The Ensuring Positive Futures Partners
Ensuring Positive Futures has great strength in being a partnership of organisations. By joining forces, these organisations can combine their individual strengths in working towards a positive future for people living with HIV.
Six major HIV charities make up the Core Partners.
Core Partners
The National AIDS Trust (NAT) is the UK’s leading independent policy and campaigning voice on HIV and AIDS. NAT develop policies and campaign to stop the spread of HIV and Aids, and improve the quality of life for people affected by HIV, both in the UK and internationally. They aim to prevent the spread of HIV and AIDS, ensuring people living with HIV have access to treatment and care, and eradicate HIV-related stigma and discrimination. Find out more about NAT...
Oasis North London (ONL) was started around 1990 to offer a local service catering for people living with HIV in North London. Over the years, it has grown from a once weekly drop in, at Salvation Army premises to a new and modern centre offering a Web Café, IT classes, massage therapies, keep-fit sessions and more. Find out more about Oasis...
Positive East was formed in April 2005 from the merger between London East AIDS Network and The Globe Centre. Their services are provided across four centres in Ilford, Stratford, Stepney and Walthamstow.
Their aim is to create a safe environment for people to come and receive peer and professional support. Find out more about Positive East...
Positively Women was established in 1987 by a group of HIV positive women who were determined to set up services specific to women’s needs. Today, the organisation remains strongly committed to the principles of peer support and empowerment. It is the only national charity that provides support for women living with HIV by women living with HIV. Find out more about Positively Women...
THT was one of the first charities set up in response to the HIV epidemic and has been at the forefront of the fight against HIV and AIDS ever since. Their objectives are: to reduce the spread of HIV and promote good sexual health, to provide services which improve the health and quality of life of those affected, and to campaign for greater public understanding of the personal, social and medical impact of HIV and AIDS. Find out more about Terrence Higgins Trust...
UKC was established in 1993, and is a charity run by and for people living with HIV. UKC started life as an advocacy organisation fighting for the rights of people living with HIV and encouraging them to speak for themselves. They lobby for improved care and welfare for people living with HIV, and encourage the development of peer led services offering information, advice and guidance to people living with HIV. Find out more about UKC...