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U.S. News Pennsylvania: BEBASHI Marks Quarter CenturyApril 29, 2010 BEBASHI (Blacks Educating Blacks About Sexual Health Issues), a Philadelphia-based nonprofit, is marking a quarter century with "25 Events for 25 Years." The yearlong outreach will include HIV testing, a food drive, fundraising, and health education workshops. Executive Director Gary Bell called the milestone bittersweet. "On the one hand, we are blessed and we are honored to continue to be here to help the community, but it's also a sign that we haven't found a cure for HIV and we haven't as a community come to fully grasp the magnitude of the epidemic and its impact on black folks," he said. BEBASHI was the first nonprofit in the country to target HIV among African Americans exclusively, providing culturally sensitive HIV/AIDS education and assistance. After Bell joined the agency in 1996, it expanded its services to include STD testing, support groups, and a food pantry. Bell said a new focus for the agency is young people, a group seeing a growing number of HIV infections. Young black men who have sex with men are especially affected, representing 55 percent of new infections among African Americans ages 13-29, according to CDC. In response, the agency has launched "Text 4 the Truth," in which young people can text 267-265-8228 to ask anonymous sexual health questions. For more information, visit www.BEBASHI.org. Philadelphia Tribune 03.16.2010; Ayana Jones This article was provided by U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. It is a part of the publication CDC HIV/Hepatitis/STD/TB Prevention News Update. Visit the CDC's website to find out more about their activities, publications and services.
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