Gilead Sciences and Wake Forest University School of Divinity Partner to Address HIV Epidemic Through Faith-Based Programming and Community Outreach
Gilead Sciences (Nasdaq: GILD) has partnered with Wake Forest University School of Divinity as part of its COMPASS Initiative, aimed at addressing the HIV epidemic in the Southern United States. This partnership will expand outreach to faith-based communities, particularly the Black church. Established in 2017, COMPASS is a 10-year initiative investing over $100 million in combating healthcare disparities and HIV stigma. Gilead has provided $52 million to nearly 150 organizations since the program's inception, focusing on areas identified by the CDC as severely impacted by HIV.
- Partnership with Wake Forest University expands outreach to faith-based communities.
- COMPASS Initiative invests over $100 million, demonstrating commitment to combat HIV epidemic.
- $52 million provided to nearly 150 organizations in the Southern U.S. since inception.
- None.
Gilead Sciences, Inc. (Nasdaq: GILD) today announced a new partnership with the Wake Forest University School of Divinity, one of the leading academic and faith-based institutions in the United States, as part of the company’s ongoing COMPASS Initiative®. Through COMPASS, Gilead works with non-profit and academic institutions, which serve as coordinating centers that direct support to local community organizations through grants, training and collaborative learning opportunities to help mitigate the HIV epidemic in the Southern United States.
Wake Forest will serve as the initiative’s fourth coordinating center, expanding into faith-based communities, notably the Black church, to address an important element of Gilead’s strategy to reach people living with or at risk of HIV in the Southern United States. Wake Forest will join the existing coordinating centers: Emory University Rollins School of Public Health, Southern AIDS Coalition and the University of Houston Graduate College of Social Work.
“In our role as a coordinating center, the Wake Forest University School of Divinity is looking forward to working with other faith-based organizations to shift harmful cultural narratives about HIV throughout the Southern United States to narratives of justice, healing and hope,” said Rev. Jonathan Lee Walton, PhD, Dean of the Wake Forest University School of Divinity. “We are pleased to work with Gilead and the other coordinating centers to help advance social justice, interfaith and LGBTQ+ issues across communities and build strong partnerships that bring innovative solutions to people living with and at risk of HIV.”
“COMPASS is an important example of Gilead’s commitment to address healthcare disparities as part of our broader efforts to promote social justice,” said Daniel O’Day, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Gilead Sciences. "From our years of working with people and organizations battling HIV in the Southern United States, we recognize the important role of faith communities and leaders. We are looking forward to working with Wake Forest and a growing network of faith leaders as part of the overarching efforts to end the HIV epidemic.”
Launched in 2017, COMPASS is a 10-year, more than
COMPASS focuses on the geographies in the Southern United States identified by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and U.S. Department of Health and Human Services as hardest hit by HIV, and where the government is providing additional resources, technology and expertise to expand HIV prevention and treatment activities.
The Black community and other communities of color continue to experience the greatest burden of HIV in the United States, according to the CDC. Despite being only
“The disproportionate burden of HIV on Black communities and other communities of color in the U.S. South is alarming,” said Rev. Shonda Jones, EdD, who will lead the coordinating center’s activities and is Senior Associate Dean of the Wake Forest University School of Divinity. “Through COMPASS, we have an opportunity to eradicate root causes of HIV, including stigma, and to reach people impacted by the disease through Black churches and other interfaith partners in the Southern United States.”
Outreach in the context of interfaith services and beyond offers an opportunity to educate community organizations about HIV.
“I know first-hand about the stigma that many of us face in the Black community,” said Morris Singletary, Executive Director of Pozitive2Positive, which first received COMPASS funding in 2019. “COMPASS has given our organization the opportunity to help connect with Black men of faith and build a program that helps us support one another. I look forward to working with Wake Forest and Gilead to drive change and foster conversations around faith, sexuality and health.”
About Gilead Sciences
Gilead Sciences, Inc. is a biopharmaceutical company that has pursued and achieved breakthroughs in medicine for more than three decades, with the goal of creating a healthier world for all people. The company is committed to advancing innovative medicines to prevent and treat life-threatening diseases, including HIV, viral hepatitis and cancer. Gilead operates in more than 35 countries worldwide, with headquarters in Foster City, California.
Gilead has promoted equity, particularly healthcare equity, since the company brought its first therapies to the market. Through global partnerships, Gilead’s medicines today reach millions of people in low- and middle-income countries around the world. In the United States, Gilead has committed more than
For more information about Gilead, please visit the company’s website at www.gilead.com, follow Gilead on Twitter (@Gilead Sciences) or call Gilead Public Affairs at 1-800-GILEAD-5 or 1-650-574-3000.
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