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Live chat hours are Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Fridays from 7pm-10pm.
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Western Ontario Opening Doors HIV Counselling Initiative is proud to present: Opening Doors: Closing the Door on Stigma, March 1 & 2, 2012!
Registration is now open for Opening Doors: Closing the Door on Stigma! For only $25 for Service Providers (payable at the door), this is an excellent opportunity to further our understanding of the stigma that accompanies the HIV virus and reflect upon our own biases. This event is FREE for PHAs (accomodations and meals provided), and also includes a FREE shuttle from Windsor and Chatham to London. Registration includes: Thursday March 1st, 2012: (Evening only)
Friday March 2nd, 2012: (All day; breaks and lunch included)
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WOODCI is proud to have Louise Binder, Lawyer, Activist and PHA, joining us as our Keynote Speaker at dinner on Thursday March 1st. Louise's impressive HIV advocacy and outreach includes involvement with such great organizations as: Toronto People with AIDS Foundation, Provincial Women’s AIDS Organization, the Canadian Treatment Action Council, the Federal Ministerial Council on HIV/AIDS, the Community Advisory Committee of the Canadian HIV Trials Network, Blueprint for Action on Women and Girls and HIV/AIDS, the Canadian Advisory Committee for the HIV+ Children’s Hospital Project, Global Coalition on Women and AIDS Leadership Council and is currently vice-chair of Voices of Positive Women. To view a short clip of our Keynote, Louise Binder, click here. |
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FOR MORE INFORMATION PLEASE CONTACT This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it OR 519-973-0222 eXT. 225 |

AIDS Committee of Windsor Marks World AIDS Day
Thursday, December 1, 2011
Windsor, Ontario: The AIDS Committee of Windsor will mark World AIDS Day, Thursday, December 1, 2011 with a commemorative evening at the Art Gallery of Windsor in Downtown Windsor. Since 1987, this important day has honoured those whom we have lost to AIDS and has become one of the most recognized international events attributed to this pandemic.
“This year we’re expecting more than double the number of people attending our candlelight ceremony, my sense is this due in part to the fact that Windsor is starting to recognize that HIV remains an issue for our community, and people wish to make a difference,” says Michele Sharp, Executive Director. “Over the past year, the work at the ACW has increased dramatically with more people are accessing our services and in response, I’m proud to say much more effective programming,” says Sharp. “We are seeing an expanding landscape of people being diagnosed with HIV, including women, first nations and newcomers to Canada – all of which stretch our resources and we struggle to meet demands.”
Recent statistics indicate that Windsor-Essex and Chatham-Kent (the catchment area served by ACW), has as many as 700 people living with HIV or AIDS and as many as 30% of people with HIV go undiagnosed. From 2003 to 2008, there was a 31% increase in HIV diagnosis in Ontario.
While it’s true that dramatic improvements in treatment have people living longer, many other issues continue to impact those who live with HIV (and especially those who are unable to work). This includes systemic marginalization, isolation and stigma– all which compound the health and well being of these community members.
Issues specific to Windsor also impact the work at ACW. For example; a higher than average unemployment rate, high incidence of people who use intravenous drugs and a large multicultural community where stigma is much more of an issue than in other at risk populations.
AIDS Committee of Windsor (ACW) is a registered charity that provides support, education and outreach services for people at risk of, or living with HIV/AIDS. Our services span the Windsor-Essex and Chatham-Kent counties through two offices located in downtown Windsor and downtown Chatham respectively.
Since 1985, the ACW has grown, expanded and evolved to address the constantly changing needs of our community. Our committed volunteers, board and staff work very hard to offer direct services to over 500 people annually as well as community education programs to more than 6,000 youth and adults in our region each year.

A Big Thank You To The Community!!!
Windsor-Essex and Chatham-Kent didn't just stand there, they made a make a difference in the lives of those living with or affected by HIV/AIDS by walking, volunteering or making a donations! We raised over $25,500.00 in our annual campaign!
The money raised supports innovative programs and services that are essential to maintaining the health of individuals living with the disease and providing education / prevention of spread of the epidemic.
Thank you so much to our participants, sponsors, volunteers and all of the donors who made a huge difference, we truly appreciate the support.
For over 18 years the AIDS Committee of Windsor has served the Windsor and Essex counties with one of the most effective and far reaching Harm Reduction programs in Canada!
Since 1993, the AIDS Committee of Windsor has distributed more than 1.8 million clean needles with a phenomenal return rate of 99.02%!
This means that not only is the ACW helping to keep our community free of used needles, but according to Dr. Jeff Cohen at the HIV Care Clinic, “Windsor/Essex has one of the lowest HIV rates among People who use Drugs (PUDs) because of the needle exchange program run by the ACW.”
Rooted in the measures taken to reduce the spread of HIV among injection drug users in the 1980s, the most commonly accepted definition of harm reduction is "measures taken to address drug problems that are open to outcomes other than abstinence or cessation of use." - Canadian Centre on Substance Abuse.
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