National Gay Men's HIV Prevention Campaign Launched
National Gay Men's HIV Prevention Campaign Launched
www.think-again.ca
In response to rising HIV rates among gay and bisexual men in Canada, a coalition of HIV/AIDS organizations today unveiled the "How do you know what you know?" HIV prevention campaign in Vancouver.
This national campaign challenges the assumptions men make when they have sex with each other -- assumptions that may increase their risk for transmitting or contracting HIV.
"This campaign also addresses the urgent need to re-invigorate HIV prevention across the country" said Phillip Banks of AIDS Vancouver, the national campaign coordinator.
HIV infection rates have been on the increase among gay and bisexual men. For 2002 Health Canada estimated that 40% of new HIV infections in Canada were among men who have sex with men, compared to 30% in 1996. This, according to Sarah Poirer, Senior Communications Advisor to Health Canada, is the reason why it is important to reach this target group.
Here in Toronto, men who have sex with men comprised 57% of all new infections in 2001 and 61% of all new infections in 2002.
The campaign, which uses sexy images of men and provocative text, is concentrated in Vancouver, Edmonton, Winnipeg, Toronto, Montreal, Halifax and additional communities throughout British Columbia and Ontario.
For the next six months, the campaign will consist of print advertising, transit and billboard advertising, posters, postcards, condom packs and website: www.think-again.ca The mediums used will differ slightly in each area.
Originally created for the San Francisco AIDS Foundation, AIDS Vancouver and its national partners then adapted the campaign to be more reflective of Canadian demographics.
Health Canada Funding annoucement
See news story and more info...

Pattison Signs have refused to provide billboard
http://www.avi.org/node/view/428
Pattison Signs have refused to provide billboard or advertising space to this campaign.
Check out new report Pattison company rejects AIDS ads
Open letter to Pattison from Victoria Gay Men's Alliance
Below is a letter sent to local media in response to Jimmy Pattison's companies refusal to allow the Think-again campaign to buy advertising space on his billboards and bus shelters.
Open letter to Pattison from Victoria Gay Men's Alliance (being sent to local media in Victoria including Sun, Province and CBC.)
Dear Mr. Pattison,
Canada's gay men's communities and the nation's HIV prevention workers are shocked that your company, Pattison Outdoor has refused to sell billboard and other outdoor advertising space for Canada's first national HIV/AIDS prevention campaign for gay men.
The "Think Again" campaign focuses on arming gay men with HIV prevention information by challenging the assumptions they may make about the HIV status of others. The Victoria Gay Men's Alliance recognizes the critical need for this kind of campaign in light of rising HIV rates in their communities, and fully supports the campaign.
Your spokesperson said to CBC "the messages and the visuals are inappropriate for our environment." Who's environment would that be? Certainly not the environments of the thousands of gay men who live in the very communities where this campaign would run. Your company's decision will mean thousands of gay men will not see the campaign, at a time when HIV rates are climbing among gay men faster than in any other population group*.
The Victoria Gay Men's Alliance was formed to support innovative programs for gay men and to challenge homophobia wherever it exists. Pattison Outdoor's decision, because of its near monopoly on billboard space in many gay communities, will negatively affect the health of gay men, as many will not see this campaign. The same campaign in the United States was credited with reducing the infection rates for HIV in many of the communities in which it ran. We urge Pattison Outdoor to think about the consequences of its decision, and to reverse it.
*HIV infection rates have been on the increase among gay and bisexual men. For 2002 Health Canada estimated that 40% of new HIV infections in Canada were among men who have sex with men, compared to 30% in 1996. This is the reason why it is important to reach this gay men target group.
Victoria Gay Men's Alliance
email this group at victoriagaymen@yahoo.ca
Afrikanerp
hmm... good site
Thank You
Thank You. Very useful
Forced Sex - "Women giving you his IP address and keeping forced sex fantasies".
Violent Rape - "I've believed that they have choices, and believe they violent rape slathered one another victim".
Drunk Rape - "drunk rape I'm saying is an excellent chance to travel and face".
Virgin Rape - "I just smiled into the house, and virgin rape found its way of knowing".
Questions & Answers Think-Again
Questions & Answers
Q.1. Why are gay men continuing to have unsafe sex?
A.1. First, we should keep in mind many gay/bisexual men do practice safer sex. This is highlighted by the Ontario Men’s Survey. However, some men do not practice safer sex consistently for many reasons. This campaign addresses one of them: the inaccurate assumptions men make about their sexual partners.
Q.2. Why is this campaign important?
A.2. This campaign is important as it breaks away from the traditional “use a condom every time” HIV prevention message. It acknowledges that safer sex is not a consistent reality for some men and attempts to address one of the reasons why this is so.
This campaign comes at a time when HIV rates are rising and there is a need to re-invigorate HIV prevention efforts.
Q.3. Why does the campaign focus on challenging assumptions?
A.3. This campaign focuses on the unspoken assumptions men make that put themselves and others at risk for transmitting or contracting HIV.
Research has revealed that gay men’s assumptions may influence their perceptions and behaviours related to practicing safer sex.
When their assumptions are correct there may be no risk of transmitting or contracting HIV. When their assumptions are incorrect, however, they may be unintentionally compromising their own health or the health of their partner.
By getting men to rethink their assumptions we are encouraging them to make informed decisions about their sexual practices.
Q.4. What does the campaign hope to achieve?
A.4. The goal of the Assumptions campaign is to bring about a decline in the number of new HIV infections in the Canadian gay male population by encouraging gay men to challenge their assumptions about the serostatus of the partners, thereby reducing the incidence of unprotected anal intercourse between sero-discordant gay men (men whose HIV status is different).
Q.5. Is the focus of the campaign the disclosure of people’s HIV status?
A.5. No. This is not a campaign about the disclosure of one’s HIV status. This is a campaign to increase the practice of safer sex and to encourage men to recognize the assumptions they make that can put them at higher risk for infection.
Q.6. Is this campaign pulling back from stressing universal condom use?
A.6. Yes. This campaign tries to address the complexities of decision making around condom use and why men still practice unsafe sex.
This campaign is promoting the practice of safer sex. However, we know that gay men have been inundated with the ‘condom’ message to the point that it may not be an effective communications tool for everyone.
Accordingly, HIV prevention, and this campaign, must move beyond “use a condom everytime” messages in order to engage and be relevant to today’s population of gay men. Effective messages assist men in making realistic and informed decisions about their personalized risk-reduction practices.
Q.7. Why are you using a US-based campaign instead of a Canadian one?
A.7. The San Francisco campaign that we have purchased was proven successful in creating awareness in the US, so we have adapted and expanded it to a Canadian cultural context in order to ensure acceptability, accessibility and maximal relevance to the target population.
We made the decision to purchase a campaign rather than create one due to time and budget constraints this year. It was more cost-effective and time-effective to purchase and adapt a campaign. Next year we plan to develop and implement a Canadian campaign.
Outlooks rejects AIDS prevention ad (Xtra! West)
Outlooks rejects AIDS prevention ad
SAVING LIVES / And won’t reimburse the organizers
Xtra! West
story by Robin Perelle / Xtra! West Jul 8 2004
What do Outlooks magazine and Pattison Outdoor have in common? Both have refused to run AIDS Vancouver’s new HIV prevention campaign. Pattison Outdoor, owned by local billionaire Jimmy Pattison, controls everything from billboards to bus shelters throughout much of the Lower Mainland. Outlooks describes itself as Canada’s national gay community magazine.
Minutes after receiving word of Outlooks’ refusal to run the ads, campaign organizer Phillip Banks is almost too stunned to speak. “I’m shocked,” he says. “I’m like really, really shocked and enormously disappointed.”
This is such an important campaign, he continues. It comes at a time when HIV prevention campaigns specifically targeting gay men in Canada have been “derailed” for seven or eight years.
This campaign is meant to “reinvigorate” the discussion, Banks says. With gay men accounting for about 52 percent of new HIV infections, “it’s just such an important issue.
“I was mildly shocked when Pattison rejected the creative for its billboards,” Banks continues. “But for a gay publication to do this…” he trails off.
Outlooks publisher Roy Heale says he’s just following the guidelines he recently drafted in response to his readers’ and distributors’ concerns. The guidelines “prohibit both graphic and overtly implied depictions of sexual activity within advertisements.”
Says Heale: “We feel that certain things are acceptable and certain things aren’t.” It’s his responsibility to know what his readers are looking for, he adds. “We cater to our readership, and that is what a publication is supposed to do.”
Heale says Outlooks tightened its guidelines after receiving complaints about two ad campaigns earlier this year. Now, he says, he has to stick to those guidelines—without exception. “You can’t just make exceptions and break rules. Unfortunately—or fortunately—you have to stand behind them.”
Heale says he may, however, reconsider how the guidelines should apply to AIDS organizations when they next come up for review. But until the guidelines are changed, he won’t enforce them selectively.
Besides, he adds, AIDS Vancouver got its ad in a day late. “Obviously, AIDS Vancouver had something that was controversial,” Heale says. “It’s a shame [they] came in so late, so there was no time for discussion. If you get your ads in on time, there’s opportunity for discussion.”
Banks says he didn’t expect to need any discussion. “I never even imagined” that HIV prevention ads would need approval from a gay publication, he says.
Banks denies receiving a copy of Outlooks’ new guidelines. Heale says the guidelines were sent out to all advertisers after they were implemented in February. Guidelines or not, Banks questions the principle behind the policy. Images suggesting gay men having sex should be “within the realm of acceptable in a queer publication,” he says.
This is an HIV-prevention campaign, he emphasizes. “If the publication doesn’t have the mettle to take on an issue such as this…” Banks trails off again. Then it “really forces me to wonder” whether Outlooks has a place as a national gay publication, he concludes.
“I can’t help but feel it’s a bit of an abdication of its responsibility to the gay community,” he adds.
That’s because he won’t be “sitting here getting all the letters” from angry readers, Heale retorts. “After seven and a half years, we know what’s going to create negative feedback from the readers.”
AIDS Vancouver could have found another way to get its message across, Heale continues—one that wasn’t sexually explicit. “If you have to use that kind of graphic to get a message across, then it’s pretty sad,” he says.
The publisher points to the 2001 Condom Country campaign as an example of an effective ad that didn’t need any sexual images. The ad featured two men, fully clothed, riding horses and welcoming people to condom country.
Banks says the feedback he’s received so far suggests his new ads are more effective. This isn’t just a simple “use a condom” message, he points out. The new campaign goes beyond condom use to challenge the underlying assumptions men make about the people they’re about to have sex with—and whether they’re HIV-positive or -negative.
The new AIDS Vancouver ads feature several images of men in sexually suggestive poses with captions such as: “He’d tell me if he were positive.” (Turn to page 3 of this issue to view an ad.)
Outlooks is the only gay publication in Canada that’s expressed any problem with the ads, Banks notes.
In fact, the ads are now running in 32 publications across the country—gay and straight. Only one other publication, a straight alternative in Winnipeg called Uptown Magazine, rejected some of the ads.
Granted, Outlooks did offer AIDS Vancouver a bit of extra time (Heale says 24 hours; Banks says one) to submit a different image after rejecting the original ad. Banks initially refused, reluctant both to compromise his principles and to spend money the campaign “just doesn’t have” on a new image.
In the end, Banks re-submitted the same ad—with its image blurred and a new note inviting readers to look at the image on the campaign’s website.
Heale says that was unacceptable. Banks wrote “censored” across the ad, Heale explains. But “the ad wasn’t censored. It didn’t meet our guidelines.”
Banks says he also submitted a second substitute image: a big empty box with a black border and the campaign’s website in the middle. Outlooks rejected that one, too.
Heale doesn’t know why his staff rejected the almost-blank box. By then it was just “way past deadline,” he guesses.
Banks says he feels disrespected by the whole encounter. And to add insult to injury, he says Outlooks won’t reimburse the money AIDS Vancouver pre-paid for the ad space.
“They’re actually taking money away from HIV prevention,” Banks says. AIDS Vancouver could have used the money to run the ad in other publications, he notes.
Heale is unimpressed. His refusal to reimburse AIDS Vancouver’s money is in keeping with standard business practices, he says. “If you book space and your ad doesn’t arrive on time, you have to pay for the space.”
Banks says Outlooks’ decision to keep AIDS Vancouver’s money and reject its ad feels “punitive.”
Other Links:
Think Again Campaign Website
AIDS Vancouver
gayway
Pattison's company rejects ADS
Xtra! West