Online Resources
- HIV Advocacy Organizations Launch Online Resource: HIVHealthReform.org (February 9, 2012)
In CDC HIV/Hepatitis/STD/TB Prevention News Update, from U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
- Sizing Up Web Sources (Winter 2012)
Six tips for assessing the credibility of online health info.
To read PDF, click here.
In The Positive Side, from Canadian AIDS Treatment Information Exchange
Finding Support in an e-Patient World: A Video Blog Entry by Mark S. King (September 26, 2011)
"As much as I view HIV/AIDS as "terminally unique," there's something comforting about how much in common I had with the other bloggers. Yes, it did occur to me that I was the only person in the room with a condition that could get me arrested for having sex, for instance, but this wasn't the time or forum to announce our differences. What we shared, and what they taught me about being a more effective advocate, was considerable."
From The Body
Online Resources to Protect Those With HIV/AIDS: A Blog Entry by Tracy Russo (July 18, 2011)
From AIDS.gov
- What's a QR Code? (May 17, 2011)
From AIDS.gov
Six Steps to Assess Health Information on the Web (Spring 2011)
On the Web we have access to more information than we could ever hope to use. We need to know how to filter out what we don't need and keep only what is useful to us. Here are six questions to help you quickly assess the usefulness of a Web site.
In Prevention in Focus: Spotlight on Research and Programming, from Canadian AIDS Treatment Information Exchange
- Web Filters Block Safe-Sex Sites (December 11, 2002)
In CDC HIV/Hepatitis/STD/TB Prevention News Update, from U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
- Quick Reference Guide to AIDS-Related Web Sites (March 21, 2002)
From San Francisco AIDS Foundation
- AIDS Treatment Information on the World Wide Web (March 2000)
In Survival News, from AIDS Survival Project
- AIDSinfo
Provides guidelines, clinical trial databases and other information on HIV prevention and treatment to doctors, researchers, HIVers and the general public.
From U.S. National Institutes of Health
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