U.S. Chargé d’Affaires Virginia Blaser (right) and Centers for Disease Control (CDC) Country Director Dr. David Lowrance (center) listen to Tanzania Youth Alliance (TAYOA) CEO Peter Masika explain how the National Treatment Hotline works.
U.S. Chargé d’Affaires Virginia Blaser (right) congratulates Tanzania Youth Alliance (TAYOA) Board Chairman Ambassador Charles Sanga and CEO Peter Masika on the launch of the National Treatment Hotline.
Jackline Kiwele (holding microphone) of the Tanzania Youth Alliance (TAYOA) moderates a discussion on gender-based violence and HIV/AIDS with Centers for Disease Control (CDC) Country Director Dr. David Lowrance, U.S. Chargé d’Affaires Virginia Blaser, and TAYOA CEO Peter Masika.
U.S. Embassy Dar es Salaam
TANZANIA
|
November 30, 2016
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
U.S. CHARGÉ D’AFFAIRES LAUNCHES TANZANIA YOUTH ALLIANCE (TAYOA) TREATMENT HELPLINE AND MOBILE OUTREACH BUS
Dar es Salaam, TANZANIA. In anticipation of World AIDS Day on December 1, Chargé d’Affaires of the U.S. Embassy to Tanzania Virginia Blaser visited the Tanzania Youth Alliance (TAYOA) on November 29 to launch the organization’s National Health AIDS Helpline (117) and mobile outreach bus. TAYOA CEO Peter Masika and Board Chairman Ambassador Charles Sanga welcomed Chargé Blaser and Centers for Disease Control (CDC) Country Director Dr. David Lowrance.
During a tour of TAYOA’s offices, Chargé Blaser enjoyed a first-hand look at TAYOA’s helpline center. After inaugurating a new, treatment-focused hotline as part of the National Health AIDS Helpline, she donned a head-set and practiced fielding a call to get a true sense of how the service provides helpful and appropriate responses to callers’ treatment questions. She also participated in a live demonstration of TAYOA’s SMS text messaging service, and helped disseminate a targeted health message to 500,000 people.
Chargé Blaser engaged in a frank roundtable discussion with 20 social and community health workers, focusing on the issues of gender-based violence and efforts to encourage the new national and WHO-supported “Test and Start” guidelines. “Our goal is to achieve an AIDS-free generation in Tanzania, and it takes all of us to reach it – government, the private sector, partners, donors, and the American people working with the Tanzanian people,” Chargé Blaser emphasized.
Together with TAYOA CEO Peter Masika and Board Chairman Ambassador Charles Sanga, Chargé Blaser participated in a ribbon-cutting ceremony to launch TAYOA’s Community HIV Testing and Counseling Bus. The mobile testing center enables TAYOA to expand its reach by offering needed HIV testing and treatment referral services to under-served and hard-to-reach communities in Tanzania. In 2016, the U.S. Government through the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) awarded TAYOA $1.8 million to provide HIV testing and counseling services for mobile and key populations in Tanzania.
To request more information about this statement, please call the U.S. Embassy Dar es Salaam Press Office at Tel: +255 22 229-4000 or email: DPO@state.gov.
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