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Treatment Action Group
I'll Take Los Angeles: AIDS Treatment Activists from
Across the Land Gather to Share Expertise and Ideas "A conversation long overdue"
November 1995 This article is part of TheBody.com's archive. Because it contains information that may no longer be accurate, this article should only be considered a historical document. TAG was the proud co-sponsor of the first national gathering of AIDS treatment activists, the National AIDS Treatment Advocates' Forum (NATAF), in Los Angeles in mid-October. The event was the brainchild of TAG board member Moisés Agosto, who is the Director of Research and Treatment Advocacy at the National Minority AIDS Council (NMAC) in Washington, D.C. In addition to TAG, NATAF was sponsored by NMAC, AIDS Project Los Angeles (APLA), Gay Men's Health Crisis (GMHC), and the National Association of People with AIDS (NAPWA). Supporters of the conference included the AIDS Action Council, AIDS Action Baltimore, the American Foundation for AIDS Research, the Design Industry Foundation to Fight AIDS (DIFFA)-Houston, the National Education Association (NEA) and Project Inform. The conference was underwritten entirely without the support of pharmaceutical sponsors.
The conference, unlike smaller gatherings of AIDS treatment activists in the past, brought together nearly 200 treatment advocates from around the U.S., and a few from across the Atlantic. The participants were drawn from all of the communities affected by the epidemic and reflected a special effort by organizers to reach out beyond the usual coterie of seasoned treatment activists. Because the conference was scheduled back-to-back with NMAC's and NAPWA's National Skills Building Conference, the meeting was able to draw in many new people who were planning to attend only the Skills Building Conference and may not have had much exposure to treatment advocacy in the past. The conference began with a three-hour workshop on clinical trial methodology with Jim Neaton and Carlton Hogan of the Statistical Center of the Community Program for Clinical Research on AIDS (CPCRA) and the University of Minnesota. The workshop was designed to teach the participants about the basics of clinical trial design and why randomization, controls and other methodological tools are important ways to help ensure the reliability of clinical study results. The remainder of the 11 sessions at the conference were split into two 2-hour sections each, on the following topics:
The first two hours were spent up-dating the participants on the latest developments in each area with the second 2 hours set aside for strategizing and discussion.
This article is part of TheBody.com's archive. Because it contains information that may no longer be accurate, this article should only be considered a historical document. This article was provided by Treatment Action Group. It is a part of the publication TAGline. |