Symposium / Conference / Workshop

Faith Over Fear

How Lessons from HIV are Informing COVID-19 Response

You are invited to participate in the first webinar of the CFAR Faith and Spirituality Research Collaborative (CFSRC) summer webinar series. Please see the attached flyer.

The first session, entitled: Faith over Fear: How Lessons from HIV are Informing COVID-19 Response will be held on Tuesday, May 19 at 11am CT.The sessions will be livestreamed on the UAB School of Public Health’s Facebook Page.

For more about the May 19th webinar, please see information below written by CFAR colleague and panelist, Dr. John Blevins, Emory CFAR:

This panel looks at the way that the knowledge and experiences of those individuals and communities most affected by HIV serve as the essential foundation for a scientifically sound, community focused, and sustainable HIV response. At times, many medical and public health researchers have assumed a kind of expert knowledge that supersedes community wisdom and efforts to establish and nurture strong community partnerships are relegated to the function of an advisory board. We have learned hard lessons to ensure that sound HIV prevention, treatment, and support initiatives are informed by the priorities and insights of communities most affected.

For faith-based initiatives, however, this issue remains complex. Often, religious leaders are identified as experts who talk about the lives of women, gay men, trans folk, and people of color (the communities disproportionately impacted by HIV in the southeastern US). However, women, gay men, trans folk, and people of color themselves are rarely asked to lead faith-based HIV initiatives but are relegated to an advisory role (if invited to participate at all).

This panel will discuss how members of the communities most affected by HIV can assume leadership in faith-based HIV initiatives carried out by HIV researchers and how the religious and spiritual practices of these communities can inform such initiatives. Drawing on the idea that the knowledge and experiences of those most affected by an event should inform a public health response, the panel will also discuss how community knowledge is essential for a sound response to COVID-19, both in the United States and globally.