Watch AIDS Conference Coverage Live
For the first time in 22 years, the United States will host the International AIDS Conference in Washington, D.C., from July 22-27.
As many as 25,000 people from around the globe will converge on the nation's capital to discuss whether it might now be possible to start imagining "a beginning of the end of the HIV epidemic" -- and what needs to happen scientifically, socially and politically to make that happen.
Through our partners at Kaiser Family Foundation, watch live webcasts of each day's plenary sessions, plus webcasts, podcasts and transcripts of about 50 other sessions, and interviews with newsmakers, scientist and journalists. Links will be added to specific sessions as they become available.
Monday, July 22 Schedule
When each webcast becomes available, it will be linked below.
Plenary: Ending the Epidemic: Turning the Tide Together - Live Webcast: 08:30 - 10:30
Improving Effectiveness and Efficiency in the HIV Response
Health Disparities and the US MSM HIV Epidemic
Prevention Today: What's the Right Mix?
Comprehensive HIV Prevention for People Who Use Drugs: Ways Forward for Inclusion of Needle and Syringe Exchange Programmes
How Do We Get There? Country Planning for Maximum Impact
Can Public-Private Partnerships Help Those who Think Globally, Act Locally?
In-Country Ownership Solutions for Leadership and Accountability
Treatment as Prevention: Is It Time for Action?
Regional Session: Sustainable Development and HIV - A Caribbean Agenda
Young and Restless Youth Leadership: Together We Can
Newsmaker Press Conference
Sunday, July 21 Schedule
A Look Ahead: The 2012 International AIDS Conference - July 19
Washington Notebook: Interviews from the XIX International AIDS Conference
A Call to Action: Global Sex Workers Recommend Policy Change for Better HIV Prevention and Treatment
Beyond MDG 6: HIV and Chronic NCDs: Integrating Health Systems Toward Universal Health Coverage
New Frontiers in NIH AIDS Research
No "Getting to Zero" Without Scale-Up of Stigma Reduction
HIV/AIDS and the News Agenda - Implications for Ending the Epidemic










