
Statement on safety and care for our immigrant clients, participants, and communities
SFAF re-affirms our commitment and care to the entire diverse communities of immigrants that we see and serve at our sites.
San Francisco AIDS Foundation has been a go-to community resource for information about HIV, sexual health and substance use since our founding in 1982. Today, our 200 employees offer more services, programs and advocacy to more people than ever. Learn more about SFAF today on our mission, our work, our advocacy and our impact pages.
For interview and other media requests, please contact our communications team at 415-487-8064.
media@sfaf.orgFor the most up-to-date information about HIV, information about our programs and partnerships, and press releases, visit our blog.
Get the LatestSFAF re-affirms our commitment and care to the entire diverse communities of immigrants that we see and serve at our sites.
This lawsuit was filed on behalf of multiple non-profits that serve the LGBTQ+ community, work to end the HIV epidemic, and record the history of LGBTQ+ people.
We look forward to addressing the challenging issues of substance use and overdose in partnership with Mayor Lurie and his team.
We are deeply concerned by the freeze on federal funding, halt to PEPFAR funding, harmful executive actions, ban on DEI programs, actions against immigrants, anti-trans and anti-LGBTQ+ actions, and more.
Construction is expected to begin at Strut in February, 2025; the sexual health clinic Magnet will remain open and operational during construction.
This ambitious project, titled, “We Live: Voices of the First Generation to Survive HIV/AIDS,” aims to capture and preserve the untold stories of long-term survivors across the nation.
SFAF and the Los Angeles LGBT Center to celebrate the impact of more than 30 years of AIDS/LifeCycle on HIV and LGBTQ+ communities with a final historic event.
Anne Donnelly, State Healthcare Policy Director at San Francisco AIDS Foundation, helps explain expansions to the state’s AIDS Drug Assistance Program (ADAP) and associated services.
San Francisco AIDS Foundation promotes health, wellness, and social justice for communities most impacted by HIV, through sexual health and substance use services, advocacy, and community partnerships. Founded in 1982, SFAF envisions a future where health justice is achieved for all people living with or at risk for HIV, ultimately striving for a day when race is not a barrier to health and wellness, substance use is not stigmatized, HIV status does not determine quality of life, and HIV transmission is eliminated. Each year more than 21,000 people rely on SFAF programs and services and millions more find advocacy tools and information they need online.