizabeth Wetherell Eynon
Music: Peitor Angell
Archival Footage from the GMHC archive: Jean Carlomusto, producer 

http://victormignatti.com

Saturday, August 8, 2009

Rainbow ssssssprinkles


"If I weren't gay, I wouldn't call it the Big Gay Ice Cream Truck. And if I weren't happy, I wouldn't have the Big Gay Ice Cream Truck. It would just be the big crabby ice cream truck," Quint says.

Via NPR

Friday, June 26, 2009

Stonewall at 40: The Voice Articles That Sparked a Final Night of Rioting


via The Village Voice

Earlier this month, the New York Times published for the first time several photographs that were taken on July 2, 1969, the final night of the Stonewall uprising. The Times noted that few photographs exist of the six-day disturbance, so it was significant to find images all these years later that captured some of the action on the uprising's final night. The initial police raid on the Stonewall that started the riots happened five days earlier, on June 28. But on Wednesday, July 2, there was a new wave of anger and rioting. The cause: the Village Voice. That day, two articles appeared on the Voice's front page describing the struggle happening both inside and outside the Stonewall Inn. Voice reporter Howard Smith's piece described how he found himself trapped inside the Stonewall with police officers as they came under violent attack by the crowd -- at one point, Smith wishes he had a gun to defend himself, just like the cops. Writer Lucian Truscott IV reported on the agitated street scene outside the building. "Limp wrists were forgotten," Truscott writes, but his use of words like "faggot" and "faggotry" enraged gay activists. Anger at the pieces ran so high, rioters marched on the Voice office itself. Four decades on, here's another opportunity to see what caused all the fuss.

Read the rest.

Monday, June 15, 2009

"Sex Positive" - How the most promiscuous men pioneered safer sex

Safe sex came from activists, porn stars, sex workers and their community driven efforts.



If you've been curious about how safe sex became the norm among gay men, then Sex Positive is your ticket to having all your questions answered. The film opened in New York Friday.

Sex Positive focuses on early safe sex pioneer Richard Berkowitz whose life of hustling on the mean streets of New York came to a crushing end when AIDS started its infectious assault in the 1980s. He was one of the first gay men to demand answers about the disease from the government and advocate condom use among gay men. His message, however, was met with resistance from men who were not ready to leave the party.

Director Daryl Wein culls together rare footage of Berkowitz along with new interviews to piece together his contributions to the invention of safe sex. Berkowitz's anger and frustration at the gay men who rejected his message is also on display.

Berkowitz molded his safe sex message off Dr. Joseph Sonnabend's pioneering AIDS research, which suggested as early as 1983 that anal sex among gay men was fueling the pandemic.

“It was Richard Berkowitz's book, Stayin' Alive: The Invention of Safe Sex, that forced me to face my own ignorance,” said filmmaker Wein in a press release. “Like most of my friends, I had always thought of safe sex as a government invented advocacy program, but I was enlightened to find out it was not the government at all but the tireless efforts of so many fervent activist who paved the way for change.”

“Both in the government and the gay community, the widespread silence during the early years of AIDS is absolutely shocking. What Richard taught me, among many other things, was that the most promiscuous gay men were the pioneers of the safe sex movement”

Sex Positive opened in New York City's Quad Cinema Friday, June 12 after winning numerous prizes on the GLBT film festival circuit.

Tuesday, May 26, 2009

Gay and AIDS community condemn Frieden CDC appointment


“The bad news is that [Frieden’s] propensity to ignore the concerns of affected communities may hinder his ultimate success in achieving the goals of aligning public health with the best that science has to offer.”

via Housing Works, by David Thorpe

This week’s appointment of New York City Health Commissioner Thomas Frieden to head the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) provoked dismay among AIDS advocates and the gay press in New York City and beyond (with some exceptions).

As Health Commissioner, Frieden tried to do away with informed consent for HIV tests, made an Orwellian power grab for the medical information of people living with HIV, and infamously mishandled the so-called AIDS “superbug” case in 2005. As head of the CDC, Frieden may try to bully states into adopting routine testing without informed consent and will almost certainly take a step away from the real concerns of real people living with HIV/AIDS.

Read the rest.

Of interest in Gay City News:
Policy Regarding Bathhouses and Other Commercial Sex Venues in New York City

Saturday, May 2, 2009

Young and, Now, HIV-Positive as Well



via Gay City News, by Christopher Murray

A hundred and thirty years ago, when I was 21, I moved to New York to seek my fortune, and along the way quite quickly contracted HIV disease. It was in 1989, still a plenty scary time, but I managed to survive by dint of good luck, a hefty dose of healthy denial, and some truly caring friends. Back then, when a young queer came up positive, one either joined a peer-led support group at Body Positive and talked about your feelings - as I did - or went to the LGBT Community Center to be simply angry and cruise hot guys in leather jackets at ACT UP meetings.

Read the rest.

Thursday, February 26, 2009

NYC - Forum on Anal Cancer - TONIGHT


Gay Men’s Health Crisis and Harlem United to Host Community Forum - TONIGHT

Anal cancer is on the increase among gay and bisexual men, and people living with HIV. Gay men are 20 times more likely than the general population to contract anal cancer. HIV-positive gay men are 40 times more likely than the general population to contract anal cancer.

The same high-risk strains of HPV (human papillomavirus) that cause most cervical cancers in women are also responsible for causing anal cancer. The virus, spread through receptive anal intercourse, is estimated to be present in 65% of gay men without HIV and 95% of those who are HIV positive. A simple and inexpensive anal Pap test detects the virus. Unfortunately, few physicians are performing anal screening exams and offering anal pap smears to gay men, resulting in anal cancer rates as high as those of cervical cancer before the use of routine Pap smears in women.

On Thursday, February 26, GMHC and Harlem United, two local AIDS services organizations, will host a community forum on anal cancer and gay/bisexual men. Liz Margolies, LCSW, Executive Director from the National LGBT Cancer Network, and Dan Bowers, MD, now in private practice, and former senior partner of Pacific Oaks Medical Group, will present on the latest information regarding prevention and treatment.

Event Information

Date: Thursday, February 26

Time: 6:00 pm to 7:30 pm

Place: GMHC
The Tisch Building
119 West 24th Street – 9th floor
New York City

Subways: F/V to 23rd Street/6th Avenue; 1/9 to 23rd Street/7th Avenue

Friday, July 18, 2008

NYC Bathhouses: Safe Sex Allowed


"Being able to do this type of work in venues where people are
actually congregating is invaluable."

New York City's Prevention Planning Group endorsed changes to a state code that regulates sex clubs and bathhouses that would allow sex with condoms in those businesses and said that such businesses are "important sites for HIV/STD/harm reduction interventions."

With 29 members in favor, none opposed, and two abstaining, the 50-member group, which advises the city on HIV prevention initiatives, backed a proposal from the Commercial Sex Venues Coalition that wants to change the 1985 code from its current ban in businesses on oral, anal and vaginal sex, with or without a condom, to prohibitions that are "directed specifically towards unprotected sexual activity," a coalition briefing paper said.

Read the rest in Gay City News.

Friday, February 15, 2008

NYC Dept of Health - ??? on Bathhouse Policy

More on the NYC bathhouse - do we hold 'em, do we fold 'em story... from Gay City News
After meeting with senior city health department officials, gay and AIDS groups are saying that the agency appears to be open to regulating sex clubs and bathhouses and has not decided to shut those businesses down.

"They were saying that they were entertaining everything, that they were looking for a direction," said Terry Evans, public health outreach coordinator at the Positive Health Project, an AIDS group. "They were very open to our suggestions and to having additional meetings."

Evans and representatives from five AIDS, gay, and research organizations met for nearly two hours with health department officials, including Dr. Isaac B. Weisfuse, deputy commissioner for disease control, and Dr. Thomas Farley, a special advisor to Dr. Thomas R. Frieden, the city's health commissioner, on February 12.

Read the rest.

Thursday, February 14, 2008

Get Some NYC


New York City health officials on Wednesday unveiled the city's new official condom as part of the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene's efforts to curb the spread of HIV and other sexually transmitted infections, as well as to prevent unintended pregnancies, the AP/Google.com reports (Kugler, AP/Google.com, 2/13).

The health department in January 2007 approved a $1.57 million contract to deliver Ansell Healthcare's Lifestyle condoms and packets of lubricant to organizations and venues in the city. The health department will pay Ansell four cents per condom, putting the cost of the program at about $720,000 annually, according to health officials. Officials plan to track the progress of the program through an annual community health survey, which polls 10,000 city residents by telephone. Organizations or venues can request an unlimited supply of condoms at no cost through an online ordering system set up by the health department.

City health officials in February 2007 unveiled the first official condom, which featured a subway theme with different colors for various train lines (Kaiser Daily HIV/AIDS Report, 5/9/07). The new condoms -- which were redesigned by Yves Behar of the San Francisco-based agency fuseproject -- features the letters "NYC" in black and the word "CONDOM" directly below it in bright colors (AP/Google.com, 2/13). The condom packages also feature the new slogan "Get some," the New York Post reports (Edozien, New York Post, 2/14). According to the AP/Google.com, teams from the health department will begin distributing the condoms around the city Thursday. An ad campaign featuring the new slogan is also scheduled to launch soon on television, radio, subways and buses.

"We want to give away as many condoms as people will use because we're trying to make New York City an even safer place to have sex, and this is a powerful way to do it," Monica Sweeney, assistant commissioner for HIV prevention and control at the health department, said (AP/Google.com, 2/13). She added, "We gave out more than 36 million of [the condoms] last year. I hope the fresh look will help even more New Yorkers protect themselves from infection and unintended pregnancy in 2008" (New York Post, 2/14).

Saturday, January 19, 2008

UCSF Bathhouse Experts Clock NYC Commish in Open Letter


Remember, you read it on LifeLube!


Read the full text of this open letter below, from two researchers at the University of California San Francisco's Center for AIDS Prevention Studies to NYC Health Commissioner Frieden (r) regarding his hardline, and misguided, misinformed, approach to bathhouses.



January 16, 2008

Thomas Frieden, MD MPH
Commissioner
Department of Health and Mental Hygiene
New York City

RE: Policy Regarding Bathhouses and Other Commercial Sex Venues in New York City

Dear Commissioner Frieden:

In the last week we received several emails concerning a story in Gay City News related to a report addressing public health policy in bathhouses and other venues. As two researchers published in this area and cited in the report, we have a responsibility to comment. Because the overall thrust of literature does not support the conclusions drawn in the report, we write this open letter to correct any misperceptions the public may have acquired from reading the report and to ensure that your department has the opportunity to formulate policy decisions based on the available data.

The report’s summary of the literature was often incomplete. For example, it is technically correct to say, “Bathhouses attract high-risk clients” [1]. But because most people are unfamiliar with these environments, it easily creates a misperception equivalent to saying, “bars attract alcoholics.” The available data consistently show that the typical bathhouse client does not have unprotected anal sex at the bathhouse [1-7]. Most importantly, men at high-risk go to many venues for sex [1] and their high-risk behavior is most likely to occur at home [7]. Further, it is a small minority of men who engage in high-risk sex at the bathhouse; while the majority of men engage in behaviors that promote a social norm of safer sex.

The report cited published statistics but did not present the overall findings from cited studies. For example, the report cited two statistics from our bathhouse exit survey [7]. By saying that 11% of the men report unprotected anal sex and that the average number of partners at the bathhouse was 3.2, the report implied that there was a much greater level of risk-taking among bathhouse clients during a visit than the study data revealed. The report did not mention, as we discussed in the paper, that the 11% may overestimate the true rate of risk for HIVtransmission. Further, we stated in the sentence that presented the mean of 3.2 (as well as the median, 3.0, mode, 1.0, and range, 1-30), the figure represented only men who had oral or anal sexual partners. By excluding men who had zero partners (10%) and not mentioning that the majority (56%) of men did not engage in anal sex at all, the report significantly misrepresented the number of partners men had at the bathhouse and the overall risk that occurs there.

The report mentioned that “public health officials have been concerned that gay bathhouses and other commercial sex venues may facilitate spread of the infection.” Although a link can be established between men who frequent bathhouses and infection with sexually transmitted diseases, it is only a link, not a cause, because men who are likely to have an STD are likely to have to any number of places where men meet for sex [1]. Our exit survey data demonstrate how this might work: many of the men who reported unprotected anal sex during the previous 3 months did not engage in the behavior during the visit and men who engaged in unprotected anal sex did so wherever they had sex [7]. This finding was corroborated in a mathematical modeling analysis using population-based data from the Urban Men's Health Study that included four U.S. cities (New York, Chicago, Los Angeles and San Francisco), which showed that anal intercourse in bathhouses was more likely to involve a condom than the same behavior in other settings [8]. These results suggest that bathhouses, particularly those that promote consistent condom use, actually facilitate risk reduction. Regardless of local health policy, all bathhouses in the U.S. provide condoms [9, 10], thereby reinforcing condom use as a social norm.

Finally, the options for remedy presented in the report included only policies that generate antagonistic relations between health departments and owners with threats to close businesses that fail to control their clients' sexual behavior. The report did not include policies based on collaborative approaches in evidence across the country. Although the report stated that policy studies could not be found, such studies are available [11-18]. Using data from the Urban Men's Health Study, an analysis of local policy differences across New York, Chicago, Los Angeles and San Francisco suggested that policies made no difference in overall risk behavior, though they may have moved risk behavior elsewhere [15]. Moreover, published studies show that bathhouse may increase condom use [8] and that a collaborative relationship between a health department and a bathhouse resulted in an on-site HIV testing program that reduced risk behavior among testers [16-18].Scientific studies consistently conclude that bathhouses can be used to reach the small segment of the population responsible for transmission or at risk for becoming infected [1-8], and that over-regulating or closing bathhouse moves the behavior to other sex venues [15, 19]. But compared to other sex venues like parks and private sex parties (easily created over the internet in minutes), bathhouses and sex clubs are the most stable and secure locations where men go to meet for sex. A public health department, working with bathhouse management, can target at-risk men with interventions to help prevent the spread of infection, not just at the bathhouse, but whenever and wherever men have sex. Based on our data on policies in 12 health jurisdictions across the country,we draw two conclusions: 1) regulations limit prevention opportunities as they tend to generate antagonistic relations among stakeholder (i.e., health officials, club managers, prevention providers,and clients); and 2) policies that facilitate collaborative relations among stakeholder expand prevention opportunities, some of which have been demonstrated to reach at-risk men with prevention materials and interventions [9, 10, 16-18].

We wish you well in your efforts to tackle this complex situation and hope our response to the report will contribute to your department's policy review.

Sincerely,

William J. Woods, PhD
Associate Professor
Department of Medicine

Diane Binson, PhD
Associate Professor
Department of Medicine

Read more bathhouse posts on LifeLube.

For the endnotes from the above letter, send us an email.
Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...

select key words

2007 National HIV Prevention Conference 2009 National LGBTI Health Summit 2011 LGBTI Health Summit 2012 Gay Men's Health Summit 2012 International AIDS Conference ACT Up AIDS AIDS Foundation of Chicago Africa BUTT Bisexual Bisexual Health Summit Brian Mustanski Center on Halsted Charles Stephens Chicago Chicago Black Gay Men's Caucus Chicago Task Force on LGBT Substance Use and Abuse Chris Bartlett Coaching with Jake Congress David Halperin David Munar Dr. James Holsinger Dr. Jesus Ramirez-Valles Dr. Rafael Diaz Dr. Ron Stall ENDA Ed Negron Eric Rofes FTM Feast of Fun Feel the love... Friday is for Faeries Gay Men's Health Summit 2010 HCV HIV HIV care HIV drugs HIV negative HIV positive HIV prevention HIV stigma HIV strategic plan HIV testing HIV/AIDS HPV Howard Brown Health Center IML IRMA Illinois International AIDS Conference Jim Pickett LGBT LGBT adoption LGBT culture LGBT health LGBT rights LGBT seniors LGBT youth LGBTI community LGBTI culture LGBTI health LGBTI rights LGBTI spirituality LGV Leon Liberman LifeLube LifeLube forum LifeLube poll LifeLube subscription Lorenzo Herrera y Lozano Lymphogranuloma Venereum MRSA MSM Monday Morning Perk-Up National AIDS Strategy National Gay Men's Health Summit One Fey's Tale Peter Pointers Pistol Pete PnP PrEP President Barack Obama Presidential Campaign Project CRYSP Radical Faerie STD Senator Barack Obama Sister Glo Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence Susan Kingston Swiss declaration Ted Kerr Test Positive Aware Network The "Work-In" The 2009 Gay Men's Health Agenda Tony Valenzuela Trans Gynecology Access Program Trans and Intersex Association Trevor Hoppe Who's That Queer Woof Wednesday You Tube abstinence only activism advocacy african-american aging issues anal cancer anal carcinoma anal health anal sex andrew's anus athlete ball scene bareback porn barebacking bathhouses bears big bold and beautiful bisexuality black gay men black msm blood ban blood donor body image bottom chubby chaser circumcision civil rights civil union communication community organizing condoms crystal meth dating dating and mating with alan irgang depression disclosure discrimination domestic violence don't ask don't tell douche downlow drag queen emotional health exercise female condom fitness gay culture gay identity gay latino gay male sex gay marriage gay men gay men of color gay men's health gay pride gay rights gay rugby gay sex gay youth gender harm reduction hate crime health care health care reform health insurance hepatitis C hiv vaccine homophobia homosexuality hottie hotties how are you healthy? human rights humor hunk immigration international mr. leather internet intimacy leather community leathersex lifelube survey love lube lubricant masturbation mental health microbicides middle music negotiated safety nutrition oral sex physical health pleasure podcast policy politics poppers porn post-exposure prophylaxis prevention prostate prostate cancer public health public sex venues queer identity racism recovery rectal microbicides relationships religion research safe sex semen sero-adaptation sero-sorting seroguessing sex sexual abuse sexual addiction sexual health sexual orientation smoking social marketing spirituality stigma stonewall riots substance abuse treatment substance use suicide super-bug superinfection syphilis testicle self-examination testicular cancer testing top trans group blog transgender transgender day of remembrance transgendered transmen transphobia transsexual universal health care unsafe sex vaccines video violence viral load writers yoga youtube