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George Street barbers to raise money for Sussex Beacon

OS Barbers in George Street will once again be raising money for the Sussex Beacon on Friday, August 4.

For the third successive year, barbers, George and Joe will be donating all the takings from the haircuts they both do, all day.

Haircuts will cost £14/£10 for students. No appointments are needed and the salon is open from 10am – 7pm.

You will find the boys at OS Barbers, 52 George Street, Kemp Town, Brighton, BN2 1RJ: Tel. 07548 351901

Study suggests routine HIV test is offered at GP surgery for new patients

A new study published in the Lancet today shows that HIV testing on registration with GPs in areas with a high prevalence of HIV is cost-effective, and even cost saving.

Conducted jointly by Queen Mary University of London (QMUL) and the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, researchers found that offering HIV tests to people when they register at a new GP surgery was cost-effective and helps save lives.

The study looked at a trial conducted at GP surgeries in Hackney, London, where patients routinely received rapid fingerprick HIV tests as part of their standard health check during registration. Researchers found it led to a four-fold higher HIV diagnosis rate.

Kat Smithson
Kat Smithson

Kat Smithson, Director of Policy and Campaigns at NAT (National AIDS Trust), said: “NICE guidelines have recommended for some time that GPs in high prevalence areas offer HIV tests on registration. We urge commissioners to take heed of this new evidence and to work with GPs to roll this out in more places.

“The good news is that NAT has observed increasing investment in HIV testing in primary care settings such as GPs in recent years but barriers have still remained to implementing it across the country. Public health budgets are under extreme pressure so this further evidence of cost effectiveness is very important for making the case for investment.”

Dr Michael Brady, Medical Director for Terrence Higgins Trust, added: “One in seven people living with HIV do not know that they have it. Undiagnosed HIV infection puts individuals at risk of preventable illness and death, disproportionately contributes to onward transmission and is an unnecessary burden of cost to the NHS.

Dr Michael Brady
Dr Michael Brady

“Effective HIV therapy means people can now expect to live a normal lifespan and won’t pass the virus on to anyone else. But testing and early treatment is essential to be able to benefit from this. We urgently need new approaches to HIV testing that are delivered at scale and targeted at those at risk. Testing in General Practice is a key component of this because, whilst people living with undiagnosed HIV are not accessing existing HIV testing services, they do visit their GP and there are many missed opportunities to test.

“The UK’s national HIV testing guidance has recommending HIV testing in General Practices in high prevalence areas since 2008. HIV testing guidelines from NICE recommend the same. This important research demonstrates this approach is cost effective, and may even be cost-saving. I hope that policy makers, commissioners and healthcare providers act on these findings and invest in HIV testing in primary care. We have the tools to end HIV transmission in the UK but we won’t achieve that without scaling up testing in General Practice and other community settings.”

University honours diversity campaigner

A champion of business and diversity has been honoured by the University of Brighton.

Miranda Brawn: photo by Jim Holden

Miranda Brawn, award-winning businesswoman, banker and barrister received an honorary Doctor of Letters during the university’s summer graduation ceremonies at the Brighton Centre.

Miranda, CEO of the Brawn Diversity Leadership Foundation, campaigns for an equal and diverse workforce and promotes all forms of diversity including gender, race, disability and LGBT+.

She said: “I feel deeply privileged … this university plays an essential part to develop skills and the talents of potential and diverse world leaders.

“My values and work match the university’s commitments where diversity and inclusion are core values.  We are both helping to champion and nurture inclusivity, diversity and equality to the highest levels across all sectors to deliver change.

“The university has helped many students from across the UK and the globe to become a future success with a genuine focus on diversity and equality.”

Miranda advised graduates: “Follow your dreams to find your perfect career and be open to unexpected opportunities … continue to work hard and smart, take risks, focus and network, exercise persistence and determination, believe in yourself, listen well – and success will surely follow.”

OPINION: Transitioning with Sugar – my memories of past Prides

Sugar Swan: Photo Hugo Michiels
Ms Sugar Swan: Photo Hugo Michiels

Sugar Swan reflects back on her Pride experiences over the last 20 years.

My first experience of a Pride event was back in 1997, some 20 years ago. A fresh-faced 16-year-old kid, who knew she was trans but only in her wildest dreams did she think she could transition, made her way to Clapham Common for Pride London. I was absolutely terrified as I made my way there with my cis girlfriend. She was the first person who I confided in who understood my gender feelings. Following a string of disastrous teenage relationships with men, she was my first real partner. Being bisexual herself, we had a beautiful open relationship where we really did have it all. We didn’t know the word Poly at the time but we knew that we were different from other people and we embraced that.

As we got closer and closer to the event we were surrounded by more and more queer people all making their way to the park in high spirits. I couldn’t help but notice amongst the crowds that we didn’t really fit in. The crowd was mostly white, gay and male. There were very few women and even less trans and BME representation. I was happy though, I was surrounded by queer people, covered in glitter, intoxicated on love, and I felt the love, from my girlfriend and from the friends and sexual partners we met along the way.

I hark from the London home counties, in a small village between Ascot Racecourse and Windsor Castle. Schooled in the very depressing satellite town of Bracknell, consisting of council estates and office blocks, I was beaten to the ground and kicked in the stomach for being different. We were lucky to have found each other. We were very much the minority. Unfortunately that was our first and only Pride together, as she died some months later in a car accident that would shape my future.

After her death and my subsequent recovery period following the car accident I was terribly bereft and consequently pushed my gender identity deep down inside. I presented for the next 15 years as a cis gay man to most of the outside world, as that is what they read me as, and at the time I thought it was easier to live that lie than to find the strength to transition.

During the two years following her death I attended Prides in London but they were never the same. I felt like no one understood me, no one got me. That was until I was fortunate enough to find myself, at 19 years old, working in a call centre and meeting an established group of queer alternative and goth friends that included my life long friend and short time show biz partner, Spice, and my beloved companion for the rest of his life, Mouse. They both knew that I was a girl from the very beginning, I didn’t have to explain myself, they just knew, I didn’t have to hide my breasts from my first puberty.

“The crowd was mostly white, gay and male. There were very few women and even less trans and BME representation”

My Pride experiences were very different in the 20 years since that first one back in 1997. Back then I stood out. I was notably different from everyone else, but as the years went by I blended in more. By 2001 I was establishing myself on the drag circuit with Spice and we were atop open buses in the parade and performing in the cabaret tent in Preston Park and at the village street parties. Drag afforded me a certain invisibility around my gender and sexuality, or so I thought. I clearly wasn’t fooling anybody as it came as no surprise when I came out last year.

During those 20 years of moving down here and religiously being part of Pride, be that as an entertainer, a barmaid, or a spectator, I still felt out-of-place just as I did back in 1997 on Clapham Common. I always felt that I didn’t see many other people I could really relate to, people I could see myself in. The trans community was almost invisible at many of the Pride events I attended. These included events both here in Brighton, London, and across Europe.

I struggled with how whitewashed and corporate everything was and how Prides the world over seemed more about brand names and white muscled guys in speedos as the main line of advertisement. Where was the fat representation? The black people? The trans people? Lesbians? Bisexuals? The Disabled? I guess we weren’t deemed beautiful enough to represent Pride, which has led me to ask the question of late, Where is my Pride?

I still recognise that Pride events across the globe are a right of passage for many a young queer that have never been in a large group of like-minded people. It’s important for them to have that experience of love and acceptance on a mass scale. Therefore I support Pride events but believe that greater representation of the umbrella is paramount.

This is something that’s just as apparent today as it always has been. Following the worldwide debates over the inclusion of black and brown stripes to the Pride flag of the city of Philadelphia back in June, the banning of the Jewish Pride flag in the Chicago Dyke March, and most recently Pride London’s horrific cis hetero led advertising that was dutifully pulled following uproar within days of launch. These three separate Pride events this year opened up frank and honest discussions about minority representation at Pride events and whether ‘Pride’ across the globe has lost its way and has forgotten that it is supposed to be about the marginalised people, not just those who conform to the gay masses. There is an increasingly diverse LGBTQIA umbrella and we’ve been under represented for too long. It’s this new-found awareness by the masses, fuelled by the advent of social media, that brings me hope. Hope for a brighter tomorrow, where trans women, especially those of colour, are back in the forefront of the Pride movement, for that is its roots.

“The crowd was mostly white, gay and male. There were very few women and even less trans and BME representation”

Dr Brightons quiz to raise money for Rainbow Fund

Dr Brightons will be raising money for the Rainbow Fund at their annual pre-Pride Pub Quiz on Thursday, August 3.

Entry is just £2 per person with a maximum of 5 people to a team. Get there at 7.30pm for an 8pm start. There will be a raffle and prizes galore.

Dr Brightons will be adding money raised during the quiz evening to the grand total of monies raised at their Sunday night comedy events.

The Rainbow Fund makes grants to LGBT/HIV organisations who provide effective front line services to LGBT+ people in the city.


Event: Dr Brightons pre-Pride Pub Quiz

Where: Dr Brightons, 16 – 17 Kings Road, BN1 1NE Brighton

When: Thursday, August 3

Time: 7.30pm for a prompt 8pm start

Cost: £2 per person. Maximum of 5 people per team.

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