The National AIDS Trust is a United Kingdom charity with the purpose to stand alongside and defend the rights of everyone living with, affected by or at risk of HIV. Its expertise, research and advocacy secure lasting change to the lives of people living with and at risk of HIV. The charity's key strategic goals are:
Diana, Princess of Wales made a significant contribution to National AIDS Trust in her role as patron from 1991 to 1997. National AIDS Trust was one of only six charities that she formally supported at the time of her death, four as patron and two as president.[4]
Activities
Today, the Trust's funding comes from public donations, corporate supporters, grant-making trusts and foundations, and its own fundraising work – it doesn't receive funding from the UK Government. National AIDS Trust is a policy and campaigning charity, working to improve the national response to HIV through policy development, expertise and the provision of practical resources rather than through offering direct support services to people living with HIV.
Some recent National AIDS Trust successes include:
After a seven-year campaign, National AIDS Trust secured free HIV treatment in England[5]
National AIDS Trust brought together a coalition of charities to end the use of pre-employment health questionnaires before the offer of a job is made, through the Equality Act 2010.[6]
National AIDS Trust were instrumental in securing and participating in the review which led to an overturn of the lifetime ban on gay men donating blood.[7]
National AIDS Trust influenced Home Office policy so that asylum seekers living with HIV who need help with accommodation will not routinely be 'dispersed' away from the area where they are attending an HIV clinic.
The Government has announced an end to the absolute ban on HIV positive healthcare workers from doing jobs which involve 'exposure prone procedures' (e.g. dentistry, surgery). From early 2014, it will be possible for people living with HIV to work in these professions, provided they are on effective treatment with a non-detectable viral load and are monitored every three months. NAT has been calling for this change for a number of years – and we were the only charity on the expert working group which made the recommendation to change the rules, based on the most recent scientific evidence.[8]
National AIDS Trust lobbied the NHS to consider immediate treatment for those diagnosed with HIV because those who are on treatment suppress their viral load and cannot pass HIV on. The policy was changed, which was a contributing factor in historic drops in HIV diagnoses.[9]
In a much-publicised case, National AIDS Trust challenged NHS England in court over their failure to consider providing the HIV prevention drug PrEP. In 2016, NAT won their case in the High Court and won a later appeal, resulting in the IMPACT trial, which will benefit at least 10,000 at-risk patients in England.[10] The battle for PrEP was the topic of BBC Two documentary 'The People Vs The NHS: Who Gets The Drugs?' in July 2018.[11]
The National AIDS Trust is a small charity with one office found in Highgate in London, and maintains a permanent staff of fewer than 20 people, and a pool of volunteers. The current chief executive as of 2024 is Robbie Currie.[12]
An important recurring role of NAT is the annual hosting of the World AIDS Day[13] website. National AIDS Trust develops resources[14] each year to enable other HIV organisations to maximise the impact of World AIDS Day in the UK, which is 1 December.
National AIDS Trust is an independent charity with a board of trustees, who are responsible for the governance and direction which the charity takes. The chair of the Board since 2016 has been Professor Jane Anderson, CBE.[15]
^Weston, Janet; Berridge, Virginia (18 May 2017), "Transcript", HIV/AIDS and the Prison Service of England & Wales, 1980s-1990s [Internet], London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, retrieved 22 September 2024
^Berridge, Virginia (25 July 1996). AIDS in the UK: the making of a policy, 1981-1994. Oxford ; New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 189–90. ISBN978-0-19-820473-2.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)
^Bottomley, Virginia (9 June 2022). "First written statement of Virginia Bottomley"(PDF). Infected Blood Inquiry. Retrieved 22 September 2024. At that time (1988) I approached the Chair, Lord George Jellicoe concerning the appointment of Margaret Jay as the first director of the National Aids Trust