Sir Keir Starmer has become the first sitting UK prime minister to publicly take an HIV test to reduce stigma around Aids and encourage more people to get tested. There are historical parallels.
Lennox has founded the Sing campaign, which focuses on HIV on women and children ... and during Women’s History Month. Last ...
The Prime Minister has urged the public to take part in HIV Testing Week by taking a test himself at 10 Downing Street. Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer meets with Beverley Knight and Richard ...
AFP British Prime Minster Keir Starmer on Monday congratulated former ... week’: UK UK's Starmer urges world leaders to test for HIV ...
The chart-topping star sexually active Black Britons to get tested as she joined Starmer as he became the first UK Prime Minister to take a HIV test at Downing Street Prime Minister Sir Keir ...
when I say I am living with HIV. open image in gallery Keir Starmer with Beverley Knight and Richard Angell, chief executive of the Terrence Higgins Trust, as he takes an HIV test at 10 Downing ...
McKenna is the third British MP to reveal their positive HIV status over the last 20 years. Earlier this week, Keir Starmer, the British Prime Minister, allowed cameras to film him taking an HIV ...
Hoping to make these facts loud and clear to the British public, Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer became the first UK prime minister and G20 Leader to take an HIV test publicly for National Testing ...
increase overseas development assistance and expand key life-changing services including drugs to combat the HIV-AIDS epidemic. As first minister of Scotland, I was very proud to join the UK PM in ...
Sir Keir Starmer said the reduction in foreign aid ... had already had an impact across the sector. In South Africa, HIV vaccine trials have been halted, while in Uganda, HIV medicine has run ...
Announcing the measures, Prime Minister Keir Starmer took a self-test for HIV on camera to highlight that testing is quick, easy, free and confidential. He said: ‘It is really important to do it, and ...
According to a new survey led by Newfoundland Diagnostics, 25 per cent of men think they “cannot” contract HIV, while 34 per cent believe they are unlikely to contract the disease. On Monday, Sir Keir ...