Synchronicity
The National Conference for HIV, HCV, STIs, Drug User Health, and LGBTQ Health

Serving with Intention: A Sisterhood Built in Meaningful Involvement
This session will showcase how AIDS United’s Melanated Movement Fund grantees are responding to the needs of aging Black women across the diaspora by implementing innovative stigma-reductive and community-engagement approaches in two distinct communities.

Reaching Her: Evaluating PrEP Uptake and Engagement Strategies for Cisgender Women in Florida Specialty Clinics
In this presentation, we share results of our outreach efforts to engage cisgender women for HIV prevention services, including PrEP.

From Cell to Clinic: Connecting Returning Citizens to HIV Prevention and Care
Imagine a world where every individual, regardless of their past, has access to essential healthcare services and the support they need to thrive. For returning citizens living with HIV, this is not just a dream—it’s a necessity. The Intervention Services Program (ISP), part of the DC Health’s HIV AIDS Hepatitis STD Tuberculosis Administration (HAHSTA), is on a mission to transform this vision into reality.

The San Francisco Principles 2020: Centering Long-Term HIV Survivors in Research, Care, and Advocacy
The San Francisco Principles 2020 builds on the 1983 Denver Principles to highlight the critical needs of long-term HIV/AIDS survivors (LTS) as they age with HIV. This important statement brings attention to the linked problems of aging, unfair health access, and how systems often ignore marginalized people within the LTS community.
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Sniffies: Not Just for Hook-ups — How Your Prevention Department Can Expand Outreach in Real Time
This session will introduce some of the dating apps people are using – specifically Sniffies – and outlining how agencies can use the software to establish patterns for sexual activity in the immediate area and develop strategies to outreach options in real time, ultimately leading to an increase in PrEP and STI prevention uptake across all demographics.

MSM Perspectives on Hypothetical Novel HIV Testing and Linkage Technology in South Carolina
Men who have sex with men (MSM) in the U.S. South face a disproportionate burden of HIV yet remain underserved in traditional prevention and care pathways. Stigma, structural inequities, and limited access to culturally competent services contribute to poor engagement across the HIV care continuum. These barriers are exacerbated by resource-constrained settings such as the rural South.

Taking the Test Home: NKY Health’s Inclusive Approach to HIV Self Test Access
This presentation offers an in-depth exploration of NKY Health’s expansive HIV self-test distribution program, highlighting its multifaceted approach to making test kits readily available throughout the Northern Kentucky community. Our primary goal has been to maximize reach, ensuring these vital resources get into the hands of as many people as possible.

PrEPared RN: Bridging Health Equity Gaps Through Nurse-Delivered PrEP
This session showcases how nurses are transforming HIV prevention in one of the nation’s highest-incidence regions. This innovative, nurse-led model expands access to pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) through standing orders, telehealth, and mobile outreach, allowing same-day initiation of care.

PrEP, PEP & Pleasure: Tools of Sexual Liberation
This interactive presentation explores the intersection of sexual pleasure, HIV prevention, and liberation for communities of color. The Science of Sexuality and Pleasure, it reframes PrEP and PEP not just as biomedical tools, but as instruments of sexual agency, protection, and empowerment. Drawing on the imagery of chains, whips, handcuffs, and doxycycline, we assert that protection and pleasure are not mutually exclusive, but deeply intertwined. Through storytelling, case-based dialogue, and visual metaphors, we invite attendees to challenge conventional narratives that separate safety from desire.

Unhoused and Unheard: Addressing Structural Racism and STI Risk in Queer Youth Care
This presentation examines how housing precarity and systemic bias shape clinical encounters with queer adolescents of color. Drawing from direct clinical practice, supervision, and education within urban community settings, it highlights the ways traditional care models often replicate inequities through rigid policies, pathologizing language, and a lack of intersectional awareness.
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Transgender Empathy Training: Transforming Understanding Into Action
Transgender Empathy Training is an interactive, community-centered educational program designed to cultivate cultural humility, deepen understanding, and expand institutional capacity to support transgender, nonbinary, and gender-expansive people. Grounded in trauma-informed care, intersectional analysis, and lived experience, this training moves beyond basic terminology and policy compliance to build genuine human connection and sustained allyship.
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The Provision of STI Education and HIV Testing among Incarcerated Youth in Alabama
In 2022 in Alabama, youth age 13-24 made up the majority of chlamydia and gonorrhea cases, and nearly a quarter of new HIV diagnoses, illustrating the need for STI prevention efforts aimed at this population. Incarcerated youth represent a group more vulnerable to HIV/STI infection than youth in general. The UAB Family Clinic has partnered with the Alabama Department of Youth Services to provide HIV/STI education confidential HIV testing to youth held in detention facilities across the state of Alabama. In 2024, the UAB Family Clinic provided comprehensive HIV/STI education to approximately 350 youth across 3 sites, 268 of whom opted to be tested for HIV.


