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Exercise programme promotes positive living for people with HIV

Exercise programme promotes positive living for people with HIV

A new exercise programme is helping to address the physical, mental and social health related challenges faced by people living with HIV in Sussex. The Positive Living Programme at Sussex Beacon provides people with HIV the opportunity to participate in a physiotherapy supervised group based on individualised exercises, in a supportive and friendly environment.

After being referred to the programme, patients are offered an assessment to help determine the exercises they can do in the class and establish some practical goals. The classes, which involve exercises using an exercise bike, weights, resistance bands and floor mats, run every Wednesday for 1.5 hours at the Sussex Beacon.

The programme was developed collaboratively by Dr Jaime Vera, Senior Lecturer in HIV Medicine and Honorary Consultant Physician at Brighton and Sussex Medical School (BSMS), and Hattie Yannaghas, Senior Project Coordinator at the Sussex Beacon, in partnership with Sussex Community NHS Foundation Trust.

Dr Vera, who received funding from Gilead to set up Positive Living, said: “Brighton and Sussex has a large population of people living with HIV, which is the oldest cohort of people with the condition in the UK and one of the oldest in Europe. Therefore, it’s really important that they have access to exercise and facilities that can improve the outcomes of many issues associated with HIV, such as isolation, ageing and comorbidities.

“Exercise and active living can really help to improve our physical and emotional health but not everyone has access to these facilities, or can find facilities that are tailored to their needs or requirements, and that’s a problem area that the Positive Living Programme is trying to address.”

Hattie Yannaghas added: “The programme has been really successful, with people showing a real keenness to attend the sessions every week, which has been great to see. People have told us they don’t feel comfortable going to the gym but feel they do feel comfortable here. One of the participants, who is visually impaired, found that he never received any support or help at his local gym, which meant he wasn’t able to exercise at all. Another has osteoporosis, and couldn’t find a gym that could support his physical needs, with the exception of short-term physiotherapy, so this seems to be a crucial service.”

Sarah Silberston, a physiotherapist at Sussex Community NHS Foundation Trust, leads the classes, and she assesses the participants in order to develop goals and targets for each session. She said: “In addition to the classes each week, a few of the participants have also done things outside in their own time to improve their fitness further, which has been fantastic to see. Everyone has improved so it’s clearly working. There has been a lovely atmosphere in the classes too – it’s supportive and not competitive.”

The other main strength of the programme is that it builds friendships and a community. Dr Vera added: “The classes are small, which means you get to know other people who can support you. They offer a space where participants feel safe and don’t feel stigmatised, which is often not the case elsewhere.”

The Sussex Beacon has received additional grant funding from a variety of sources to run classes twice a week. Not only is this beneficial for people wanting to take part, it also helps to strengthen Dr Vera’s research, which is continuing alongside the programme. “All of the data we collect at the beginning and at the end of the programme, coupled with the feedback we get from the participants, will act as evidence to roll out the programme on a wider scale,” he said.

The Positive Living Programme is open to anyone living with HIV living in Sussex. To find out more see here or call 01273 694222.

Pushing the Boundaries of LGBTIQ Activism” A Global Summit for the Human Rights of LGBTIQ People

OutSummit  “Pushing the Boundaries of LGBTIQ Activism”

A Global Summit for the Human Rights of LGBTIQ People happening this Saturday, 7 December, 2019 in New York.

Incredible progress in the recognition and promotion of the human rights of LGBTIQ people has been seen around the globe in recent years. Over the last year alone Angola, Botswana and Bhutan have decriminalized same-sex relations. Taiwan, the Cayman Islands and Ecuador legalized same-sex marriage. The World Health Organization removed “gender identity disorder” from the International Classification of Diseases.

But there have also been significant setbacks. The anti-gender movement has gained ground. The rights of trans people are coming under increasing attack. Right-wing civil society opposed to gender and LGBTIQ equality has expanded their work geographically and in the corridors of the UN. A bid to decriminalize same-sex relations in Kenya failed. To name a few.

The context we are working in is becoming increasingly polarized. This is a time when pushing the boundaries of LGBTIQ activism is absolutely crucial to ensuring that the hard-won battles for equality do not backslide, enabling us to continue taking steps towards achieving a world in which we can live free from discrimination, harassment and violence purely for being the gender we are, and loving whom we do.

Every day around the world, LGBTIQ people’s human rights and dignity are abused in ways that shock the conscience. The stories of their struggles and their resilience are astounding, yet remain unknown—or willfully ignored—by those with the power to make change. OutRight Action International, founded in 1990 as the International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission, works alongside LGBTIQ people in the Global South, with offices in six countries, to help identify community-focused solutions to promote policy for a lasting change. We vigilantly monitor and document human rights abuses to spur action when they occur. We train partners to expose abuses and advocate for themselves. Headquartered in New York City, OutRight is the only global LGBTIQ-specific organization with a permanent presence at the United Nations in New York that advocates for human rights progress for LGBTIQ people.

The event is co-organized by the Sorensen Center for International Peace and Justice and CUNY School of Law.

Speakers include

Victor Madrigal-Borloz – the United Nations Independent Expert on protection from violence and discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identit

Katlego Kai Kolanyane-Kesupile – groundbreaking Trans* ARTivist from Botswana

Neish McLean – co-founder of TransWave Jamaica, Vice-Chair of the United Caribbean Trans Network and Caribbean Program Officer at OutRight Action International

Jennifer Lu – Chief Coordinator of Marriage Equality Coalition Taiwan and long-term worker of the Taiwan Tongzhi (LGBTQ+) Hotline Association

More info on this and the rest of the work OutRight are involved with here: 

 

Billy Ocean & Gerry Cinnamon @ Brighton Centre in 2020

Billy Ocean will be appearing at The Brighton Centre on Friday 6th November  2020 & Gerry Cinnamon will be performing at the Brighton Centre on Sunday 31st May 2020

Billy Ocean is the biggest selling black recording star Britain has ever produced and has sold over 30 million records in his lifetime to date. Having achieved extraordinary success as both an artist and a songwriter, Billy has collected multiple Gold and Platinum records across the world and hit the number one spot worldwide in the pop charts

The continuing ascent of Gerry Cinnamon is one of contemporary music’s most outstanding stories. Rising from a self-released debut album, Gerry has become a stadium and arena-filling headliner. And as an artist whose revealing and honest songs naturally connect with a huge and devoted audience, he’s achieved it all entirely independently.

Tickets go on general sale on Friday 6th December 2019 at 10am priced from £25/£35 respectively for more info or to book tickets get in touch with the  Brighton Centre Box Office: 0844 8471515

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