
Olympic champion Sally Gunnell takes on latest challenge to banish stigma around HIV
Olympic champion Sally Gunnell takes on latest challenge to banish stigma around HIV
The 1992 Olympic champion is part of a team taking on the Snowdonia Ten Peak Challenge as part of the Tackle HIV campaign, joining other well-known celebrity supporters as well as the initiative's advocates, some of whom are living with HIV.
Sally Gunnell and Gareth Thomas are teaming up again for Tackle HIV
Sally Gunnell is relishing her latest challenge aimed at banishing the stigma around HIV, admitting she continues to feel 'astounded' by the feats of those living with it.
The 1992 Olympic champion is part of a team taking on the Snowdonia Ten Peak Challenge as part of the Tackle HIV campaign, joining other well-known celebrity supporters as well as the initiative's advocates, some of whom are living with HIV.
Gunnell has been a long-standing supporter of the organisation, taking on several endurance events alongside the campaign's figurehead, former Wales rugby international Gareth Thomas, and wants to keep playing her part in spreading the word.
'These challenges are hard, they are not for the feint-hearted, by any means,' she said.
'You have to physically be able to walk for that amount of time up those hills. That is the thing that has really astounded me, that you can live with HIV and just carry on living a normal life, being able to do such challenges.
'Gareth has done triathlons, marathons, you name it, he has physically been able to do it. What he can do with it physically is just incredible
Article continues below
'We have heard so many bad stories in the past around AIDS and HIV, so events like this are really about changing that story.'
The Snowdonia 10 Peak Challenge crosses the most remote mountain range in Wales and England - the Carneddau - a route 25 km in length which has 1200m of ascent and descent.
Gunnell has been warming up for her latest hike by lacing up her walking boots on the South Downs, near her home in Sussex, while temperatures of zero degrees are expected at the summits.
But with Thomas at the helm and some invaluable local knowledge, Gunnell knows she is in safe hands.
'There's about 12 of us, including people guiding us up who we will be relying on,' she said.
'They are all different backgrounds and ages, we will be out there for a good 10-12 hours, we will need each other to get ourselves through.
'Gareth is incredible. He has so much stamina and I have experienced watching him at various events relentlessly spreading the word.
'He is always bubbly, he will keep us going and he will be the leader out there. He always has a good story to tell and that's what we will need to hear.'
The Snowdonia mission will build on the initiative's recent appearance at the RHS Chelsea Flower Show 2025. The Tackle HIV Challenging Stigma Garden was designed by award-winning designer Manoj Malde and marked a celebration of how far science and medicine have come in the treatment of HIV since it was discovered over 40 years ago.
And the ability to spread the campaign's messages on such a stage proved invaluable, according to Viiv Healthcare's Helen McDowell.
'We have been super happy with the impact the Flower Show has had on the campaign,' said McDowell, Head of Government affairs & Global Public Health at the organisation.
'We had people coming to the garden saying they had marked it down as they had read about it or seen it on TV in the preview shows.
Article continues below
'We got lots of interest, lots of people wanted to learn about the message of the garden. Elements like the U=U bench, in particular, were a real draw for people to understand more about HIV.
'It has been really well received and gained a huge international following, which is also important. HIV is not something that respects borders, it is a truly global challenge, so it was really good to do something that is so local and British that can also reach so far.
'Events like this (Snowdonia) challenge also demonstrate the ability to really thrive with HIV, and through these different ways we reach more people and educate more people about the realities of living with HIV in 2025.'

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


NBC News
2 hours ago
- NBC News
By maintaining Obamacare pillar, Supreme Court hands win to HIV advocates
The Supreme Court on Friday granted the HIV-prevention field a historic win — yet with a major caveat — as it upheld a federally appointed health task force's authority to mandate no-cost insurance coverage of certain preventive interventions, but clarifying that the Health and Human Services secretary holds dominion over the panel. The 6-3 decision in Kennedy v. Braidwood Management, Inc. essentially leaves in place a popular pillar of the Affordable Care Act, which mandates that most insurers cover various task force-recommended preventive screenings, therapies and interventions, with no out-of-pocket costs imposed on patients. The case reached the high court after a group of Christian businesses in Texas objected to being compelled to cover a certain drug used for HIV prevention, known as PrEP, given their claims that it 'promotes homosexuality.' 'Since our efforts to address HIV in the U.S. are under attack on so many levels, preserving insurers' requirement to cover preventive services, including PrEP, will help ensure access to people who need it,' said Carl Schmid, executive director of the HIV + Hepatitis Policy Institute, a patient advocacy group in Washington, D.C. But the court clarified the scope of the task force's independence, thus potentially compromising its impact. Addressing concerns that the 16-member volunteer task force's power over insurers was unconstitutional, the justices asserted that the health secretary holds the authority to appoint and dismiss the panelists and to block their new recommendations from mandating insurance coverage. The secretary could also possibly direct the panel, including one stocked with his or her own hand-picked members, to revisit previous recommendations that have already gone into effect. Given the unpredictable nature and unconventional approach to health policy of the current health secretary, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., HIV advocates are concerned that he might undermine the task force's current or future endorsements of HIV-prevention medications, known as PrEP. The ruling 'is a victory in the sense that it leaves intact the requirement to cover task-force recommendations,' said attorney Richard Hughes, a partner with Epstein Becker Green in Washington, D.C., who represented a group of HIV advocacy organizations in submitting a friend-of-the-court brief in the casel. 'It was always going to be a double-edged sword, as the political accountability that salvaged its authority comes with the ability to alter its recommendations.' The U.S. has secured only a modest decline recently in HIV cases, and HIV advocates stand at a crossroads amid the Trump administration's dramatic withdrawal of support for their cause. Promisingly, the Food and Drug Administration last week approved a long-acting injectable form of PrEP, Yeztugo, made by Gilead Sciences. Injected every six months, Yeztugo overwhelmingly bested Truvada, a daily-pill form of PrEP also made by Gilead, at lowering HIV transmissions in clinical trials. But Yeztugo has debuted as the Trump administration is gutting the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's HIV-prevention division and after it canceled scores of HIV-related research grants. HIV experts have warned that this upheaval could lead HIV to rise again. Kennedy v. Braidwood Management, Inc. The plaintiffs' initial religious-liberty complaint was ultimately dropped from the case. The court more narrowly considered the constitutionality of an ACA provision that lent effective authority to a longstanding volunteer medical task force to mandate no-cost insurance coverage to preventive interventions that the expert group rated highly, including PrEP. The plaintiffs argued that because the task force was not appointed by the president and confirmed by the Senate, granting it such power over insurance markets violated the Constitution's appointments clause. The justices grappled with the task force's balance of independence versus accountability. In particular, they sought to determine whether the task force members were appointed by the Senate-confirmed Health and Human Services secretary. In addition to PrEP, the task force has issued high scores, for example, to screening for lung cancer, diabetes, and HIV; treatment to help quit smoking; and behavioral counseling to prevent heart disease. Had the Supreme Court fully sided with the plaintiffs, insurers would have been free to drop such popular benefits or, at the very least, to impose related co-pays and other cost sharing. Writing for the majority, Justice Brett Kavanaugh found that the health secretary has the power 'to appoint Task Force members, and no statute restricts their removal.' He was joined by an ideological mix of colleagues, including Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Amy Coney Barrett on the right, and Justices Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan and Ketanji Brown Jackson on the left. Concerns and uncertainty about Kennedy HIV advocates expressed concern that Kennedy might undo the task force's recommendation for PrEP, or at the least deprioritize ensuring that Yeztugo receives a clear coverage mandate. Earlier this month, Kennedy dismissed the entire CDC Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, or ACIP, and replaced them with his own hand-picked selections, including one notable anti-vaccine activist. At the first meeting of the newly formed committee this week, ACIP dropped recommendations for some flu vaccines over claims, widely debunked by researchers, that one ingredient in them is tied to autism. Mitchell Warren, executive director of the HIV advocacy nonprofit AVAC, expressed concern about 'what happened with the CDC ACIP this week, as it could be a harbinger of what a secretary of HHS can do to twist committees and task forces that should be composed of experts guided by science to ones that are guided by ideology and politics.' In an email to NBC News, Carmel Shachar, faculty director of the Health Law and Policy Clinic at Harvard Law School, characterized Kennedy's potential approach to overseeing the health task force as unpredictable. 'RFK has been skeptical of the medical approach to HIV/AIDS in the past, and that may color his attitude to revising PrEP guidance,' Shachar said. HHS did not immediately respond to a request for comment about the HIV advocates' concerns. In 2019, the health task force granted Truvada as PrEP a top rating. The drug was already widely covered by insurers. But under ACA rules, the task force's recommendation meant that by January 2021, insurance plans needed to cease imposing cost-sharing for the drug. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, or CMS, then clarified that insurers were also forbidden to impose cost sharing for the quarterly clinic visits and lab tests required for a PrEP prescription. A CDC study published in October found that about 200,000 people were using PrEP at any point in 2023. In 2019, the FDA approved another Gilead daily pill, Descovy, for use as PrEP. In late 2021, ViiV Healthcare's Apretude — an injection given every two months — was also green lit. The health task force gave top ratings to both of the newer forms of PrEP in 2023, which triggered a mandate for no-cost coverage to begin in January. A generic version of Truvada emerged in 2020 and now costs as little as $30 per month. The list prices of the three brand-name PrEP drugs range from about $2,200 to $2,350 a month. How the court's ruling could play out for HIV prevention Were Kennedy to appoint task force members who ultimately voided the PrEP coverage mandate, generic Truvada, at the very least, would still likely remain widely covered by insurance. But insurers would be free to demand cost-sharing for all forms of PrEP, including for required clinic visits and lab tests. And they could restrict access to the more expensive versions, including by imposing prior authorization requirements and higher cost sharing. Research suggests that even a small increase in monthly out-of-pocket costs for PrEP can depress its use and that those who accordingly forgo a prescription are especially likely to contract HIV. Johanna Mercier, Gilead's chief commercial officer, said even before the health task force's 2023 insurance mandate for Descovy went into effect in January, the drug's coverage was still pretty solid. Private insurers provided unrestricted coverage of Descovy for PrEP to 74% of commercially insured people, and 40% of prescriptions for the drug had no co-pay. After the mandate went into effect — including after CMS released a clarification on the PrEP-coverage mandate in October — those rates increased to 93% and 85%, respectively. This experience, Mercier said, has left the company optimistic that an increasing proportion of health plans will cover Yeztugo during the coming months. Health-policy experts are not certain whether the existing PrEP rating from the task force automatically applies to Yeztugo, or whether the drug will require its own rating to ensure coverage comes with no cost sharing. If Apretude's history is any guide, a requirement for Yeztugo to receive a specific rating could delay a no-cost insurance-coverage mandate for the drug from going into effect until January 2027 or 2028. It's also possible that CMS could release guidance clarifying that the existing mandate for PrEP coverage applies to Yeztugo, which would likely have a more immediate impact on coverage. However, Elizabeth Kaplan, director of health care access at Harvard's Health Law and Policy Clinic, said in an email that 'given this administration's and RFK's stated priorities,' the publication of a guidance on Yeztugo coverage by an HHS division 'appears unlikely.'


Scotsman
5 hours ago
- Scotsman
Team GB athlete Jennifer Dodds visits Trinity Primary School for special workshop
Team GB athlete, Jennifer Dodds Team GB athlete Jennifer Dodds made a special appearance at Trinity Primary School last week to help deliver an exciting workshop on the importance of energy saving in partnership with British Gas. Sign up to our daily newsletter Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to Edinburgh News, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... The visit formed part of British Gas' Get Set for Positive Energy Roadshow which aims to educate pupils across the UK on energy saving behaviours and habits. Through an engaging session led by Jennifer and British Gas representatives, 77 pupils at Trinity Primary School participated in a range of activities including designing posters to encourage energy saving at home and school, spotting ways to prevent energy misuse, and suggesting improvements to make their school a greener place. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad During the summer, the Get Set for Positive Energy regional Roadshow will see British Gas and a group of Olympic and Paralympic athletes visit a selection of other schools across the UK, leading workshops and inspiring the minds of the future to get involved in energy saving from a young age. Aimi McIntosh, Deputy Headteacher at Trinity Primary School, said: 'It was lovely to see the children enjoying themselves so much during the workshop hosted by Jennifer Dodds and British Gas – they particularly loved suggesting creative ways to make our school a greener environment and hearing all about Jennifer's journey as a Team GB athlete. 'It was a really inspiring and educational session and a fantastic opportunity for our school, so we'd like to thank all involved!' Hannah Lawrance, Strategic Brand Partnerships Lead at British Gas, said: 'We really enjoyed visiting Trinity Primary School last week alongside Jennifer Dodds for our Get Set for Positive Energy workshop. We met some brilliant pupils who threw their all into the energy saving activities we had planned which was great to see. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad 'The programme aims to educate children on building a more sustainable future, which helps us to create a more sustainable community for all. We're using our partnership with Team GB and ParalympicsGB to inspire schools to get more active and consider different ways to create a positive impact.' The Get Set for Positive Energy Roadshow makes up part of British Gas' wider Get Set for Positive Energy initiative, a free cross-curricular programme that aims to educate young people aged five to 11 on the importance of saving energy to drive change, getting active and building healthy everyday habits. Through Get Set for Positive Energy, British Gas aims to reach up to 8,500 schools and 1.5 million young people and families across the UK by 2028, taking inspiration from the Olympic and Paralympic values to motivate young people to be active in creating a greener future for themselves and their community. The partnership between Team GB, ParalympicsGB and British Gas launched in 2023. The five-year collaboration will last up until the Los Angeles Olympic and Paralympic Games in 2028. For more information on the Get Set for Positive Energy programme, visit: Get Set | Get Set for Positive Energy


Wales Online
6 hours ago
- Wales Online
Gareth Thomas backs Wales player to shine for British & Irish Lions this summer
Gareth Thomas backs Wales player to shine for British & Irish Lions this summer Thomas believes Tomos Williams could be a match-winner for the Lions in Australia Gareth Thomas and a team of 14 people are undertaking the Snowdonia Ten Peak Challenge, raising awareness of HIV stigma, and challenging perceptions that living with HIV limits what you can achieve. Pictures by Paul Currie/for Matt Dickens Photography Wales might have their lowest Lions contingent since the Second World War but former skipper Gareth Thomas believes Tomos Williams is a match-winner who can force his way into Test contention. The scrum-half was named Premiership Player of the Season for his performances in his first year for Gloucester, and earned a first Lions call-up despite playing for a Wales team still searching for a first win since the 2023 Rugby World Cup. He impressed off the bench in the opening Lions fixture against Argentina, and will now make a first start alongside Finn Russell against the Western Force in Perth on Saturday. Thomas believes there is something special about Williams, who could both push his way into the Test 23, as well as inspiring any Welsh youngsters to ensure there is greater representation in four years' time. Thomas said: 'Tomos Williams is a person who can change games. He has great individual talent and that talent has probably got him on the plane. He can win a game for you if he gets an opportunity. 'To have the two (Williams and Jac Morgan) of them represent Wales and potentially press for a Test spot will be great motivation for whoever is watching now and will be playing for Wales in four years' time. Article continues below 'They will think there is the potential to get there from Wales. Even though at the moment, rugby in Wales is negative, this time in four years' time, we could have won a Grand Slam and have 15 people on the tour.' Thomas speaks from experience. When he toured with the Lions in 2005, going onto captain the Test side after Brian O'Driscoll was injured two minutes into the first Test, just three Scots were initially included. Two decades on, Scotland have provided a much bigger contingent, with eight in Andy Farrell's original squad of 38, although tighthead prop Zander Fagerson has been forced to withdraw through injury. So while Thomas would have loved more Welsh players to make it onto the plane Down Under, he acknowledges the reasons for the decision and believes that the public back home will still get behind the team as much as ever. He added: 'It is one of those things that comes around once every four years. "Sometimes it comes on a year where you have had a good year as a team, and sometimes it is when you have had a bad year, that is the way it goes. 'The thing with the Lions, there seems to be an element of sometimes people dropping their identity of Scottish, Welsh or Irish and supporting the Lions. "I don't think the pubs in Wales will be empty because there might not be any players from Wales playing, they will go to support the British & Irish Lions, not just supporting the Welsh players in the Lions. It is a wonderful example of how sport can unify.' On the subject of unifying, Thomas this week took part in the Snowdonia 10 Peak Challenge for Tackle HIV, in a bid to tackle misunderstanding of HIV as well as addressing the stigma around it. He has been part of the campaign for more than half a decade now, and this challenge, which involved climbing many of the highest mountains in Wales and crossing the most remote mountain range in Wales and England – the Carneddau - is an opportunity to show what is possible for those living with HIV. He added: "HIV is such a lifestyle thing, we have to get people to realise, not just tell them that people who live with HIV are not restricted physically and mentally of their capabilities. 'Sometimes when you stand up and are the example of what you are saying, people take notice even more. So to do a physical challenge backs up everything we have been verbally saying for the last five years that this campaign has been going.' Article continues below Tackle HIV is a campaign led by Gareth Thomas in partnership with ViiV Healthcare, with Terrence Higgins Trust as the charity partner, which aims to tackle the stigma and misunderstanding around HIV. For more information visit and follow @tacklehiv