
'We're healthy and we can't pass it on' - Shoreham HIV patient's message to combat stigma
ITV News Meridian's James Dunham has been speaking to Sue Hunter about her story.
A HIV patient has been sharing the dangers of misinformation around the virus after she feared she would die after her positive diagnosis.
Sue Hunter from Shoreham, Sussex, tested positive in 2006 and is on medication. It involves taking one pill a day, which stops her from getting unwell and has suppressed the virus, so it is untransmissible.
She is now backing a charity campaign which aims to stop the stigma, as she wants people to understand that the treatment is effective at making sure she is not able to pass on HIV to anyone else.
Ms Hunter said: "I didn't have the correct information and that caused me to have fear, the fear that I was going to die.
"Obviously, I got that information that allowed me to tell myself that I can live a long and healthy life."
When asked how it makes her feel when people are judgemental about her diagnosis, she said: "It makes me feel different, it makes me feel inadequate, it makes me feel as though I've done something wrong.
"There was a potential partner and I told him I was living with HIV, on medication, and he told me 'I value my life too much to have a relationship with you'."
She wants to combat the stigma of HIV patients like her, saying "We're here, we're great, we're living a healthy life, we can't pass HIV on. Please look at the science."
Ms Hunter is one of than 100,000 people thought to be living with the virus in the UK.
The 'Can't Pass It On' message, is being shared across Brighton and Hove as part of an awareness drive by theTerrance Higgins Trust.
Marc Tweed from Terrance Higgins Trust, said: "People have got really out of date ideas about HIV.
"They don't realise how far HIV treatment has progressed and for most people that means one pill a day. There's even injectable HIV medication, some people have an injection once every six months."

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
7 hours ago
- Daily Mail
MSNBC anchor chokes up live on air as he blames Trump and Musk for African boy's HIV death
MSNBC's Lawrence O'Donnell held back tears while blaming the death of a 5-year-old African boy born with HIV on Donald Trump and Elon Musk. The Last Word host labeled the pair 'soulless, mindless entities' on Monday's show, claiming their cuts to the US Agency for International Development (USAID) caused the death of the South Sudanese boy. ' The richest person in the world carrying around his drug box of Ecstasy, Adderall, psychedelic mushrooms and then taking life-saving drugs away from the poorest people in the world is a picture only Donald Trump could have created,' O'Donnell said. The host had been referring to a New York Times piece in March that detailed how Evan Anzoo died days after Trump and Musk halted all US foreign aid pending a review on January 20. Eighty-three percent of USAID programs - including the one providing aid to Anzoo - have been terminated since. The boy had been taking antiretroviral medicines that cost less than 12 cents per day, an emotional O'Donnell said, while also taking aim at Secretary of State Marco Rubio. 'Evan died on his watch,' the host said of Rubio, who last month told members of Congress that no children would die following the freezing of aid packages. Scroll down for video: 'Evans of all ages are dying on Marco Rubio's watch, and no one is counting. 'And so we don't know as of tonight whether it's tens of thousands or hundreds of thousands of Evans, but we know it will be.' O'Donnell cited a separate New York Times piece, headlined Elon Musk's Legacy is Disease, Starvation and Death, that stated the cuts have led to an estimated 300,000 deaths overseas. 'Most of them children,' the host said. 'And it will most likely lead to significantly more by the end of the year.' 'This is what Musk's foray into politics accomplished,' he continued. 'If there were justice in the world, Musk would never be able to repair his reputation - at least not without devoting the bulk of his fortune to easing the misery he's engendered.' O'Donnell said that that Musk's time in government 'has revealed severe flaws in his character.' '[It's shown] a blithe, dehumanizing cruelty and a deadly incuriosity,' he said. Musk officially stepped down from his role in Trump 's administration over the weekend. The move - which came months after the Tesla and SpaceX boss shelled out nearly $300 million in political spending to help re-elect Trump - brought an abrupt end to one of politics' most unconventional partnerships. The funds that paid for Evan's medication, meanwhile, came from emergency plan for AIDS relief launched by George W. Bush in 2003. Before being frozen, the program reportedly saved more than 26 million lives.


ITV News
13 hours ago
- ITV News
'Concerning jump' in antibiotic resistant gonorrhoea
There has been a "concerning jump" in cases of gonorrhoea resistant to strong antibiotics, health officials have warned. New figures from the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) show there have been more cases of the sexually transmitted infection (STI) that are resistant to the antibiotic ceftriaxone so far in 2025 than the whole of last year. Overall, there was a 16% drop in gonorrhoea cases in 2024 in England, with 71,802 diagnoses, compared with 85,370 in 2023. However, ceftriaxone-resistant gonorrhoea cases are being detected more frequently - with 14 in the first five months of 2025 compared with 13 in the whole of the previous year. Six of the 14 cases this year have been "extensively drug-resistant", which means that they were resistant to ceftriaxone and then to second-line treatment options, according to the UKHSA. What is gonorrhoea? According to the NHS, Gonorrhoea is a sexually transmitted disease caused by the bacterium Neisseria gonorrhoeae. It is often symptomless, but symptoms can include unusual discharge from the genitals, pain during urination or sex, a sore throat, or redness in the eyes. Untreated gonorrhoea can cause serious complications which can lead to infertility in both men and women. If you think you might have gonorrhoea you can get tested for free through the NHS, either with a self-test kit or by going to a sexual health clinic. Gonorrhoea is treated with a single dose of antibiotics, which can be an injection or tablets. You would need to go back to your GP or clinic about a week later to check you no longer have gonorrhoea. Ceftriaxone is a strong antibiotic and the main treatment for gonorrhoea. Experts are therefore concerned when infections fail to respond to it. Most of these drug-resistant cases are linked with travel to or from the Asia-Pacific region, where the prevalence of ceftriaxone resistance is high. Elsewhere, among people in England, early-stage syphilis diagnoses rose 1.7%, from 9,375 in 2023 to 9,535 in 2024. The overall figure for syphilis, including late-stage syphilis or complications from the infection, increased 5% from 12,456 in 2023 to 13,030 in 2024. Chlamydia fell 13%, from 194,143 diagnoses in 2023 to 168,889 in 2024, while people diagnosed for the first time with genital warts also dropped. Among women aged 15 to 24 who are recommended to be screened through the National Chlamydia Screening Programme (NCSP), there was a 10.7% decrease in the number of chlamydia tests carried out, from 673,102 to 601,295. Dr Hamish Mohammed, consultant epidemiologist at UKHSA, said: "Levels of STIs in this country remain a big threat to sexual wellbeing. "These infections can have a major impact on your health and that of any sexual partners - particularly if they are antibiotic resistant. "If you've had condomless sex with new or casual partners - either in the UK or overseas - get tested for STIs and HIV at least yearly, even if you don't have symptoms. Regular testing protects both you and those you're having sex with. "From August, eligible people will also be offered vaccination to reduce the risk of gonorrhoea and we expect to see the immunisation programme have an impact on diagnoses of this infection in coming years - please take up the vaccine if you are offered it."


Glasgow Times
13 hours ago
- Glasgow Times
Experts warn of ‘concerning jump' in antibiotic-resistant gonorrhoea
New figures from the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) show there have been more cases of the sexually transmitted infection (STI) gonorrhoea that are resistant to the antibiotic ceftriaxone so far in 2025 than the whole of last year. Overall, there was a 16% drop in gonorrhoea cases in 2024 in England, with 71,802 diagnoses, compared with 85,370 in 2023. However, ceftriaxone-resistant gonorrhoea cases are being detected more frequently – with 14 in the first five months of 2025 compared with 13 in the whole of the previous year. Six of the 14 cases this year have been 'extensively drug-resistant', which means that they were resistant to ceftriaxone and then to second-line treatment options, according to the UKHSA. Ceftriaxone is a strong antibiotic and the main treatment for gonorrhoea. Experts are therefore concerned when infections fail to respond to it. Most of these drug-resistant cases are linked with travel to or from the Asia-Pacific region, where the prevalence of ceftriaxone resistance is high. Elsewhere, among people in England, early-stage syphilis diagnoses rose 1.7%, from 9,375 in 2023 to 9,535 in 2024. The overall figure for syphilis, including late-stage syphilis or complications from the infection, increased 5% from 12,456 in 2023 to 13,030 in 2024. Chlamydia fell 13%, from 194,143 diagnoses in 2023 to 168,889 in 2024, while people diagnosed for the first time with genital warts also dropped. Among women aged 15 to 24 who are recommended to be screened through the National Chlamydia Screening Programme (NCSP), there was a 10.7% decrease in the number of chlamydia tests carried out, from 673,102 to 601,295. Dr Hamish Mohammed, consultant epidemiologist at UKHSA, said: 'Levels of STIs in this country remain a big threat to sexual wellbeing. 'These infections can have a major impact on your health and that of any sexual partners – particularly if they are antibiotic resistant. 'If you've had condomless sex with new or casual partners – either in the UK or overseas – get tested for STIs and HIV at least yearly, even if you don't have symptoms. Regular testing protects both you and those you're having sex with. 'From August, eligible people will also be offered vaccination to reduce the risk of gonorrhoea and we expect to see the immunisation programme have an impact on diagnoses of this infection in coming years – please take up the vaccine if you are offered it.'