Showing posts with label transgendered. Show all posts
Showing posts with label transgendered. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 11, 2011

Trans Actions Transgender Conference May 19th - CHICAGO

Increasing workplace opportunities for the transgendered population is an important way to stop discrimination. You are invited to the Service Providers Council’s Transgender Conference to be held Thursday, May 19, 2011, from 9:00 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. at the University Center, 525 S. State Street in Chicago. The conference is entitled “Trans Actions;” its theme is “Increasing Access to Care.” The 2011 conference is organized by the AIDS Foundation of Chicago Service Providers’ Council (SPC) Prevention & Care Committees and the ad-hoc host committee.

It will bring together local, state and national leaders to discuss “best practice,” cultural competency, employment issues, research-based programs and HIV/STI prevention for and with transgendered populations.

Featured Speakers are:

* Joanne Herman author of “Transgender Explained For Those Who Are Not”
* Jamison Green, PhD, an international leader in transgender, health, policy, law and education from the University of California, San Francisco
* Amanda Simpson a political and transgender trailblazer

Who should attend? The conference will appeal to anyone interested in providing services to and increasing workplace opportunities for the transgendered population. It will be of particular value to professional educators; service providers in the areas of mental health, substance abuse prevention, intervention, treatment, prevention education, treatment and adherence education (i.e., health care providers, prevention and community health workers, nurses, health educators, program directors, social workers, case managers) as well as resource managers, labor and diversity specialists.

Register today!

Wednesday, April 13, 2011

50 Cent's New Pocketbook Values: Anti-Gay Won't Pay, Even for Hip Hop

by Kenyon Farrow
(Originally posted on www.kenyonfarrow.com)

The arrest last week of Hot 97 DJ and hip-hop legend Mister Cee for allegedly having commercial sex with a 20-year-old transgender woman has sparked another hip-hop “war,” this time between Cee’s Hot 97 colleague Funkmaster Flex and rival DJ Charlamagne tha God. Since Cee’s arrest, Flex and Charlamange, a former Wendy Williams sidekick, have been going at one another over the role of queer people within hip-hop, spurring a debate that’s sprawled from Twitter to the blogosphere and that’s been filled with a good bit of the expected homophobia and transphobia.

But a surprising voice has stepped into the forefront to defend Mister Cee: 50 Cent, one hip-hop’s favorite homophobes (and a friend to Mister Cee). Fifty could care less about queer folks, of course. But he does care about the Benjamins, and to him hip-hop’s pro-gay era needs to begin for one simple reason: Homophobia isn’t good for business anymore.

Mister Cee’s case has stirred such soul searching because he’s not some fringe persona or an artist, who come a dime a dozen; he’s a major figure important not only to fans of the music, but to the actual business of producing and promoting the artists and the industry. Hot 97 is arguably the most influential radio station in hip-hop—getting a record played there, or having an interview with one of its many DJs can make or break careers. Cee himself has been a DJ for hip-hop legend Big Daddy Kane, and is credited with discovering another hip-hop icon, the Notorious B.I.G. And 50 Cent told another Hot 97 personality, Miss Info, that he never releases a record without Mister Cee hearing it first, and giving him feedback. His sexuality notwithstanding, hip-hop needs Mister Cee.

So on Wednesday, Miss Info posted a short interview on her blog with 50 Cent in which he talked about why he intends to continue supporting (and consulting) the renowned DJ. 50 Cent explained to Miss Info that the “LGBT” market (and people who see themselves as our allies) may make or break you as an artist more than how masculine and straight you appear to be:

50 Cent: They can say what they want about it, but…how about if you say I don’t care? Who is to judge you when there’s an audience that’s probably one of the strongest audiences—if you look at Lady Gaga’s career—that says that that’s fine?

Miss Info: And you will look crazy if you say that it’s not fine.

50 Cent: No, if you say that it’s not fine you’re gonna get attacked. You’re gonna write apology notices.

He’d certainly know. 50-Cent, who once bragged about being damn near un-killable, has shuffled back from multiple hateful statements and tweets he’s made about queer people, after being challenged by LGBT activists and bloggers.

Black queer activists have for years organized against homophobic lyrics in hip-hop and in Jamaican dancehall music, causing artists to lose concert dates and endorsements. (Of course, Eminem hasn’t paid the same price as black artists; he dared to share a stage with Elton John a decade ago as “proof” he loves the gays and all was forgiven.) Even Funkmaster Flex and Charlamagne tha God, while trading on-air jibes, have been careful to insist that they don’t discriminate against anyone’s sexual preferences (set aside the fact that a beef over Cee’s sexuality is in and of itself homo- and transphobic). No one can afford to have already dwindling corporate sponsors pulled. These days, pissing off any audience that seems to be buying music, like them or not, does not make good business sense.

According to Billboard.com, while hip-hop album sales increased in 2010 by 3 percent from the previous year (mostly due to Eminem’s highly anticipated comeback, which was the highest selling album of any genre in 2010), sales of rap records have been in substantial decline for five years. To be sure, all genres of music have experienced a drop in sales, but hip-hop’s decline over the last decade is far more substantial.

Meanwhile, hip-hop artists have learned that there is money to be made in a gay market—and not just by Lady Gaga. Younger hip-hop artists are not using homophobia to sell records in the way their elders often have. Nicki Minaj has written songs about having having sex with other femmes and regularly autographs the breast of female fans. She’s also been outspoken in support of queer youth. And many gay clubs—and not just the black or Latino ones—are incorporating more R&B and hip-hop into their set lists.

Last year, hip hop artist Wale initially signed up to perform at D.C. Black Pride, then backed out. But after taking bad press for backing out, he reversed himself again and performed. According to HipHopDX.com, Wale told the crowd during the performance, ”One thing I stand for is hip hop music. And hip hop music knows no race, no color, no age, no gender, no sexual orientation—none of that. So, the most important thing about it is the music, and if it makes the people feel happy, that’s what we hear.”

What’s all this mean? Maybe in an industry that’s always been dominated by young artists, the older set that rode in on a wave of thuggery and “keepin’ it real” gangsterism is becoming irrelevant. Maybe younger artists embracing skinny jeans, cardigans and skateboards will make sagging jeans and macho posing the bell bottoms of their era—the punchline of a joke. And maybe the trumped up, often misogynist masculinity that went with the old gangsta mentality will become equally absurd.

Politically, young fans of hip-hop seem to be shifting on LGBT issues. Studies show youth are much more likely to support LGBT civil rights causes, regardless of their political affiliation. If young people are the largest buying audience for hip hop, might they be growing turned off by the incessant queer bashing?

Black Entertainment Television has also, for the first time, begun to tackle the issue of homophobia. Its flagship show, “106th & Park,” this year featured Marsha Ambrosius’ video “Far Away,” about homophobic violence, and had Ambrosius on to talk about her real life experience of having a gay friend commit suicide. And this year, BET even honored me as a Modern Black History Hero for my activism as a black gay man. I’m not bragging. Rather, it marks a major shift in the network’s willingness to feature black LGBT people in prominent places in its programming. Maybe the execs at the channel are beginning to get the word that selling homophobia may cost you more than it earns in the long run.

So I hate to admit it, but 50 Cent is on to something. Mister Cee has thus far kept silent about both the arrest and his sexuality. But he might just want to shout it out, as Wendy Williams would say, because despite persistent homophobia and transphobia in the world at large, market forces may just keep the haters at bay. Say what you will about 50 Cent—who’s preparing for the release of “Things Fall Apart,” in which he plays the sympathetic role of a man fighting cancer—the reliable provocateur also clearly knows exactly when to change his persona in order to stay relevant. Mainstream hip-hop is not getting soft on gays, it’s mostly getting hard up for money, and as one commenter on Miss Info’s blog noted: You don’t bite the hand that feeds you.

Kenyon Farrow is a black gay writer, noted public speaker and activist based in Brooklyn and blogging atwww.kenyonfarrow.com.

Friday, February 4, 2011

The FTM Experience

Adrian's story of transition from female to male and how he educates medical providers on transgendered bodies.

Tuesday, February 1, 2011

New Study Shows that Transsexuals' Brains are Different

Differences in the brain's white matter may hold the key to identifying transsexual people before puberty. Doctors could use this information to make a case for delaying puberty to improve the success of a sex change later.

Antonio Guillamon's team ran MRI scans on the brains of 18 female-to-male transsexual people who'd had no hormone treatment and compared them with those of 24 males and 19 females.

They found significant differences between male and female brains in four regions of white matter – and the female-to-male transsexual people had white matter in these regions that resembled a male brain.

Read the rest.

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Transgender Homelessness and Safety Pilot Success

A pilot policy that allows transgender individuals to choose between staying in a men's or women's shelter has reduced trans-based violence in New York City.

Besides permitting transgender shelter-seekers to stay in shelters appropriate to their identity, the policy states that "staff will address individuals with names, titles and other terms appropriate to their gender identity" and "staff at Intake/Shelter assignments will receive training on diversity, transgender and intersex issues."

The policy defines transgender as "an umbrella term that includes anyone whose gender identity and/or gender expression does not match society's expectations of how an individual assigned a particular sex at birth should behave or appear." The broad definition includes people who are androgynous, drag queens or kings and cross-dressers.

The policy was implemented as a four-year pilot program in January 2006 at three men's and three women's shelters. The written policy has not been updated since the program's inception. But it now applies at all homeless shelters that receive city funding.

Read the rest.

Tuesday, December 14, 2010

Bill Introduced to Amend Fair Housing Law to Include Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity


Rep. Jerry Nadler of New York introduced a bill yesterday that would ban housing discrimination based on sexual orientation, gender identity, marital status or source of income. The bill would amend the Fair Housing Act to include these categories and would impact the sale and rental of housing, home financing and brokerage services.

"Transgender people urgently need protection from discrimination in housing. It is unconscionable that people are being forced out of their home and onto the streets because of prejudice," noted NCTE's Executive Director Mara Keisling.

A survey of transgender and gender non-conforming people conducted by NCTE and the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force last year found that 19% of the 6,450 respondents reported having been homeless at some point in their lives because of their gender identity. People of color reported even higher rates, with an alarming 41% of African Americans and 29% of Latina/os in the study having been homeless because of bias.

Read the rest at NCTE.

Thursday, December 9, 2010

Is 2010 the Year of the Transsexual?


New York Times on the posh-ness of transsexuality:

Not since the glam era of the 1970s has gender-bending so saturated the news media. The difference now is that mystery has been replaced with empowerment, even pride. Consider a few happenings that have blipped recently on our radar. The blog of a young mother whose 5-year-old son had dressed like Daphne on “Scooby-Doo” for Halloween went viral, initiating a nationwide discussion on the fluidity of gender. (The mother ended up on “Today.”) The performance artist Kalup Linzy became a downtown phenomenon in Manhattan for his gender-bending portrayals of soap-opera divas. Oprah Winfrey welcomed transsexual men to her program.

Read the rest.

Thursday, December 2, 2010

LifeLube's Pete Subkoviak Talking Homophobia on Feast of Fun

via Feast of Fun



Disease, suicide, abuse and discrimination, in many ways all stem from the same disorder- homophobia.

So how do we get to the root of this hate and create an environment where our health, wellness, and human rights are respected and nurtured?

Does it all start with just a little bit love and understanding?

Pete Subkoviak, health advocate, blogger for Lifelube, and policy coordinator at the AIDS Foundation of Chicago joins us to talk about fighting homophobia, in obvious and not so obvious ways. Next week in Chicago, Lifelube is holding a public discussion on fighting hate and bigotry, and they want to hear your ideas on what works.

Pete also shares with us his own experience in being a trans guy, and how he got the support from his family to transition at the young age of 18.

Plus we take a look at some trans guy myths and legends, like why so many guys choose the name Bastain or Sebastian and what part the film “The Never Ending Story” has in choosing that name.

Listen to the podcast.

Check out info on the It's Not Just "Faggot!" forum next Wednesday.

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Remembering the Self-Violence on the Transgender Day of Remembrance


by Pete Subkoviak, via Huffington Post 

As I enter my 30th year of life, something is happening to me that I never thought would take place: I'm getting older. The hair atop my head is thinning; the creases around my eyes are deepening, and the love handles simply won't go away, no matter how hard I hit the gym. It's a fact of life I never imagined I'd have to deal with because, simply put, I thought I'd be dead by now. Grim I know, but keep reading - it gets better.

November 20th is the International Transgender Day of Remembrance, which pays homage to transgender individuals around the globe who are murdered for being who they were born to be. Fourteen were murdered this year in the United States and Puerto Rico alone, including Sandy Woulard, who was murdered right here in Chicago. While I believe violence is an unbelievably important issue in the transgender community, I think it is important to broaden this commemoration to include victims of self-violence, as transgendered individuals are much more likely to die by their own hands than by another's. Suicide is a huge issue in the trans community, and a recent survey by the Gay and Lesbian Task Force and the National Center for Transgender Equality elucidates this more clearly, finding that 41 percent of transgender people have attempted suicide (compared to the 1.6 percent national average).

Read the rest at HuffPo

Thursday, October 21, 2010

Who's That Queer? [Lynn Conway]

Brought to you by Pistol Pete


Lynn Conway is an American computer scientist, electrical engineer, inventor, trans woman, and activist for the transgender community.

Conway is notable for several technical achievements, including the Mead & Conway revolution in VLSI design, which incubated an emerging electronic design automation industry. She worked at IBM in the 1960s and is credited with the invention of generalised dynamic instruction handling, a key advance used in out-of-order execution, used by most modern computer processors to improve performance.

Conway was recruited by IBM Research in Yorktown Heights, New York in 1964. She was soon selected to join the architecture team designing a multiple-issue out-of-order dynamic instruction scheduling while working there. The Computer History Museum has stated that "the ACS machines appears to have been the first superscalar design, a computer architectural paradigm widely exploited in modern high-performance microprocessors.

After learning of the pioneering research of Dr. Harry Benjamin in transgender treatment and realizing that a full gender transition was now possible, Conway sought his help and became his patient. After suffering from severe depression over her situation, Conway contacted Dr. Benjamin, who agreed to counsel her and prescribe hormones. Under Dr. Benjamin's care, she began preparing for transition.

Although she hoped to be allowed to transition on the job, IBM fired Conway in 1968 after she revealed to them that she was transsexual, and was planning on transitioning to a female gender role.

Read the rest at Wikipedia.

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

New Report Finds Rampant Health Care Discrimination Against Transgender Individuals


Talk about the need for cultural competency, a new study out today finds that transgender and gender non-conforming people face rampant discrimination in health care settings, are regularly denied needed care, and experience a range of health risks because they are transgender or gender non-conforming, according to a report of over 6,450 transgender and gender non-conforming people. The National Transgender Discrimination Survey: Report on Health and Health Care was released nationally today by the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force and the National Center for Transgender Equality.


Key findings include:

* Nearly 1 in 5, 19%, reported being refused care outright, because they were transgender or gender non-conforming;

* Survey participants reported very high levels of postponing medical care when sick or injured due to discrimination and disrespect (28%);

* Harassment: 28% of respondents were subjected to harassment in medical settings;

* Significant lack of provider knowledge: 50% of the sample reported having to teach their medical providers about transgender care;

* Despite barriers, the majority have accessed some form of transition-related medical care; but only a minority has had any surgery, despite the fact that a strong majority stated wanting to have it someday;
* Respondents reported over four times the national average of HIV infection, 2.64% in our sample compared to 0.6% in the general population, with rates for transgender women at 3.76%, and with those who are unemployed (4.67%) or who have engaged in sex work (15.32%) even higher;

* Over a quarter of the respondents misused drugs or alcohol specifically to cope with the discrimination they faced due to their gender identity or expression;

* A staggering 41% of respondents reported attempting suicide compared to 1.6% of the general population.


Read the entire report here.

Friday, October 8, 2010

New Survey Finds Bullying Rampant Among Gender Non-Conforming Individuals


More than half of transgender and gender non-conforming people who were bullied, harassed or assaulted in school because of their gender identity have attempted suicide, according to just-released findings from the National Transgender Discrimination Survey, conducted by the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force and National Center for Transgender Equality.


"From our experience working with transgender people, we had prepared ourselves for high rates of suicide attempts, but we didn't expect anything like this," says Mara Keisling, executive director of the National Center for Transgender Equality. "Our study participants reported attempting suicide at a rate more than 25 times the national average." Forty-one percent of all respondents reported that they had attempted suicide, compared with a national estimated rate of 1.6 percent.


Read the rest at NCTE.

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Transmen - body, sex, identity and more

What are Transmen's HIV Prevention Needs?
via Youths 2gether Network (Nigeria)


Excerpt:

Accurate information about the diversity of transmen’s bodies is not widely available. Transmen have different types of bodies, depending on their use of testosterone and gender confirmation surgeries (which may include chest reconstruction, hysterectomy, metoidioplasty, phalloplasty, 1 etc.; see www.ftmguide. org for further information) . Transmen use a broad range of terms and language to identify their sex/gender, describe their body parts, and disclose their trans status to others. For instance, some transmen are not comfortable with the terms ‘vagina’ and ‘vaginal sex’ and may prefer ‘front hole’ and ‘front sex’ or ‘front hole sex’, although this is not true for all transmen. This diversity creates unique needs and barriers for negotiating and adhering to safer sex practices that are not addressed by current HIV prevention programs.

Read more.

Great resource - check it:
Primed: The Back Pocket Guide for Transmen and the Men Who Dig Them


Tuesday, August 17, 2010

Giving Voice to the Once-Silent



Via New York Times...

“WE figured we’ll print 500 copies and they’ll take months to sell,” Rocco Kayiatos said the other day, referring to Original Plumbing, a quarterly he started a little over a year ago with a friend, Amos Mac.

“We just thought there was a need because the world is pretty much ignorant of the existence of transmen,” said Mr. Kayiatos, a poet and rapper who performs under the name Katastrophe and who, like Mr. Mac, identifies himself as a transman.

It turned out that Mr. Kayiatos’s assumptions were both right and wrong. It is true that a lot of people remain uninformed, if not about the existence of transmen — to use an umbrella term for someone born female who identifies as male (think of Chaz Bono) — then about the variety of the experiences that fall under the rubric and transmen’s growing cultural presence.

Those people probably don’t live in the Bay Area, where the zine is published, and where transmen have been gathering over the past decade in numbers no official agency has counted. But the scope of the population can be guessed at from its visibility on the local scene.

Read the rest...

Thursday, June 10, 2010

Transgender Individuals Do Not Require Surgery to Get a Passport ‎


Via Washington Post:

The State Department has revised its policy on changing passports for transgender people, announcing Wednesday night that a doctor's note will now suffice in such cases.

Previously, the State Department had required that a person undergo sexual reassignment surgery before it would change the passport. The policy had outraged transgender advocates, who called for an updated approach.

Under the new policy, which takes effect Thursday, a doctor must attest that the person is undergoing clinical treatment for gender transition, State said. Limited-validity passports will also be available to applicants in the process of gender transition, the department added.

State noted that its policy is "based on standards and recommendations of the World Professional Association for Transgender Health (WPATH), recognized by the American Medical Association as the authority in this field."

The department also stressed that passport-issuing officials "will only ask appropriate questions to obtain information necessary to determine citizenship and identity."

The new policy is based on recommendations from the World Professional Association for Transgender Health (WPATH), widely recognized as a leading authority on transgender issues.


Read the rest...

Monday, May 24, 2010

American Psychiatric Association Wants to Changes the Diagnosis of Transsexualism

The Trans Group Blog has published an open letter from Callen-Lorde and the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Community Center, in response to the APA's revised DSM diagnosis for Gender Identity Disorder -- which is now being re-named Gender Incongruence.

Re: Comment on the proposed "Gender Incongruence" in the draft revision of the of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, version 5
(DSM-5)


American Psychiatric Association:

The undersigned providers of and advocates for medical and mental health services to transgender and gender non-conforming communities welcome this opportunity to offer feedback and comment on the American Psychiatric Association's draft revision diagnosis for Gender Identity Disorders (GID), "Gender Incongruence" (GI).

The lead organizations facilitating this response are Callen-Lorde Community Health Center and the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Community Center of New York City. Each of these organizations started providing community services in 1983 and together serve over 2,000 people of transgender experience with primary health care and hormone care as well as substance abuse, mental health, and community building services. Our organizations, as well as the other signatories to this letter, represent the largest settings providing health and social services to transgender and gender non-conforming people and their families in the United States.

We appreciate the APA's proposed "Gender Incongruence"(GI) diagnosis is an effort intended to de-stigmatize gender non-conformity and improve transgender-identified people's access to mental health care. We agree with the intention behind this effort; however, we endorse an alternative viewpoint, based on our years of collective practice knowledge. We believe GI will continue to inappropriately pathologize gender non-conformity, maintain barriers to medically necessary health care, and lend justification to gender based stigmatization and discrimination.


Read the rest.

Thursday, March 4, 2010

Who's That Queer [Amanda Simpson]

Brought to you by Pistol Pete


Amanda Simpson is a rocket scientist who has run for a state representative seat in Arizona. She is the first openly-transgendered person to earn a presidential appointment.

Born Mitchell Simpson, Amanda transitioned into a woman in 2000. Since her transition, she has fought for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) rights. In 2005, she convinced her employer of 26 years, Raytheon, to become the first major aerospace and defense contractor to add gender identity to its discrimination policy.

Simpson now works at the Bureau of Industry and Security, an agency within the Commerce Department. She helps monitor exports of defense technology in order to assure dangerous weapons do not fall into the hands of U.S. enemies.

Read her full biography here.


Tuesday, January 26, 2010

For Transgender People, Name Is a Message


Via New York Times:

Katherine used to be Miguel. Olin had a girl’s name. And in October, Robert Ira Schnur, 70, became Roberta Iris Schnur, a Manhattan retiree with magenta lipstick and, she noted the other day, chipped silver nail polish.

“I wasn’t like other men,” she said.

Theirs are among hundreds of names a Manhattan court has changed over the last few years for transgender New Yorkers. That tally, specialists in the relatively new field of transgender law say, may make the borough’s workaday Civil Court one of the country’s biggest official name swappers — male names for female, vice versa and ambiguous.

Changing a name might seem like a minor matter for those who are changing their gender identities and, for some, facing challenges like finding knowledgeable doctors, trying hormones and experimenting with painful hair-removal procedures. But many who have gone through the switch say a name change sends an important message to the world, a message solidified and made official with a court’s approval.

Read the rest...

Friday, January 8, 2010

Q&A - What's up with the new vaccine trial in Chicago?

We really need the public to engage with us and be in this fight for the long haul... It took over 45 years to find the vaccine for polio!

An exclusive LifeLube interview with Sanford E. Gaylord, 
Community Educator, Project WISH





LifeLube - What HIV vaccine is being tested in the new study just launched in Chicago?

Sanford - At the University of Illinois at Chicago - Project WISH (We’re Invested In Stopping HIV), we launched HVTN 505, September 2009. HVTN stands for the HIV Vaccine Trials Network (www.hvtn.org). There are two types of vaccines that will be used in the study: DNA and Adenovirus vectored vaccines. The DNA vaccine is a synthetic replication of pieces of the HIV virus. It’s made in a laboratory and cannot give anyone HIV infection. Adenovirus vector is a common cold virus that is used to carry synthetic pieces of the HIV virus. This combination of vaccines has been used previously to stimulate the immune system in other studies and has been shown to be well tolerated.

Project WISH has been affiliated with the HVTN since 2001 and we’ve conducted clinical trials in partnership with them since 2004.

-What will the trial tell us?

The purpose of HVTN 505 is to teach us more about how a vaccine can stimulate production of T-cells to help the immune system respond to HIV if a person is exposed. We hope to learn if this vaccine can decrease the viral load of people who become infected with HIV. The lower the viral load, the longer it may take before a person develops symptoms of AIDS. An HIV vaccine that lowers viral load may delay the onset of illness, even if it doesn’t prevent HIV. A lower viral load may also reduce transmission of the virus to others. If the 505 vaccine does lower viral loads, scientists will know they are on the right track with vaccines which stimulate cellular (T-Cell) immunity. 

-Where else is the trial taking place? 

There are a total of 14 sites across the nation. In addition to Project WISH, trial is taking place simultaneously in the following cities: Atlanta, GA, Boston, MA; Birmingham, AL; Los Angeles, CA; Nashville, TN; New York, NY; Philadelphia, PA; Rochester, NY; San Francisco, CA; Seattle WA; and Washington, D.C. Check out www.hopetakesaction.org for a complete listing of sites.

-Who is being recruited for this study and why? How many people are you looking for in Chicago, and nationally?

Men who have sex with men (MSM) and Male to Female Transgender individuals 18-45 years of age who are fully circumcised are being recruited. The MSM population within the U.S. still bears the burden of HIV within our country.

We’re looking to recruit 80 people at Project WISH; nationally, we’re looking to recruit 1,350 people to participate in HVTN 505. 675 study participants will get vaccine and 675 will get a placebo.


- If I were to participate, how much time would it take, and what could I expect?

We’re looking for a 5 year commitment from study volunteers. The DNA vaccine will be given on 3 separate visits and the adenovirus vaccine at month 6. Then we continue to follow people for safety and we continue to provide HIV risk reduction counseling and HIV testing every three months. We’re also looking to see how their body is responding to the vaccine. There will also be physical exams and behavioral risk questionnaires. Each volunteer will receive a stipend of $ 40-95 per visit, depending on the type of visit.

-What are some of the benefits for me to participate in this trial?

This study may help in the search for a preventive HIV vaccine. At this point in the epidemic, we all must do our part so we can create a difference, especially for the generations that follow us all.

Being in this study might be beneficial to some of the study volunteers. The counseling that volunteers receive as part of the study may help them avoid getting HIV infection. The lab tests and physical exams may detect unknown health problems.

-Will this trial find a cure for HIV?

No, but it will advance our prevention efforts. Scientists believe that an effective preventive HIV vaccine is possible and are working to speed up the research process. Developing safe, effective and affordable vaccines are the best hope for controlling and/or ending the AIDS epidemic.

-Why does vaccine research take so long? Shouldn't we have something by now?

Research always requires multiple trials to find the right answer. For example, most of us wouldn’t think twice about taking Tylenol for a headache. Many may not have any idea how many trials it took to find a new pain reliever. Similarly, vaccine research has taken many years for other diseases as well. It took over 45 years to find the vaccine for polio!

I think what is important to remember is that even in trials where the product didn’t work as well as we hoped, we have still learned a great deal. Each trial is helping us to refine and retool our strategies so that we can move forward in our search. We really need the public to engage with us and be in this fight for the long haul.

-What are some of the risks to me as a trial participant?

Most common side effects from the vaccine are mild and include headache, tiredness, injection site pain or a small bump and/or scab at the injection site.

-Can I get HIV from being in this trial?

It is impossible to get HIV infection or develop AIDS from experimental vaccines. They are not made from live HIV, killed HIV, weakened HIV, or HIV-infected cells; they are synthetic replications. The investigational vaccines in this trial cannot cause HIV infection.

-I heard that some people test "false positive" in vaccine trials. What does that mean? How do you know if the positive result is truly false, or if in fact the person has seroconverted?

If you received the vaccine you might appear positive on the most common HIV tests. These tests are designed to look for the presence of antibodies to HIV and not the virus itself. We actually hope that the study vaccines will cause people to create antibodies; that is one indication that the vaccine is stimulating the immune system. This is what people may be referring to as a “false positive.” We encourage our study volunteers to only get their HIV testing done at our clinic during the trial because we can use tests that are able to tell the difference between vaccine-induced antibodies and a true HIV infection.

At the end of the study, volunteers who are showing antibodies from the vaccine will be provided HIV testing for free as long as they test “false positive.” Previous vaccine studies have shown this “false positive” may remain for years or may go away after some time.

-Would you encourage your best friend, or a close relative, to participate in this trial?

That’s a good question! I believe that this trial is well designed and well monitored but each person really needs to decide for themselves. I would encourage people I know to call or go to the website www.hopetakesaction.org and learn more about the study and meet with one of the study staff to get all of their questions answered.

Being in a study isn’t always the best decision for each individual or they may not be eligible for this particular trial, so its important to have all the facts and consider whether this seems like the right thing for you.

Even if people decide not to join the study, they can still help support our efforts in other ways. They can help educate others about vaccine research and help us to break down myths and misinformation that are out there. They may also want to join our Community Advisory Board.

-If I am interested in participating, what are my next steps?

Interested individuals can check out www.hopetakesaction.org for details. If you’re in the Chicago area, contact Project WISH toll free at 800-575-5758 or email us at wish@uic.edu. You can speak with our study staff for more information and see if you are eligible to participate, and learn how you can join us in the effort to stop HIV. 

Tuesday, December 29, 2009

A Tranny Girl goes to the White House: a Personal Account by Helena Bushong



As I sit here, I can’t help but ask the question, “Just how did I find myself headed to Washington, DC to advise on public policy at the White House?” It’s been a whirlwind fall that all started with me applying for and being selected as a member of the newly formed IL Alliance for Sound AIDS Policy (IL ASAP), a group of statewide policy and advocacy leaders picked to increase community involvement in HIV/AIDS activities, and fight for fair policies for those living with and at risk for HIV and AIDS.

On November 12, 2009, IL ASAP was fortunate enough to take part in a National HIV/AIDS Strategy Focus Group. Jeffery Crowley, Director of the White House Office of National Aids Policy and Senior Advisor of Disability Policy was the guest at the focus group and listened as community members spoke to issues that need to be addressed when forming the National HIV/AIDS Strategy. I testified at the focus group meeting regarding the barriers facing transgender, women, and aging populations; I had a lot to say!

After the focus group, I spoke with Mr. Crowley as a follow up to my testimony and I offered him a business card in case he had any questions or needed further input from me. I was impressed that Mr. Crowley seemed to listen carefully to testimony, took notes and asked thoughtful questions. I thought to myself, “Who knows?”

I did not think about it anymore until I open my email in early December, and spotted an email from the White House! Subject: December 8, White House “Women and HIV” meeting. It was flagged: Importance - High.

At first, I thought it might be a joke (I do have some prankster friends). I returned to the e-mail to read it again. As I read further, I felt almost unable to breathe. The email went on:



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