• Mashup Score: 3

    Over 40 years ago, a disease The New York Times famously called a “gay cancer” began to appear in U.S. cities, columnist Naomi Ishisaka writes. Fear and stigma led to underreporting, blame and shame.

    Tweet Tweets with this article
    • “I think we need to really take a collective pause here on how we’re communicating this and really think about this from an equity lens — as well as the anti-stigma lens," said @imstephaunelite of the Fred Hutch-based @HelpEndHIV. https://t.co/OjtKq1Isk8

  • Mashup Score: 3

    Over 40 years ago, a disease The New York Times famously called a “gay cancer” began to appear in U.S. cities, columnist Naomi Ishisaka writes. Fear and stigma led to underreporting, blame and shame.

    Tweet Tweets with this article
    • “I think we need to really take a collective pause here on how we’re communicating this and really think about this from an equity lens — as well as the anti-stigma lens," said @imstephaunelite of the Fred Hutch-based @HelpEndHIV. https://t.co/OjtKq1Isk8

  • Mashup Score: 1

    Over 40 years ago, a disease The New York Times famously called a “gay cancer” began to appear in U.S. cities, columnist Naomi Ishisaka writes. Fear and stigma led to underreporting, blame and shame.

    Tweet Tweets with this article
    • “I think we need to really take a collective pause here on how we’re communicating this and really think about this from an equity lens — as well as the anti-stigma lens," said @imstephaunelite of the Fred Hutch-based @HelpEndHIV. https://t.co/OjtKq1Isk8