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Stronger Futures: Re-Entry Support for Black Women with HIV
Join us on Wednesday, October 29, 2025, at 12:00pm Eastern for a powerful webinar spotlighting the resilience of Black women living with HIV as they return to their communities after involvement in the justice system. This engaging session will uncover how stigma, systemic inequities, and gaps in care shape health outcomes, while also lifting up real-world strategies that work. Participants will leave inspired with tools and best practices to expand access to care, strengthen support systems, and amplify the voices and experiences of Black women at the center of this conversation.
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The Prevention Generation: Evolving Strategies to Engage Youth
The “The Prevention Generation: Evolving Strategies to Engage Youth” webinar is designed to empower professionals to take an active role in engaging youth in HIV prevention. "The Prevention Generation" will discuss innovative and effective engagement strategies, share real-world experiences from youth-focused professionals, and promote actionable steps to help keep the next generation engaged in reducing the spread of HIV.
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Stability in Uncertain Times: Strengthening HIV Prevention Through Peer Workforce Investment
This webinar on Wednesday, September 17, 2015 at 12:00pm Eastern is designed to guide those in leadership roles at organizations focused on HIV, STIs, and harm reduction to recruit, retain, … Continue reading Stability in Uncertain Times: Strengthening HIV Prevention Through Peer Workforce Investment
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Thriving in Uncertainty: Strategies for Sustaining HIV Prevention in DC
This webinar will provide practical, actionable strategies to help leaders assess their organizations, identify vulnerabilities and opportunities, and chart a path toward sustainability. Participants will also learn innovative approaches to diversifying funding streams and building adaptive, future-ready organizations that can continue driving impact in the DC Community.
This fact-based guide is intended to strengthen the impact of the HIV prevention workforce in DC by
providing strategies to effectively engage with and educate youth ages 13 to 24 about HIV and their
health. By engaging youth directly using innovative approaches, individuals working in HIV prevention
can positively impact youth and reduce HIV’s disproportionate impact on this vulnerable population.