Several Federal agencies have developed public awareness and education campaigns about HIV prevention, treatment, or care with tools and resources you can use and share. On this page, you’ll find a snapshot of these Federal HIV campaigns and links to help you access more information about each one. Also included is information about campaigns about HIV-related issues including hepatitis B and hepatitis C, sexually transmitted infections, and drug use.
Campaigns for consumers and the public
Campaigns for health care providers
Campaigns for consumers and the public
“I am a Work of ART"
I am a Work of ART, and its Spanish-language version, Celebro mi salud, are a community-informed national campaign funded by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services designed to encourage people with HIV who are not in care for HIV to seek care, stay in care, and achieve viral suppression by taking antiretroviral therapy (ART).
HASHTAG:
#WorkOfART
Let’s Stop HIV Together
CDC’s Let’s Stop HIV Together (Together) campaign is the national campaign of the Ending the HIV Epidemic in the U.S. (EHE) initiative and the National HIV/AIDS Strategy. Together is an evidence-based campaign created in English and Spanish. It aims to empower communities, partners, and health care providers to reduce HIV stigma and promote HIV testing, prevention, and treatment.
HASHTAG:
#StopHIVtogether
Let’s Stop HIV Together: HIV Stigma
The anti-stigma component of CDC’s Let’s Stop HIV Together campaign highlights the role that each person can play in stopping HIV stigma and gives a voice to people with HIV, as well as their friends, families, and allies. Campaign participants share their stories and call on everyone to work together to stop HIV stigma.
HASHTAGS:
#StopHIVStigma
#DetenelEstigmadelVIH
Let’s Stop HIV Together: HIV Testing
The HIV testing component of CDC’s Let’s Stop HIV Together campaign is designed to motivate all adults to get tested for HIV, making HIV testing part of everyone’s regular routine. It encourages people to test however they feel comfortable, including at in-person locations or by HIV self-test on their own time, in their own space. It highlights the importance of everyone knowing their HIV status and knowing what their next steps should be depending on their status.
HASHTAGS:
#DoingItTogether
#HaciéndoloJuntos
Let’s Stop HIV Together: HIV Prevention
The HIV prevention component of CDC’s Let’s Stop HIV Together campaign includes messaging for all adults about knowing their prevention options, communicating effectively about those options, and choosing the ones that are right for them. The campaign resources promote and provide information on abstinence, condoms, and medicines that prevent and treat HIV.
HASHTAGS:
#StartTalkingHIV
#IniciaHablandoVIH
Let’s Stop HIV Together: HIV Treatment
The treatment component of CDC’s Let’s Stop HIV Together campaign focuses on helping people with HIV stay healthy and live longer, healthier lives. The campaign shows how people with HIV have been successful getting in care and staying on treatment, despite the challenges they may face, and encourages those around them to provide social support. It also promotes that being undetectable means individuals won’t transmit HIV to their sexual partners.
HASHTAGS:
#HIVTreatmentWorks
#TratamientodelVIHFunciona
At the Intersection: Stories of Research, Compassion, and HIV Services for People who Use Drugs
You can’t end the HIV epidemic without understanding drug use. So says Nora Volkow, MD, director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) at the National Institutes of Health. The At the Intersection: Stories of Research, Compassion, and HIV Services for People who Use Drugs web video series highlights the ways in which evidence-based harm reduction and holistic care is necessary to end the HIV epidemic for people who use drugs.
Get Yourself Tested
CDC’s GYT: Get Yourself Tested campaign encourages young people to get tested and treated for STDs and HIV to protect their health and that of their partners. STDs affect people of all ages, yet these diseases take a particularly heavy toll on young people. The GYT campaign highlights the idea that preventing, testing for, and treating STDs is very straightforward. The campaign offers streamlined materials to help focus efforts on STD awareness, prevention, testing, and treatment among young people.
HASHTAG:
#GYT
Know Hepatitis B
CDC's Know Hepatitis B is a multilingual national education campaign that increases awareness of hepatitis B among Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders and promotes hepatitis B testing. Campaign materials are available in English. Chinese, Korean, and Vietnamese.
HASHTAG:
#KnowHepatitisB
Know More Hepatitis
CDC’s Know More Hepatitis campaign is designed to help implement CDC’s 2020 recommendations that all adults, age 18 years and up, get tested for hepatitis C. An estimated 2.4M Americans have hepatitis C, yet many do not know know it. The campaign goal is to reduce the morbidity and mortality associated with hepatitis C by increasing testing so those who have it can get linked to life-saving care and treatment, which can cure hepatitis C for most people.
HASHTAG:
#KnowHepC
HPV Vax Now
To encourage young adults to get the human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine to protect against HPV-related cancers, the HHS Office on Women’s Health (OWH) supports the HPV Vax Now campaign. HPV can cause 6 types of cancer and genital warts. The HPV vaccine is recommended for young adults through age 26 who didn't complete the series when they were younger. HPV is one of the four STIs of focus in the STI National Strategic Plan.
HASHTAG:
#HPVvaxNOW
Campaigns for health care providers
Let’s Stop HIV Together: HIV Screening
CDC’s Let’s Stop HIV Together campaign provides HIV screening resources for clinicians to encourage primary care providers to promote routine HIV screening during patient visits per the CDC HIV testing recommendations. Additional materials can be found on CDC’s HIV Nexus website, a one-stop source of the latest HIV information for clinicians.
HASHTAG:
#ScreenForHIV
Let’s Stop HIV Together: HIV Prevention
CDC’s Let’s Stop HIV Together campaign HIV prevention resources for clinicians encourage health care providers to prescribe pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) and post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP) to prevent new HIV infections. Additional materials can be found on CDC’s HIV Nexus website, a one-stop source of the latest HIV information for clinicians.
HASHTAG:
#PrescribeHIVPrevention
Let’s Stop HIV Together: HIV Treatment
CDC’s Let’s Stop HIV Together campaign includes HIV treatment resources for clinicians that provide tools and information to help health care providers start the conversation with patients about HIV treatment, care, and transmission prevention. Additional materials can be found on CDC’s HIV Nexus website, a one-stop source of the latest HIV information for clinicians.
HASHTAG:
#HIVCareCDC
Let’s Stop HIV Together: Transgender Health
CDC’s Let’s Stop HIV Together: campaign includes Transgender Health resources for clinicians to help health care providers offer gender-affirming care, reduce new HIV infections among transgender people, and improve the health of transgender people who have HIV. Additional materials can be found on CDC’s HIV Nexus website, a one-stop source of the latest HIV information for clinicians.
HASHTAG:
#CDCTransHealth