July 16, 2016 Session Room 5 - msmgf

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Jul 16, 2016 - pre-conference program that not only addresses these complexities head-on, but also .... been more than g
July 16, 2016 Session Room 5

Durban International Convention Center Durban, South Africa

Who We Are The Global Forum on MSM & HIV (MSMGF) was founded in 2006 at the Toronto International AIDS Conference by an international group of activists concerned about the disproportionate HIV disease burden being shouldered by men who have sex with men (MSM) worldwide. The silence at that time about the toll HIV was taking on MSM was deeply troubling to many community members and advocates working at the frontlines. Our coalition includes a wide range of people, including HIV-positive and HIV-negative gay men directly affected by the HIV epidemic, and other experts in health, human rights, research, and policy work. What we share is our willingness to step forward and to act to address the lack of HIV responses targeted to MSM, to end AIDS, and to promote health and rights for all. We also share a particular concern for the health and rights of gay, bisexual and other men who have sex with men who: are living with HIV; are young; are from low and middle income countries; are poor; are migrant; belong to racial/ethnic minority or indigenous communities; engage in sex work; use drugs; and/or identify as transgender.

Vision MSMGF envisions a world where the health and human rights of all men who have sex with men are actively recognized, realized, and respected.

Mission To advocate for equitable access to effective HIV prevention, care, treatment, and support services for gay men and other MSM, including gay men and MSM living with HIV, while promoting their health and human rights worldwide.

Values In all of our work, MSMGF foregrounds the values of human rights, self-determination, and working in coalition. We employ approaches that are community-led, strengths – based, sex positive, critically reflexive, evidence informed, and results oriented. By integrating these values into our policy, programs, re – search, and communications strategies, we strive to combine the full range of contributions generated by our constituents with methods that achieve smart, effective, and cost-efficient outcomes. MSMGF Executive Office 436 14th Street, Suite 100 Oakland, CA 94612 United States www.msmgf.org For more information, please contact us at +1.510.849.6311 or [email protected]

Contents Welcome Letter from MSMGF Co-Chairs 4 Acknowledgements 6 Special Acknowledgements

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Program Overview 8 Maps 17 Roadmap 19 Program MSM Networking Zone 22

Welcome Letter from MSMGF Co-Chairs Dear friends and colleagues, It is our great honor and privilege to welcome you to the 2016 MSMGF Pre-Conference: Action + Access: Rights and Demands of Gay and Bisexual Men in the Global HIV Response! This year marks our seventh biennial gathering ahead of the International AIDS Conference, and in close partnership with the International AIDS Society, we are proud to bring together more than 500 advocates, policy makers, researchers, and program implementers dedicated to the health and human rights of gay and bisexual men, and other men who have sex with men. This year MSMGF turns 10 years old. Our organization was founded in 2006 by a group of brave gay and bisexual men who were frustrated by deliberate exclusion and omission of our communities in global discussions about HIV. Ten years and several preconferences later, our gathering today happens at a much more complex time in the HIV response — newly available HIV prevention technologies, ear-marked funding streams for key population programs, legislative turmoil on LGBT and HIV criminalization laws, and uncertainty about treatment access as the major global funders undergo transition periods or shy away from their commitments to AIDS. The MSMGF is proud to deliver a pre-conference program that not only addresses these complexities head-on, but also reflects our ethos as a community-led organization. We are thankful to the hundreds of you who make every pre-conference a huge success; the speakers who submitted highquality abstracts or session descriptions; and the International Pre-Conference Planning Committee who supported the development of a robust and impressive program. We hope that today’s program inspires you. We invite you to bring back new ideas, knowledge, and partnerships to your local work. And we encourage you to take action to ensure the sexual health and rights of all gay and bisexual men worldwide. In solidarity,

George Ayala George Ayala, United States (Executive Director) Don Baxter, Australia (Co-Chair) Othoman Mellouk, Morocco (Co-Chair)

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Welcome Letter from MSMGF Co-Chairs

Welcome Letter from MSMGF Co-Chairs Dear Friends, On behalf of the International AIDS Society (IAS), we would like to extend a very special welcome to community activists and HIV stakeholders participating in “Action + Access: Rights and Demands of Gay and Bisexual Men in the Global HIV Response” the seventh consecutive Pre-Conference to the International AIDS Conference, Durban, South Africa on July 16, 2016. Action + Access is the largest known global gathering of activists, researchers, global donors and other key stakeholders focused on HIV-related and human rights concerns of gay, bisexual and other men who have sex with men. This is also a special year for MSMGF as you commemorate 10 successful years as the only global community-led advocacy and technical support network focused on HIV among gay and bisexual men. Although there has been tremendous progress in the scale up of HIV treatment and in the availability of new technologies for HIV prevention, the goals of universal access to health and rights remain elusive especially for gay and bisexual men around the world. Coverage of basic HIV and STI prevention, treatment and care services for our communities remains woefully insufficient. While in some places we have seen reductions in levels of stigma, discrimination and human rights violations, in several other geographies, these challenges continue to expand and impede an effective public health response. The IAS is impressed with the organizational momentum demonstrated by MSMGF over the last several years. MSMGF and its partners have been unwavering in its work to elevate global awareness about the disproportionate HIV disease burden that is shouldered by gay and bisexual men, and other men who have sex with men worldwide. It has worked tirelessly to delivery of high-quality technical support to countries that need it the most. We are especially grateful to each of you in addressing the impact of homophobia and transphobia and in our collective response to HIV. The IAS stands in solidarity with MSMGF to remove all barriers undermining sound science-based public health programs. This includes efforts to promote the acceptance and meaningful participation of all gay and bisexual men in the global HIV response. Best of luck for a successful Pre-Conference Event! We look forward to seeing you throughout the week. Sincerely,

Olive Shisana Olive Shisana, South Africa AIDS 2016 Local Co-Chair

Chris Beyrer Chris Beyrer, United States AIDS 2016 International Chair President, International AIDS Society

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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS MSMGF BOARD OF DIRECTORS

Don Baxter (Chair) | Australia Othoman Mellouk (Vice Chair) | Morocco Robyn Goldman (Treasurer) | United States Ifeanyi Kelly Orazulike (Secretary) | Nigeria Carlos Garcia de León | Mexico Craig Thompson | United States Gennady Roshchupkin | Ukraine Peter Perkowski | United States Tom Whitman | United States

MSMGF Steering Committee

Adedapo Fabunmi | Canada Akmal Aminjonov | Tajikistan Daniyar Orsekov | Kyrgyzstan Devin Hursey | United States Don Baxter | Australia Elie Ballan | Lebanon Inad Rendon | Thailand Jorge Saavedra | Mexico Joseph Sewedo Akoro | France Julian Boghos Kerboghossian | Lebanon Khemraj Persaud | Guyana Maria Sundin | Sweden Othman Mellouk | Morocco Sergio López | Paraguay Stephen | Nigeria Gautam Yadav | India

MSMGF STAFF

ACTION + ACCESS! PRE-CONFERENCE PLANNING COMMITTEE Ben Plumley | United States Brian Kanyemba | South Africa Carlos Garcia de Leon | Mexico Cheikh Traore | Nigeria Daniel Driffin | United States Frank Mugisha | Uganda George Owino | Kenya Ifeanyi Orazulike | Nigeria James McIntyre | South Africa Jean Eric Nkurikiye | South Africa Michael Akanji | Nigeria Micheal Ighodaro | Nigeria Niluka Perera | Sri Lanka Nonhlanhla MC Mkhize | South Africa Olumide Femi Makanjuola | Nigeria Paul Semugoma | South Africa Ricardo Baruch | Mexico Serge Douomong Yotta | Cameroon Shankar Silmula | India Shehnilla Mohamed | United States Thu Yain | Singapore

George Ayala | Executive Director Mohan Sundararaj | Director of Public Health Programs Nadia Rafif | Director of Policy Jack Mackenroth | Senior Communications Officer Omar Baños | Senior Technical Advisor Pato Hebert | Senior Education Advisor Keletso Makofane | Senior Research and Programs Consultant Sonya Arreola | Senior Research Advisor Micah Lubensky | Manager, Community Mobilization Patrick Hazelton | Senior Policy Advisor Mahri Bahati, IRGT Program Manager Lily May Catanes | Contracts and Grants Manager Carlos Alicea | Operations Associate

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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

SPECIAL ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS We would like to thank the following individuals and organizations for their amazing contributions and support: Niluka Perera, Mark S. King, Theodore Timothy Tsipiras, Charlie Tredway, Sergio Lopez, Brian Kanyemba, Michael Clark, Graham Norton, Adolfo Ruiz and Clif Cortez. We extend our gratitude to Owen Ryan, Nealon DeVore, Mandy Sugrue, and each of our colleagues from the International AIDS Society for their extraordinary contributions to the organizing of our pre-conference and related AIDS 2016 events. MSMGF also thanks individuals who assisted in session planning including, all moderators and presenters – you have been more than generous with your time, contributing to our stellar program.

ACTION + ACCESS PRE-CONFERENCE CO-SPONSORS Categories are named after ancient rivers

NILE – $75,000

Robert Carr Networks Fund International AIDS Society

MURRUMBIDGEE – $50,000 – $74,999 Dutch Ministry of Foreign Affairs Gilead USAID/PEPFAR/LINKAGES/FHI 360

INDUS – $10,000 – $24,999 AIDS Project Los Angeles Pangaea Global Health

YANGTZE – Up to $9,999

American Jewish World Service ANOVA Health Institute International HIV/AIDS Alliance Legacy Community Health Musagetes Victorian AIDS Council For more information about our pre-conference co-sponsors, please visit www.msmgf.org

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PROGRAM OVERVIEW ACTION + ACCESS! MSMGF PRE-CONFERENCE Saturday, July 16 08:30 Check-in 09:00

Welcome

09:30

Morning Plenary One



The Global Economic Cost of Homophobia Jose Antonio Izazola, UNAIDS

10:00

Morning Plenary Two



The Role of African LGBT Movements In The Global HIV Response Bisi Alimi

10:30

Break

11:00

Morning Concurrent Sessions (details on pages 9–12)

12:30

Lunch

13:30

Afternoon Concurrent Sessions (details on pages 12–15)

15:00

Break

15:30

Afternoon Plenary



We Liked the Way He Moved: Exploring the Power of Photography, Oral Histories, Art and the Contemporary Queer Archive Ajamu Pato Hebert, MSMGF 16:30

Panel Discussion





Getting The Math Right: Counting Gay and Bisexual Men into the 90-90-90 Equation Keletso Makofane (MSMGF), Meg Davis (NYU/Center for Human Rights and Global Justice), Midnight Poonkasetwatana (APCOM), and Sergio Lopez (SOMOSGAY) Moderated by Mandeep Dhaliwal, UNDP

17:30

Closing

18:00

Wine and Cheese Reception



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PROGRAM OVERVIEW

11:00 – 12:30 Morning Concurrent Sessions (90 Minutes) Community-Based Programs and Services – Hot Topics: Bare-Backing, Chemsex, Risk Reductions, and Pleasure Moderator Omar Banos, MSMGF | Room Assignment BR7

+ Pleasure – Risk, Risk Reduction Strategy for MSM Who Practice Bareback By and Through Social Networks In Mexico, Implemented By Voces H, A Mexican NGO Carlos Nicolás García de León Moreno, AVE de México & Voces H, México Investigating Associations Between Use of Chemsex Drugs And HIV Clinic Attendance Among Gay And Bisexual Men In The UK Alison Howarth, University College London, United Kingdom Adapting Combination Prevention and Care Continuum Frameworks In A CulturallyCompetent Model To Address Local Needs And Reduce HIV Infections Among Gay And Bisexual Men Jennifer Hecht, San Francisco AIDS Foundation, United States of America LGBT CBOs Are Highly Successful in Reaching MSM In Challenging Contexts: Impact Of The Sexual Health And Rights Programme (SHARP) Gavin Reid, International HIV/AIDS Alliance, Cape Town, South Africa

Intersections of Sexuality, Human Rights, Health, Migration and Race: LGBT Migrant Key Populations In The Global HIV Response Moderator Kwaku Adomako, ABDGN | Room Assignment BR9

Migrating LGBT Health into New Territory: Threats And Opportunities For African Regional Coordination Programmes For LGBT Migrants Michela Martini, International Organization for Migration (IOM), Kenya Migrate Or Die: How Civil Society Community Networks Address Transphobia, Migration, Health, And Human Rights Amongst Transgender Women In Latin America And The Caribbean EriKa Castellanos, Collaborative Network for People Living with HIV (C-NET+), Belize We Need Tools To Build A Response: Practical Guidance And Early Lessons Learned From The Protections Of LGBTI Persons In Forced Displacement Training Manual Rollout Kizitos Okisai, United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), South Africa Unapologetically Black: The Movement For All Black Lives – Connecting Youth Organizing To Decriminalization Of Black People, HIV Criminalization, Mass Incarceration And The Anti-Deportation Movements Maximillian Boykin, AIDS Foundation of Chicago, United States of America

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Expanding PrEP Across the World With Tailored Approaches Moderator Pato Hebert, MSMGF | Room Assignment BR10

Developing A Tailored PrEP Social Marketing Campaign for Multiple Contexts: How To Message PrEP In Settings Across The Globe Where It’s Been Approved And Where It Hasn’t Jim Pickett, IRMA/AIDS Foundation Chicago, United States of America Bringing Sexy Back: PrEP and Sexual Health Services For Young Urban Men Who Have Sex With Men Jessica Horwitz, Sutter Health, United States of America Use of Behavioural Eligibility Criteria To Identify High-HIV Risk Gay Men For Enrolment In A Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis (PrEP) Study In New South Wales, Australia Stefanie Jacqueline Vaccher, Kirby Institute, Australia

Scaling-Up PrEP: What Are Some of Our Next Steps?

Moderator Stef Baral, Johns Hopkins University | Room Assignment BR11 Oral Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis: State of The ART Stef Baral Scaling-Up Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis (PrEP) As A Strategy to Eliminate HIV Transmission Among Men Who Have Sex With Men (MSM): A Modeling Study Chi-Tai Fang, National Taiwan University, Taiwan An Exploratory Assessment of The Feasibility And Acceptability of Home-Based Support To Streamline HIV Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis (PrEP) Delivery Aaron Siegler, Emory University, United States of America

Changing Gears: A Guide to Effective HIV Service Programming For Gay Men And Other Men Who Have Sex With Men In Asia Moderator Nic Parkhill, ACON | Room Assignment BR12

Midnight Poonkasetwattana, APCOM , Thailand Steve Kraus, UNAIDS, Thailand Mandeep Dhaliwal, UNDP, United States of America Donn Colby, Thai Red Cross, Thailand

Structural Roadblocks: Addressing Barriers That Prevent Access Moderator Sonya Arreola, MSMGF | Room Assignment BR13

What Works to Prevent And Respond To Violence For Female Sex Workers (FSW), Men Who Have Sex With Men (MSM), And People Who Inject Drugs (PWID): A Systematic Review Michele Decker, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, United States of America

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PROGRAM OVERVIEW

Experiences of Provider Discrimination In Accessing Medical And HIV Prevention Services By Men Who Have Sex With Men Including Transgender Men Globally Tri Do, Asian and Pacific Islander Wellness Center, Inc., United States of America Violence Against Men Who Have Sex with Men In Cameroon: Correlates of HIV Risk, Infection And Access To Health Services And Justice Carrie Lyons, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, United States of America Transgender Men Who Have Sex with Men Report Lower Access To Basic HIV Prevention Services Than Their Non-Transgender Counterparts: Results Of A Global MSM Survey Ayden Scheim, Western University, Canada

Challenges with PEPFAR: Addressing Barriers To Optimize Opportunities Moderator Patrick Hazelton, MSMGF | Room Assignment BR14

Engaging Men Who Have Sex with Men And Other Key Populations In The 2015 PEPFAR COP Review Process In Cameroon Serge Douomong Yotta, Affirmative Action, Cameroon Countries with Concentrated Epidemics Among Key Populations Still Receive Disproportionally Lower PEPFAR COP Funding Than Generalized Epidemics Greg Millet, amfAR, The Foundation for AIDS Research, United States of America Challenges Amid Increases In PEPFAR COP Investments For MSM And Transgender Individuals, 2013-2015 Jack MacAllister, amfAR, The Foundation for AIDS Research, United States of America Global Solidarity to Win Increased Accountability And Impact From PEPFAR Country Programs: An Analysis Of North-South Collaborative Advocacy Strategies Asia Russell, Health GAP, Uganda/United States of America

Comprehensive Sexual Health Care for MSM: A User’s Guide Moderator Ken Mayer, Fenway Institute | Room Assignment BR15 Setting Up an MSM Clinic In Africa: What Does It Take? Kevin Brian Rebe, ANOVA Institute Bacterial STD’s in MSM: How Do We Bend The Curve? Ken Mayer, Fenway Institute/Harvard, United States of America HPV: How Do We Optimize Vaccination and Appropriate Screening For MSM? Andrew Grulich, University of New South Wales, Australia What Evidence-Based Interventions Should Be Used to Promote MSM Behavioral Health? Conall O’Cleirigh, Fenway Institute/Harvard, United States of America

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The Importance of African LGBT Movements In The HIV Response Moderator Micheal Ighodaro, AVAC | Room Assignment SR5

What Have We Done in The Past Ten Years And What Do We Need To Prioritize As A Movement Olumide Makanjuola, Initiative for Equal Rights, Nigeria Working To Overturn Anti-Gay Law: The Uganda Experience Richard Lusimbo, SMUG, Uganda Bridging The Gap; Rights Advocacy and HIV Advocacy Solomon Wambua, UHAI, Kenya Can Global Fund’s Support Be Optimized? Kate Thomson, Global Fund, Switzerland

When A Youth Approach Isn’t Enough: Building Discussion On Vulnerabilities for Young Gay Men Around The World Moderator/Facilitator Sergio Lopez, SOMOSGAY | Room Assignment BR16 Julian Kerboghossian, Y+, Lebanon Carlo Oliveras, GayLatino, Puerto Rico Khem Persaud, Guyana

13:30 –15:00 Afternoon Concurrent Session (90 Mins) Community-Led Implementation Tools to Improve The Quality And Coverage Of Services For Key Populations Moderator Mohan Sundararaj, MSMGF | Room Assignment BR7 Jenny Butler, United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) Paul-Gilbert Colletaz, Global Network of Sex Work Projects, United Kingdom Omar Baños, MSMGF, El Salvador/United States of America JoAnne Keatley, Center of Excellence for Transgender Health, University of California San Francisco, United States of America

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PROGRAM OVERVIEW

The Role of Media In The Arrest Of LGBT People And The Establishment Of Laws Criminalizing Homosexuality In Francophone Africa (Session Conducted In French) Moderator Nadia Rafif, MSMGF | Room Assignment SR5 Yves Yomb, Alternatives Cameroon, Cameroon Diadji Diouf, Aides Senegal/Africagay, Senegal Serge Yotta, Affirmative Action Cameroon/Africagay, Cameroon Charles Some, REVS+, Burkina-Faso

Community-Based Programs: Insights into Frontline Projects From Around the World Moderator Keletso Makofane, MSMGF | Room Assignment BR10

MSM Community Mobilization for HIV Prevention In Ukraine: The Effectiveness Of Mpowerment Behavioral Intervention Oleksandr Postnov, International Center for LGBT-studies – Donbas-SocProekt, Ukraine Best Practices of Community Initiatives To Access Health Services For MSM In Nairobi Kenya Jeffrey Wambaya, Ishtar, Kenya Demonstrating The Value of Community Control In Australia’s Response To HIV Darryl O’Donnell, AFAO, Australia Doing The Real Work: Comprehensive LGBT Community-Led HIV Interventions Under the Bridging The Gaps Program Keletso Makofane, MSMGF, South Africa

PrEP Around the World: Data From Various PrEP Programmes Moderator Ben Plumley, Pangaea | Room Assignment BR11

PrEP-30: An Innovative Model of Fee-Based Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis For High-Risk Individuals In Bangkok, Thailand Donn Colby, Thai Red Cross AIDS Research Centre, Thailand Early Adherence in The South African PrEP Demonstration Project Among Men Who Have Sex With Men Ben Brown, ANOVA Health Institute, South Africa Reported Changes in PrEP And Condom Use In MSM During The Open-Label Extension Of The ANRS IPERGAY Study Luis Alberto Isaac Sagaon Teyssier, Inserm-Ors Paca, France My Life, My Health, My Choice: PrEP Uptake and Utilization Among Black MSM In The United States Sheldon Fields, Charles R. Drew University of Medicine and Sciences, United States of America

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Jumping Hurdles: Creating Friendly HIV Health Services for Young Gay Men, Young Bisexual Men And Other Young Men Who Have Sex With Men In Asia And The Pacific Moderator Niluka Perera, Youth Voices Count | Room Assignment BR12 Niluka Perera, Youth Voices Count, Sri Lanka Andrey Tran, Youth Voices Count, Vietnam

The Evidence Is In! Country-Specific Community Sensitive, Rights-Based Health Programs ARE Necessary Moderator Mark Vermeulen, Aids Fonds | Room Assignment BR13

Adding to The Evidence Base For Rights-Centered HIV Programming: Comprehensive Country-Level Investigation Ralf Jürgens, The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB and Malaria, Switzerland Lessons Learned of Setting Up A Community-Based HIV-Related Human Rights Monitoring And Response System In Uganda Richard Lusimbo, Sexual Minorities Uganda – SMUG, Uganda Mitigating Risks and Enabling Safe Public Health Spaces For LGBT Jamaicans Jumoke Patrick, J-FLAG, Jamaica

The Far-Reaching (H)Arm of Homophobia And Transphobia Moderator Sonya Arreola, MSMGF | Room Assignment BR14

Structural Violence Reduces Quality of Life Among A Global Sample MSM: Community Engagement Moderates Some Negative Impacts Sonya Arreola, MSMGF, United States of America The Economic Cost of Homophobia In Low And Middle-Income Countries Erik Lamontagne, UNAIDS, Switzerland Moving from Insult To Inclusion: Homophobia And Transphobia In Asia-Pacific Educational Institutions Xavier Hospital, UNESCO, Thailand The Battle over Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity: What difference can a one day training make? Tonia Poteat, Johns Hopkins University, United States of America

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PROGRAM OVERVIEW

The Elephant in The Room: Enhancing Leadership And Meaningful Partnership In HIV And New Prevention Technologies Research Within A Dynamic Rights Environment Moderator George Owino, IAVI | Room Assignment BR15 Macland Njagi, Ishtar, Kenya Adam Bourne, London School of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, United Kingdom Jennifer Garret, IAVI, United States of America

Lightening The Viral Load: Test and Treat, Adherence, Universal Access Moderator Micah Lubensky, MSMGF | Room Assignment BR16

A Cohort Study of Community-Based Test-And-Treat For Men Who Have Sex With Men And Transgender Women: Preliminary Findings From Thailand Ravipa Vannakit, Thai Red Cross AIDS Research Centre (TRCARC), Thailand Improving ARV Adherence for Gay Men, MSM (GMT) And Male Sex Workers (MSW) John Mathenge, HOYMAS, Kenya Implementing Universal Access to Antiretroviral Treatment (ART) Among Men Who Have Sex With Men In Abuja, Nigeria: Characterization Of The Baseline Engagement In The HIV Care Continuum Uchenna Clifford Ononaku, Institute of Human Virology/International Center for Advocacy on Rights to Health, Nigeria

Tech Sex: The Role of Digital Technologies In Relation To The HIV Response Moderator Kevin Brian Rebe, ANOVA Health Institute | Room Assignment BR9

Online Platform to Sexual Health Information For Men Who Have Sex With Men – health4men. co.za Kevin Brian Rebe, ANOVA Health Institute, South Africa Ecascade: Real-Time Monitoring to Measure And Improve The HIV Cascade For MSM/TG Populations In Thailand Matt Avery, FHI 360, Thailand A Pilot Randomized Controlled Trial of A Mobile Phone Delivered Counseling Intervention To Reduce HIV Risk Among Male Sex Workers In Chennai, India Ken Mayer, Fenway Institute, Harvard United States of America Assessing The Efficacy of Harnessing Mobile Internet Technology To Provide Localized And Language-Specific MSM Health Information In Challenging Andrew Tucker, ANOVA Health Institute, South Africa

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MAPS

ACTION + ACCESS: Rights and Demands of Gay and Bisexual Men in the HIV Response July 16, 2016

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ROADMAP AIDS 2016 SESSIONS FOCUSED ON GAY, BISEXUAL AND OTHER MSM MONDAY JULY 18, 2016 MOSA01

8:00-10:00

Clinical Skills Needed to Provide Competent, Affirming Health Care to Gay and Bisexual Men/MSM and Transgender Women as Broader Context for HIV Care Prevention

MOSA10

10:15 – 12:15

Lived Realities, Imagined Futures: Meeting the HIV prevention needs of African gay men

MOSA12

10:15 – 12:15

Repairing HIV Service Cascades That Leak: Key Population Communities Taking the Lead

MOCA05

11:25 – 12:25

How Gay is Pakistan

MOSA25

12:30-14:30

Launch of the South African National Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual , Transgender and Intersex (LGBTI) HIV Plan

MOGS15

16:00 – 17:00

The Face of Transmasculine MSM

MOSA43

17:00-19:00

From General Population to Key Populations: South Africa’s Global Fund Grant Moves with the Times

TUESDAY JULY 19, 2016 TUSA02

7:00 – 8:30

HIV Prevention Literacy – Remembering What We Have Learned

TUSA07

7:00 – 8:30

Leveraging HIV Funding to Address Criminalization and its Impact on Sex Workers, Transgender Women and Gay Men in Africa

Plenary Session

8:45 – 10:45

Where are we now? Jonathan Mann Lecture by Justice Edwin Cameron: Protecting Human Rights and Reducing Stigma

TUAD01

11:00 – 12:30

Pathways: Moving from Structural Risks to Responses

TUAD02

11:00 – 12:30

Reality Check: The Intersections of HIV, Violence and Trauma

TUSY01

11:00 – 12:30

Doing the Right Things in the Right Ways: Policy, Legal and Ethical Challenges in Delivering Comprehensive Treatment and Prevention Services for Key Populations

TUWS01

11:00 – 12:30

Common at Its Core: Understanding the Linkages for Challenging the Impact of Criminal Law across Key Populations

TUPDB01

13:00 – 14:00

HIV Drug Resistance: Is it Time to Worry?

TUPDC01

13:00 – 14:00

Measuring Progress Towards 90-90-90

TUPDD01

13:00 – 14:00

Human Rights, Wrongs and Realities: Translating Frameworks into Actions

ACTION + ACCESS: Rights and Demands of Gay and Bisexual Men in the HIV Response July 16, 2016

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TUPDD02

13:00 – 14:00

WhatsUp: Mobile Technologies, Multimedia and Mass Communications

TUPDD03

13:00 – 14:00

The New Normal: Sexual Identity, Relationships and Norms

TUCA08

13:50 – 14:05

Outside: LGBT Dominican Young Activists

TUAC02

14:30 – 16:00

Can Epidemiology Lead to Action: Who, Where, When?

TUBS01

14:30 – 16:00

Removing Human Rights Barriers to HIV Prevention, Care and Treatment: Using Data to Drive Action Globally

TUSA19

18:30 – 20:30

Leaving No One Behind: How to Bring HIV Services to Scale for Key Populations

TUSA22

18:30 – 20:30

Oral PrEP “On Demand” – An Alternative to Daily PrEP?

WEDNESDAY JULY 19, 2016 WESA07

7:00 – 8:30

Insights from the Field – HIV Prevention Research by the HSRC

Plenary Session

8:45 – 10:45

What is our goal? Micheal Ighodaro: Youth Focus: Adolescents at Risk and in the Lead

WEAC01

11:00 – 12:30

Making PrEP Real for Those Who Need It Most: Optimization Strategies

WEAC02

11:00 – 12:30

Trans-forming HIV Prevention and Care Talk

WEAE01

11:00 – 12:30

Innovations in HIV Testing: the First 90

WECA01

11:00 – 12:30

Dancing to the Dawn of PrEP: How and Why to Advocate for a New HIV Prevention Tool for MSM in Africa

WEWS03

11:00 – 12:30

Reaching the Unreached: Service Uptake and Retention Among Marginalized Populations

WEPDE02

13:00 – 14:00

It Takes a Community: Leadership, Engagement and Innovation

WEAC03

14:30 – 16:00

Adolescent Affairs

WEBS02

14:30 – 16:00

Game Changers in the HIV Response: Gay Dating Apps Join Efforts to End the Epidemic by 2030

WESY05

14:30 – 16:00

Vulnerable Populations and HIV/AIDS in Islamic Communities

WEWS12

14:30 – 17:00

A Revolution Against Stigma! What Works to End HIV-related Stigma NOW!

WEGS07

15:00 – 16:30

The Double-Edged Sword of the Media: A Tool for African LGBTQ Activists and Other Criminalized Communities or a Minefield to be Avoided?

WEAD03

16:30 – 18:00

Pulling the Levers: Policy, Advocacy Approaches to Influence

WEGS10

17:00 – 18:30

Take Your Meds! Why Blaming the Patient May be Misguided: Exploring Adherence Issues Among Men Who Have Sex With Men and Transgender Women in the Caribbean.

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ROADMAP

WESA13

18:30 – 20:30

Developing the Next South African National Strategic Plan for HIV, TB and STIS (2017 – 2022)

THURSDAY JULY 20, 2016 Plenary Session

8:45 – 10:45

What are the key barriers? Cyriaque Yapo Ako: Expanding Access for All at Risk and in Need

THAE01

11:00 – 12:30

Financing the Response to HIV: Show Us the Money

THAE01

11:00 – 12:30

Financing the Response to HIV: Show Us the Money

THAX01

11:00 – 12:30

Phylodynamics: Tracking Transmission in Vulnerable Populations

THSY01

11:00 – 12:30

Young Key Populations: Empowered to Claim Their Sexual Reproductive Health and Rights

THSY02

11:00 – 12:30

Making the Revolution in HIV Prevention Real

THPDE01

13:00 – 14:00

HIV Services in Prisons: Let’s Raise the Bar

THSS01

13:00 – 14:00

Ending AIDS with the Voices of Youth: How Stigma and Discrimination Affect Key Populations

THGS09

16:15 – 17:15

Hyperlink(ages): MSM Community-Based Approaches in Using Information and Communication Technology Along the Continuum of Prevention, Care, Treatment and Support

THAC01

16:30 – 18:00

MSM: Diverse Realities Require Nuanced Programmes

THAD01

16:30 – 18:00

Barriers Must Fall: Community-Led Delivery

THAE03

16:30 – 18:00

Bang for the Buck: Cost-effectiveness and Modelling

THSA18

18:30 – 20:30

What it Takes to Make HIV Self-testing a Global Reality: Evidence, Quality-assured Products and Country Uptake

FRIDAY JULY 21, 2016 FRAC01

11:00 – 12:30

Testing Times-Interventions to Improve Rates of HIV Testing

FRAD01

11:00 – 12:30

Policies, Policing and Public Morality

FRAE01

11:00 – 12:30

Prepped for PrEP

FRBS01

11:00 – 12:30

Adopting Routine Patient-level Data to Track the HIV Epidemic and Inform HIV Prevention and Treatment Strategies: A Focus on Eastern and Southern Africa and Haiti

FRGS01

11:00 – 12:30

Understanding the Experiences of Young MSM in Accessing HIV and Health Care Services in Lahore

FRWS02

11:00 – 12:30

Mind over Matter: Providing High Quality, Respectful HIV Services to Key Populations

FRWS06

11:00 – 12:30

Designing, Implementing and Scaling-Up Comprehensive HIV and Sexually Transmitted Infections Programs with Men Who Have Sex With Men

ACTION + ACCESS: Rights and Demands of Gay and Bisexual Men in the HIV Response July 16, 2016

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PROGRAM MSM NETWORKING ZONE

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Program MSM Networking Zone

NO PANTS NO PROBLEM

AIDS 2016, Durban South Africa THU, JUL 21 AT 10:00 PM

Buy your tickets in advance — space is limited! https://www.eventbrite.com/e/no-pants-no-problem-aids-2016-durbansouth-africa-tickets-26224727867?aff=ebrowse

No Pants No Problem (NPNP) is VERY excited to be a part of the 2016 AIDS Conference in Durban, South Africa for a hot and sweaty summer affair in July. On this occasion we are going to be celebrating the 25th Anniversary of the International Community of Women Living with ICW and the 10th anniversary of the MSMGF (The Global Forum on MSM & HIV).

Thank you for your support!