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Pride in our community

Brighton Pride is our Pride, a Pride with purpose, an event run first and foremost for the benefit of the city’s diverse LGBT communies.

Pride and community

Pride is more than a celebration, more than a day out, more than a party!

Pride is a unique opportunity to raise much needed funds for LGBT/HIV organisations across Brighton and Hove which enables them, through the Rainbow Fund Grants Programme, to support the LGBT/HIV community in Brighton & Hove.

Paul Elgood
Paul Elgood

Paul Elgood Chairman of the Rainbow Fund said of Pride’s fundraising role: “Pride has made a significant contribution to the local LGBT community sector, and have created a sustainable and secure source of funding for the smaller volunteer-led community groups who can rely on this funding to operate. Pride asked the Rainbow Fund to provide a fair and needs-led basis for distributing the funding to those local groups who need it most”.

“After donating the money, they stepped back and allowed our independent grants panel, who have expertise across the LGBT sector, to assess the grants in a fair and open way. This approach shows how far Pride has the interests of the LGBT voluntary sector at the heart of their activities. The event is now the number one opportunity for our community to generate funding for the LGBT voluntary sector locally and to send a clear and united message for equality internationally”.

Every ticket purchased, be it for Preston Park, every fundraising event attended or each donation made enables Pride to support our community.

At a time when voluntary and charitable organisations are fighting for funding and when many of the local services we so often take for granted are being cut, it is more important than ever to stand with Pride and support those who support us.

If you wished to volunteer to help your community (and get a free ticket to the Pride festival) CLICK HERE:

 

 

Royal College of Nurses calls for greater support for ‘silent generation’ of older people living with HIV

“After twenty years I still have to be careful who I tell or what I say” 

Royal College of nursing

Nurses are calling for more support and help for a new generation of people living into older age with HIV and facing stigma, anxiety and lack of awareness from the public and health care staff.

Nursing staff will be debating the issue of HIV awareness on the first day of the Royal College of Nursing (RCN) annual Congress in Liverpool tomorrow. The debate will highlight the increasing number of people who are growing older with HIV, and the challenges that poses for the nurse practitioners working with them.

It is estimated that around a fifth of all people in the UK with HIV are now aged 50 and over, as treatments improve and life expectancy for the condition approaches the national average. However, awareness of the condition has declined, with a lack of training for health care workers and a lack of knowledge among the public. On top of this, many older people with HIV have severe financial problems and cannot get the support they need to survive.

Memory Sachikonye, 48, was diagnosed in 2002.

She said: “Older people with HIV will have more than one illness and when you are seeing five different consultants it can be difficult keeping track of medications, appointments and tests, especially if you are ill.

“If there is one thing that would really help older people with HIV it is having someone who can coordinate care between different parts of the health service to make sure there are no mistakes and to reduce the stress for patients.”

Ian Lamb, 61, lives in Blackpool with his partner. He was diagnosed with HIV in 1996, at the age of 42.

Ian said: “When I was diagnosed having HIV meant you were going to die, and that is how I lived my life, racking up enormous debts which I am still paying off.

“The attitudes towards HIV haven’t really changed in some parts of the country from when I was first diagnosed twenty years ago – it is just more subtle and less noticeable now. After twenty years I still have to be careful who I tell or what I say.”

Jason Warriner,
Jason Warriner,

Jason Warriner, Chair of the RCN Public Health Forum, added: “There is a silent generation of people living with HIV who don’t feel comfortable attending support groups or talking about their diagnosis. It is every health care worker’s responsibility to reach out to these people.

“There must be greater training and support for staff to ensure that people living with HIV do not face stigma or misinformation when they are using the health service.”

 

Peter Carter
Peter Carter

Dr Peter Carter, Chief Executive & General Secretary of the RCN concluded saying: “Nursing staff are seeing an increasing number of older people with HIV and too often they can see that the system is failing them. Many nurses also feel that they could be better used to help older people with HIV as they are perfectly placed to coordinate care and reduce the stress of dealing with several conditions.

“The attention and focus may have moved on from HIV since the late 80s but the condition is still very real for those who have been diagnosed and we owe it to them as a society to provide the support, medically, emotionally and financially, that they need.”

 

 

 

 

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