Tools for Reporting on HIV/AIDS
The following links will help you navigate through the Kaiser Family Foundation's current work and resources on HIV/AIDS
HIV/AIDS Reporting Guides, Kaiser Family Foundation
Reporting guides on HIV/AIDS has been designed for journalists covering the global epidemic, often on short notice. The material covers a broad range of subjects including the science, treatment and prevention of HIV/AIDS. Country guides are also available.
HIV Animation, Kaiser Family Foundation
This broadcast-quality animation commissioned by the Kaiser Family Foundation illustrates how HIV infects a cell and how antiretroviral treatments combat the virus. It is being provided to broadcasters on a rights-free basis.
Fact Sheets: The HIV/AIDS Epidemic in Sub-Saharan Africa, Kaiser Family Foundation
This series of fact sheets includes an overview of the epidemic and individual country fact sheets for many countries in sub-Saharan Africa, with data on the number of people living with HIV/AIDS, the number of deaths due to HIV/AIDS, the impact on women, young people and children, and other key aspects of the epidemic.
Global Health Facts, Kaiser Family Foundation
Provides the latest country and region-specific data on HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria; demographic and economic indicators; program funding and financing; and other emerging health problems such as avian flu. The data are displayed in tables, charts, and color-coded maps and can be downloaded for custom analyses.
Data and Statistics on HIV/AIDS, Kaiser Family Foundation
Global Media AIDS Initiative (GMAI), Kaiser Family Foundation
The Global Media AIDS Initiative launched by UN Secretary General Kofi Annan, calls for the world's media leaders to lend their vast communications expertise and resources to address the global AIDS pandemic.
AIDS at 21: Media Coverage of the HIV Epidemic 1981-2002, Columbia Journalism Review
The Kaiser Family Foundation, in conjunction with Princeton Survey Research Associates, conducted a comprehensive examination of media coverage of HIV/AIDS from 1981 to 2002. An overview of the study, "AIDS at 21: Media Coverage of the HIV Epidemic 1981-2002" was a supplement to the March/April 2004 issue of the Columbia Journalism Review.