

People have multiple identities, but this fact can be overshadowed by the diagnosis of a disease. Formed in 1991 by the late Sivananda Khan, an HIV and gay rights activist, the Naz Project London (Naz) realised that people living with HIV in South Asian communities needed support encompassing their multiple identities of faith, sexuality, gender identity, and ethnicity. “So those four core intersections were our starting point. That's why we existed, because we recognised people who were coming to Naz were not presenting single-issue stories or one-dimensional identities.
HIV
|15th Jan, 2026
|The Lancet
HIV
|15th Jan, 2026
|The Lancet
HIV
|15th Jan, 2026
|The Lancet
HIV
|15th Jan, 2026
|The Lancet
HIV
|15th Jan, 2026
|The Lancet
HIV
|15th Jan, 2026
|The Lancet
HIV
|15th Jan, 2026
|The Lancet